answer:To share my own opinion, I feel that it would make sense and require little effort to put a warning if you’re going to write something about abuse, extreme violence, or something else that is obviously disturbing. The trouble is that many people nowadays are asking for trigger warnings for everything. There are people who will actually get upset with you for not placing a “body dysmorphia” trigger warning prior to a sentence about how you really need to get to the gym because you’re getting out of shape. I find this level of sensitivity appalling and I wonder how these people get through their days. I feel their problem is their problem and that people can’t be made to walk on eggshells around them because they are offended by everything. Furthermore, I’m not sure how helpful trigger warnings are at all, because the real triggers for PTSD are often incredibly arbitrary. One of my only personal experiences with feeling “triggered” occurred when I smelled the hand soap at my uncle’s house. I was suddenly overcome with a feeling of dread and revulsion and I had no idea why. It wasn’t until about 24 hours of contemplation later that I remembered we had had soap of that same scent in my bathroom during the early days of my surgical process, when I was first learning to deal with my ostomy. I do not and can not expect anybody to put a trigger warning on their soap.