ANSWER: YES, IF YOU ARE A PROGRESSIVE:  Question:  Are you “oversensitive”?  According to the delicate snowflake who wrote the piece, one knows one suffers from this syndrome as follows:

I’ll bet that at least once in your life, you’ve been called “too dramatic” or “oversensitive.” I imagine that afterward you felt pretty ashamed, and maybe felt like you had no choice but to drop whatever issue you were upset about. That was a manipulative move on the part of the person who called you that. It was unfair. For the most part, I’ve viewed my sensitivity as a positive thing, because of the empathy and emotional awareness that comes with it. At worst, it’s been a heavy frustration or annoyance, because life would be so much easier and productive if my heart could recover from disappointments faster. The only time I saw it as negative is when others told me to see it that way. Growing up, I started to notice that a select few of the men in my family regularly found ways to misconstrue my sensitivity as a flaw, and conveniently enough, this tended to happen whenever I said something a bit too honest or uncomfortable about a situation they had a hand in.

Notice that it is the “unfair,” hard-hearted men who didn’t appreciate her “empathy and emotional awareness.”  And of course the male aggression of calling her “sensitivity” a “flaw,” was triggered whenever our little snowflake was “a bit too honest” or made the men “uncomfortable about a situation they had a hand in.”

I’m sure that’s it, dear– it’s them, not you!  When will these women grow up?  They are non compos mentis, and thus should be unable to date, much less marry or procreate.   These days, there are so many of these snowflakes that men would be well advised to administer this oversensitivity test prior to the first date.