Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Perfectly fine.
Perfectly racist, if a white says it to a BIPOC person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I use it all the time. It seems less clumsy than “I imagine you must be very proud and because I empathize, I feel pride on your behalf as well.”
OMG. LOL. Thanks!!!
Anonymous wrote:A friend just achieved a milestone. Another friend said "I am so proud of you, Larla!" in a group email. I'm sure she meant no harm but it came across as condescending to me. "I'm proud of you!" is what parents say to children, or what the coach says to the player, or what you say to somebody who has maintained sobriety. Peer to peer comes across as condescending.
Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel weird saying it to adult friends but sometimes I AM so proud of them for something they did.
Impressed would be the more befitting word. Impressed shows admiration or respect. "I'm proud of you" is very paternal.
Yes better word. It actually hard to congratulate adults.
Anonymous wrote:Not condescending. Sounds like you might be carrying a ton of your own baggage/insecurities.
I’m proud of many of my friends for different things.
Anonymous wrote:A friend just achieved a milestone. Another friend said "I am so proud of you, Larla!" in a group email. I'm sure she meant no harm but it came across as condescending to me. "I'm proud of you!" is what parents say to children, or what the coach says to the player, or what you say to somebody who has maintained sobriety. Peer to peer comes across as condescending.
Thoughts?