I only offer “solicited” opinion – meaning if they ask, I’ll tell.
They can call that whatever they want, but in the end, they
wanted my opinion and I gave it to them.
How’s the song go?
“Don’t ask me what I think of you; I might not give the answers that you want me to…”Case in point:
An old buddy of mine was single, had a live-in gf, and had a short-lived fling with a married woman.
His first Q – He explained the scenario as if it were hypothetical

and then asked if I thought God considered that a sin (after all,
he wasn’t married).
His next Q was along the lines of would I have fiddled with her.
Finally, in a shocking turn of events he revealed the fact that he himself had done the dirty deed

and asked what I thought.
I didn’t chastise him and start quoting scripture. I simply told him it’s not something I would have done. He asked why, and I explained that, too.
He told me he respected that
and me, and then went on to say that he wished he could be more like me in that regard. That actually caught me out.
My buddy wasn’t an evil guy. He didn’t do what he did to be a jerk. From our conversation, I’m not even entirely convinced that he was sure if what he’d done was bad, or at least
how bad. And he didn’t go about doing this sort of thing all the time.
It all goes back to my axioms…
Nobody is perfect
(including me) and it’s unreasonable to hold people to my own standards.
I have to accept people as they are. I can’t change them, but I can become aware of what kind of person they are and decide if I want them around me and my family.
Yes, that’s judging, but not the preachy kind where I follow people with a bible and point out all the shit they do wrong and tell them they will burn.
I think a lot of times - when it comes up - you get better results my way.
Sometimes, when people are sincere enough to open up and ask for advice about a matter like the one above, criticism, verbal attacks, and shuns may turn them off to the idea of seeking advice on those types of matters from people they do feel are somewhat qualified to give it in the future.