Venting can help us bond, but it can also leave a sour taste in your mouth – where is the line, and why do we love doing it?t’s a rush to realize you dislike the same person as someone else. There’s a delicate, intoxicating dance: throwing out oblique criticisms and prowling around the edges until one person takes the leap and bravely says: “Honestly, they kind of suck.” Soaking up the golden rays of your rightness and another’s wrongness can feel exhilarating.
Then, sometimes, there’s a comedown. It hits a little later, or even while you’re making a snarky comment: a sour taste in your mouth that makes you wonder if you went too far.Why do we trash talk?“It’s hard to say what is the earliest insult on record, as ‘insult’ is always sort of subjective,” Dr Hans Bork, an assistant professor of classics at Stanford University whose research includes insults and humor in Latin comedy, writes over email. He’s seen references to insults in ancient Hittite and Babylonian texts, and notes that Homer’s Iliad is basically all about insult
Trash Talking Venting Psychology Insults Bonding
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