deadeye68 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 12:02 pm
brimstone- I would never tell her it's a non issue. It certainly is an issue to her. I'm always very careful how to speak to her and when she would come over I was always very accommodating.
Not very many people are that good of actors, though, to completely hide their feelings.
If you feel it's a non-issue, she is very likely picking that up through subtle verbal and non-verbal cues.
If you really believe veganism is stupid, without any rational merit, and a purely emotional reaction, then that will come through.
You can't just respect her and think those things about something she believes in deeply... because it's not possible to fully respect somebody when you think that person is being ridiculous. You can go through the motions and comply with her wishes whatever they are, but it will be obvious to somebody good at picking up on that.
If you're reacting to her going vegan in the same way you'd react to her telling you she converted to some weird religion that believe there are leprechauns running around and that she has to act in certain ways to appease them (ways that are obviously inconveniencing you), then you're going about this wrong. It's not whether you bend over backwards to do what she wants, it's that you acknowledge her beliefs have merit and don't write them off as emotional whim.
deadeye68 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 12:02 pmTo answer your moral question I'd simply tell me friend to not get caught. The IRS seems like a group of people you don't want to piss off.
You completely missed the point of the question, though.
It's to put yourself in her shoes; if you don't care about tax evasion at all, then that's not the right analogy for you. You need to imagine an analogy that's applicable to you.
I'm saying try to find something you DO care about.
If you don't care about anything at all, then it will be impossible for you to understand what your daughter is feeling and relate to her.
Do you identify as a nihilist?
If you genuinely care about anything outside your family, then you can imagine a situation where you find out somebody does something you don't agree with and how you'd feel about it.
Do you strongly disapprove of terrorism?
If so, imagine your friends confided in you that they're radical Islamists funding terrorism abroad by donating money to the cause. They assure you it's just attacks in other countries, there's no risk to you so it should be a non-issue for you remaining friends. How do you feel about that? Are you staying friends with them and giving them advice? Are you cutting them off? Or maybe are you trying to talk them out of it?
You can imagine a couple outcomes of discussing it:
A. They are unresponsive and say it should be a non-issue because it doesn't affect you, and don't want to talk about it and brush it off, just saying you should respect their choices for what to do with their own money.
B. They engage with your seriously about your ethical concerns with them paying to murder people, and discuss the theology of their cause showing that they really respect your intelligence and take your concerns seriously and you reach an impasse where you can't prove their god doesn't exist, and they can't prove that it does, so you agree to disagree from a position of mutual respect. They're still going to pay to kill people, and you still disagree with it, but they took your concerns seriously and engaged with you as though you might have something valuable to say.
If it's at all possible that your interactions with her have been more A than B, think about how that would make you feel and if you would continue to invest much into the relationship.
deadeye68 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 21, 2018 12:02 pm
I am worried she's thinking of leaving her job to pursue "activism" full time. As I have been told by her friend.
Why would you worry about this? If somebody is doing what he or she loves and helping others, that can be a very happy and fulfilling life. There are careers in activism.
The only thing 100% within your power is you. If you want to fix the relationship, you should focus on what you can change, not on what she's doing wrong.