“What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Stronger” Is An Outdated Statement That Has No Basis In Reality And Stems From White Supremacy

“What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” is an outdated statement that has no basis in reality. I don’t think damaging someone’s mind with something like trauma is making someone stronger but impairing them for the rest of their lives. Stress eventually does kill people because it weakens a person’s body by increasing their heart rate and weakening their immune systems making them more susceptible to infection or other diseases like cancer, teeth decay, etc. and that sure isn’t making anyone stronger.

The truth is that what doesn’t kill can either eventually kill you in the end or leave you mentally damaged for the rest of your life. I know the statement is a manipulation tactic that is forced upon the population to try and make everyone the same by making having emotions and being upset and hurt by something as a weakness due to toxic masculinity, misogyny and racism that was created by cis white straight male supremacy.

Honestly a lot of our social “norms”, like not holding people accountable, and stuff like this all can be pinpointed back to cis white straight male supremacy and as an Autistic who’s also Hispanic (I’m half Puerto Rican so not only have I dealt with discrimination for being gay and Autistic, I have also had to deal with racism), I see this a lot more clearly than allistics, neurotypicals and even white Autistics that a lot of ideologies in both the UK and the US (where I am from) come from white colonizers who forced their way of thinking onto those who didn’t conform to what they think is how people should function.

Indigenous and Hispanics have pretty much had their history erased. With Puerto Ricans, for example, our original Indigenous ancestry has gone extinct due to colonization by the Spaniards so there’s no way to know how Indigenous people of the Americas once lived before being forced to live with cis white straight male supremacy ideologies on how a society should be. For all we know the indigenous people of America held people accountable for their actions and had them make things right.

I mean seriously when you look throughout history with cis white straight male supremacy its always about not holding cis white men accountable for their actions, whether that’s colonization, the enslavement of an entire ethnic group, forcing their religious beliefs on everyone and so on and so forth.

My point is a lot of our “social norms” are cis white straight male supremacy ideologies that have always been for the benefit of anyone but minority groups, things like “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” has a deep ties to racism and misogyny when you look at our history. Think about it, before women had to be married to a man and couldn’t divorce him at all for any reason, regardless of if they were r*ped, beaten, cheated on, etc. women had to be “strong” housewives and sit there and endure and conform to that despite the mental harm and trauma they endured and I wouldn’t be surprised if many ended up dead because of it, whether by murder or stress eventually killing them.

So yeah the whole “what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger” is just outdated and has heavy ties to cis white straight male supremacy. As an Autistic person who’s also two other minority groups (gay and Hispanic), particularly one that has to deal with racism and white supremacy, this gets used to justify racism, homophobia and even the bigotry and mistreatment of Autistic people, and they can lead to other mental health problems such as anxiety, depression due to low self-esteem, fear for ones life, mistrust in authority figures like police or the justice systems in majority white countries, most, if not all, are rigged against BIPOC and mentally disabled people, and when you Autism into the mix, yeah just none is a good combination to deal with…

Parents
  • I've been abused growing up, however I disagree with your point of view. People who understand this phrase "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger" are those who are willing to face pain, face fear, and face the challenges that are in front of them, in order to become better than they once were. Those who workout their bodies have to face feeling pain, but the body repairs itself after a few days, and then they continue. It's not easy to face pain and fear, as the mind is designed to avoid those things as a means of survival, but if you can, what was a challenge yesterday would be a lot easier to do today. This applies for both mental and physical challenges.

    It's not that strength is always used to demean and harm others either, as I've learned over the years. Strength can help you rescue a person (or if you don't have the strength, the strength of a group of people can definitely help lift one person). And strength helps you become independent, as you can lift your own things like groceries and boxes when you're alone, and not depend on someone else to lift it for you. Also, working out the back is important, to decrease the likelihood of back injuries, which are no fun. 

    I've stopped caring about the abuser, as they've used strength to harm people. I don't blame the whole of society, for what one person has done to me. And there is "healthy masculinity" too, as opposed to masculinity always being toxic. To discriminate against anyone based on their race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, sex, gender is just well, discrimination. To paint a picture that all "cis white straight males" are toxic and against autism, even when they could be a "cis white straight male" AND autistic, is just degrading. Do you think "cis white straight males" don't get abused as well? Look at the type of stuff you're posting, and tell me that's not abusive. The color of their skin, biological sex, or sexual orientation, has no barring on whether or not they'll be abusive/act superior to others. 

    And if you start targetting all "cis white straight males" and blaming them for everything wrong in your life, that's no different than the mindsets of abusers, who blame everyone and take out their anger on everyone, even if those people have done nothing wrong to hurt them. That behavior and mindset is toxic. Don't judge an entire group of people like that. It's harmful. Blame the specific people who have done harm to you, not an entire group of people. That's like if I stole from you, and you blame my entire race, sexual orientation, and biological sex, for doing that to you. No. Blame me. I did that to you. Why are you blaming hundreds of thousands of people who have never stolen from you before? 

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  • I've been abused growing up, however I disagree with your point of view. People who understand this phrase "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger" are those who are willing to face pain, face fear, and face the challenges that are in front of them, in order to become better than they once were. Those who workout their bodies have to face feeling pain, but the body repairs itself after a few days, and then they continue. It's not easy to face pain and fear, as the mind is designed to avoid those things as a means of survival, but if you can, what was a challenge yesterday would be a lot easier to do today. This applies for both mental and physical challenges.

    It's not that strength is always used to demean and harm others either, as I've learned over the years. Strength can help you rescue a person (or if you don't have the strength, the strength of a group of people can definitely help lift one person). And strength helps you become independent, as you can lift your own things like groceries and boxes when you're alone, and not depend on someone else to lift it for you. Also, working out the back is important, to decrease the likelihood of back injuries, which are no fun. 

    I've stopped caring about the abuser, as they've used strength to harm people. I don't blame the whole of society, for what one person has done to me. And there is "healthy masculinity" too, as opposed to masculinity always being toxic. To discriminate against anyone based on their race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, sex, gender is just well, discrimination. To paint a picture that all "cis white straight males" are toxic and against autism, even when they could be a "cis white straight male" AND autistic, is just degrading. Do you think "cis white straight males" don't get abused as well? Look at the type of stuff you're posting, and tell me that's not abusive. The color of their skin, biological sex, or sexual orientation, has no barring on whether or not they'll be abusive/act superior to others. 

    And if you start targetting all "cis white straight males" and blaming them for everything wrong in your life, that's no different than the mindsets of abusers, who blame everyone and take out their anger on everyone, even if those people have done nothing wrong to hurt them. That behavior and mindset is toxic. Don't judge an entire group of people like that. It's harmful. Blame the specific people who have done harm to you, not an entire group of people. That's like if I stole from you, and you blame my entire race, sexual orientation, and biological sex, for doing that to you. No. Blame me. I did that to you. Why are you blaming hundreds of thousands of people who have never stolen from you before? 

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