http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/01/opinion/sunday/stop-saying-i-feel-like.html
I've been actively trying to use "I think" over "feel" ever since reading this article.
Cue the "I feel like" responses.
Natasha Pangarkar, a senior at Williams College, hears “I feel like” “in the classroom on a daily basis,” she said. “When you use the phrase ‘I feel like,’ it gives you an out. You’re not stating a fact so much as giving an opinion,” she told me. “It’s an effort to make our ideas more palatable to the other person.”
“I feel like” masquerades as a humble conversational offering, an invitation to share your feelings, too — but the phrase is an absolutist trump card. It halts argument in its tracks.
When people cite feelings or personal experience, “you can’t really refute them with logic, because that would imply they didn’t have that experience, or their experience is less valid,” Ms. Chai told me.
“It’s a way of deflecting, avoiding full engagement with another person or group,” Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn, a historian at Syracuse University, said, “because it puts a shield up immediately. You cannot disagree.”
We should not “feel like.” We should argue rationally, feel deeply and take full responsibility for our interaction with the world.
I've been actively trying to use "I think" over "feel" ever since reading this article.
Cue the "I feel like" responses.