S
SaintNobody
Guest
I am often conflicted by this point.
I know we should talk about another person’s faults unnecessarily, especially when when one person hasn’t met the person at fault yet.
But sometimes, I just want to vent how I feel, especially to my mother or husband, about things that go on. Like “X did this to me”, or “the problem with Y is that he does this and this, but really should be doing this.”
A more concrete example: I like to vent to my mother about my mother-in-law. It makes me feel better. My mother-in-law asks a lot of nosy questions. My mother-in-law can be so picky and such a butt-in-ski.
Is it a sin to to make myself feel better and tell my mother what my mother-in-law did?
Or another example: Sometimes I tell my husband about things I think acquaintances in common did wrong (and my husband doesn’t know this).
I find it difficult because I just want to talk about how I feel. But I feel like if I say anything negative about anyone (save in the most necessary of circumstances) it feels like a sin.
What say you?
I know we should talk about another person’s faults unnecessarily, especially when when one person hasn’t met the person at fault yet.
But sometimes, I just want to vent how I feel, especially to my mother or husband, about things that go on. Like “X did this to me”, or “the problem with Y is that he does this and this, but really should be doing this.”
A more concrete example: I like to vent to my mother about my mother-in-law. It makes me feel better. My mother-in-law asks a lot of nosy questions. My mother-in-law can be so picky and such a butt-in-ski.
Is it a sin to to make myself feel better and tell my mother what my mother-in-law did?
Or another example: Sometimes I tell my husband about things I think acquaintances in common did wrong (and my husband doesn’t know this).
I find it difficult because I just want to talk about how I feel. But I feel like if I say anything negative about anyone (save in the most necessary of circumstances) it feels like a sin.
What say you?