156 points
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An excuse removes responsibility.

A reason does not.

“You are excused” means you no longer are responsible for the outcome.

“I literally wasn’t present when it happened, so I’m not responsible for the outcome” < excuse, which can be valid

“I knew what was going to happen, here is why I did it for a good reason” < reason

Example: three kids are present, 2 are graffiti’ing the back of a house

When caught, 1 kid says “I was trying to stop them, they wouldn’t listen”. This is an excuse, they’re claiming they aren’t at fault and not responsible for the graffiti.

Another says “the home owner deserved it, he’s an asshole”, this is a reason as they are clearly not avoiding responsibility.

When you try and use an excuse to get out of something thar you clearly are responsible for, that’s when you will get served the “I dont want an excuse” line.

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38 points

Not only was this well explained, but the short segments are great for my ADHD-phobia of large blocks of text

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2 points

Ohhh damn that’s why I read the whole thing. I usually scroll past walls of text in the comments.

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86 points

It’s not just you, neurotypicals on the receiving end of that hate it too. Everyone gets told that garbage line once in a while. It’s always said by someone on a power trip, they’re trying to put you down into a place beneath them

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84 points

In reply to the meme: Anyone who asks why and then cuts off the person they asked immediately assumed that ANY response would be an excuse, since they didn’t listen to it.

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42 points

They just want to be angry. They don’t care about anything else, and anything anyone says is irrelevant.

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7 points

No, there’s one reason that they wouldn’t consider an excuse, and it’s what they expected you to say: “I’m a good for nothing stupid head”. That’s what they want to hear. They’re mad because you didn’t say it.

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58 points

Excuses are generally made to avoid responsibility, and they aren’t always completely accurate. Explanations just clarify what happened.

The thing is, the person receiving an explanation might well just assume it’s an excuse, and it’s hard to convince them otherwise.

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20 points
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Yup, when it comes to intent only one person actually knows the intent and everyone else is assuming.

To add, justifications are the opposite of excuses, they are a reason for something that justifies it.

Excuse | Explanation | Justification

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9 points

Yea, even when I explain something I did wrong, I make a point to mention it’s not an okay excuse and own my mistake. Then give ways I will avoid this problem I’m the future.

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3 points

It’s this.

Good additions about justifications in this thread as well.

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43 points

If they ask for an explanation and complain about being given an excuse, then they don’t want to hear the series of events which occurred. They want to hear which of your character flaws is responsible and that you’re ashamed of that flaw.

Source: drag speaks fluent neurotypical

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