Frustrating ~syscourse~
We hate to bring up Tumblr "syscourse" on here, because it's terrible and negative, but we're so annoyed with it and we don't want to actually post about it on Tumblr for fear of attracting drama/gatekeepers, so we'll just rant about it on here a little bit.
Ok, I'm sure we're preaching to the choir but...
It bothers us to no end that we keep seeing systems using endogenic as a synonym for "has never experienced trauma" or "basically neurotypical". Endogenic and traumagenic say absolutely nothign about a system's history besides where their system came from, endogenic systems can have experienced anything that traumagenic systems have (though if they haven't that doesn't make them any less real either ofc).
Same goes for assuming that traumagenic means "must have experienced abuse". It's perfectly possible for a traumagenic system to have formed from trauma that is not abuse. We're not saying that it's totally common, but just that nobody should make any assumptions about any system's history based only on whether they identify as endogenic or traumagenic (or neither/both/anything else). I mean, these gatekeepers are also using traumagenic to mean DID/OSDD systems only, also, so there's that, but yeah.
Last thing is all the hate on exotrauma, too. Like, we're fairly sure that the term was created specifically to differentiate from trauma that is not exotrauma to avoid comparing the two directly (which isn't to say that exotrauma can't be extremely hard to deal with, and we know systems for who exotrauma manifests exactly like the trauma that they've experienced in this life). Nobody's saying that exotrauma is exactly the same as trauma from this life, that's why the term was coined ;o; (I think, anyway? If we're wrong tho lemme know). It's not harming survivors to talk about exotrauma straight up. First people were mad because they thought folks who have exotrauma would invade spaces/take resources for people with ""real trauma"" (quotes bc exotrauma is real, not because anyone's trauma is fake), and now that there's a great, separate term for it that allows for differentiation, gatekeepers are like "don't use that word!!"
Ugh it's just so frustrating and pointless. We're glad there isn't drama like that here (at least we haven't seen any!).
Ok, I'm sure we're preaching to the choir but...
It bothers us to no end that we keep seeing systems using endogenic as a synonym for "has never experienced trauma" or "basically neurotypical". Endogenic and traumagenic say absolutely nothign about a system's history besides where their system came from, endogenic systems can have experienced anything that traumagenic systems have (though if they haven't that doesn't make them any less real either ofc).
Same goes for assuming that traumagenic means "must have experienced abuse". It's perfectly possible for a traumagenic system to have formed from trauma that is not abuse. We're not saying that it's totally common, but just that nobody should make any assumptions about any system's history based only on whether they identify as endogenic or traumagenic (or neither/both/anything else). I mean, these gatekeepers are also using traumagenic to mean DID/OSDD systems only, also, so there's that, but yeah.
Last thing is all the hate on exotrauma, too. Like, we're fairly sure that the term was created specifically to differentiate from trauma that is not exotrauma to avoid comparing the two directly (which isn't to say that exotrauma can't be extremely hard to deal with, and we know systems for who exotrauma manifests exactly like the trauma that they've experienced in this life). Nobody's saying that exotrauma is exactly the same as trauma from this life, that's why the term was coined ;o; (I think, anyway? If we're wrong tho lemme know). It's not harming survivors to talk about exotrauma straight up. First people were mad because they thought folks who have exotrauma would invade spaces/take resources for people with ""real trauma"" (quotes bc exotrauma is real, not because anyone's trauma is fake), and now that there's a great, separate term for it that allows for differentiation, gatekeepers are like "don't use that word!!"
Ugh it's just so frustrating and pointless. We're glad there isn't drama like that here (at least we haven't seen any!).