Why We Argue Over Meaning Instead of Asking What Was Meant
You ever been halfway through reacting already frustrated and realize you never actually asked what they meant? It happens faster than most people notice. Someone says something, their tone shifts, their response feels off, and before they even finish speaking, meaning gets assigned. Not confirmed. Assigned. What follows doesn't take effort. It unfolds automatically. Assumption, emotional reaction, defense. The moment we assume intent, we stop listening and start defending a version of reality that may not exist. Once that shift happens, the conversation is no longer about what was said. It becomes about what was decided. Two people can hear the same words and walk away holding completely different meanings, and neither one feels wrong because the brain doesn't experience this as a guess. It experiences it as clarity. It's like writing subtitles for someone else's words and then arguing that your version is the only one that exists. Psychology has language for thi...