You're in the best of moods and the day feels just great. Suddenly
you feel sapped of energy and your spirits have been dampened. The
source of the deflation? You've just encountered someone else's bad
attitude and it has cast a pall over your own mood. While it's a
personal choice to seek to deflect the negative moods of others, it's
not always that easy – emotions are contagious and we're programmed to
empathize with others around us and to tune into their emotions.
The negative moods and thinking of a toxic person are pervasive -
nervous energy, anger, sadness, complaints, clinginess, a view of the
world constantly tinged with negativity. And if you happen to be caught
up with toxic people daily in your life, by letting their negativity get
to you, it can erode your own sense of self and deflate even the most
optimistic outlook. Constantly negative emotions can lead to illness and
a shortened lifespan – toxic personalities are not healthy for
themselves or for you. And since misery loves company, miserable people
will try to drag you into their fold; however, take charge of defending
yourself and learn how to break free from toxic attitudes around you, to
sustain your healthy, fulfilling, and optimistic outlook.
Steps
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| Are you a glass half-empty or half-full kind of person? |
Discover your current attitudes towards life in general. There is no point in striving to be progressive and successful, when you yourself possess the negative energy that holds you back. Take stock of your actions and words. If your own behaviors head in the direction of self-pity and pessimism
(a self-perceived victim status), it's time to re-track and start over
by making a choice to adopt more optimistic beliefs and attitudes. Life
will give you what you expect, so that your expectations need to be
balanced with realistic measures and a more positive framework. This
starts with you as a person before looking to blame others for your failures and miseries.
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| Learn to pick up on the energy (or vibes) around you |
Learn to pick up on the energy (or vibes) around you. Besides
knowing yourself well, you need to know how you feel when toxic people
are around you. You probably already know how to do this but learn to
make it a conscious
act, not just an unconscious reaction. For example, think about how you
feel when you walk into a business where everyone is friendly and
cannot do enough to engage you in casual conversation. Then, think about
walking into a business where the mood is sour, the assistants are
barely able to mumble a hello to you and appear to have other things to
do than to engage with you, their faces filled with resentment
and a desire to be anywhere than where they are. The energy in both
cases is enormously different and you pick up on it immediately. It is
the same with individuals; you will grow to consciously notice when you
feel immediately uplifted or plunged downward by the people in your
presence and you can take steps to make choices about how to react once
you recognize these feelings.
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| Recognize the toxic personality types. |
Recognize the toxic personality types. We all have our down days, and each of us is prone to the blues
now and then. However, when it comes to toxic people, the blues appear
to be a permanent state of being and feeling down, glum, angry, etc.,
becomes a primary personality trait rather than a temporary state of
mind. The following toxic personality types are ones to be on the watch
for:
- Angry at life: A person who is always angry, blowing up, shouting,
and reacting to everyone in a volatile manner is a toxic person. They
need a lot of help but you don't need to be their battering board.
Staying around a person like this will cause you to become angry too, to
see slights where there are none, to react instead of reflecting, and
to fear things.
- Everything in the world is rotten: A person with this
worldview is always down and always finds the dark side in everything.
And they love miserable company; the more dark thinkers agreeing with
their conspiracies
and frightening theories, the better. Oddly enough, this person will
often be competitive about their misery, trying to outdo any other
person's misery. Prone to seeing other people's mistakes as enormous
transgressions (and therefore cannot forgive)
and to fearing that people are going to let them down/let them go any
moment, they live in constant state of fate-determining negativity and
lack hope. Since they don't feel capable of changing their trajectory,
they'll try to drag you in with them.
- Attention seekers:
Insecure, unable to create their own sense of self-worth, and
emotionally immature, this person is a "clinger". They want your
attention, they want it when they want it (now!) and they need to
be at the center of everything. This person's constant need to be heard
and rescued will wear you down eventually and their inability to settle
down and take a good, long hard look at themselves means that they try
to suck the energy and life from elsewhere, namely from you.
- Gossips:
When all else in your own life fails, spill the beans on other people's
misfortunes is the motto of this difficult character. Instead of
keeping confidences and being supportive, this person allows envious feelings
to get the better of them instead of getting the better of their
envious feelings. Unfortunately, gossip feels exciting to those
receiving it initially but it's like a sugar high; it soon crashes and
the nasty after-effects harm everyone. If you have found yourself caught
up with a gossip and you've enabled them or benefited from them, don't
get hung up on worrying about your complicity; forgive yourself, make a
choice to only speak well of others from this point on, and remove
yourself form their sphere.
- Fearful frighteners: Worry, anxiety,
"what ifs", and fear push this personality. Everything in life, from
relationships to crossing the road, holds some potential for fear and
terror, and this person's anxiety is unfortunately very contagious.
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| Take a look at the company you keep (or attract). |
Take a look at the company you keep (or attract). Looking at the list in the previous step, analyze friendships, family relationships, working colleagues and decide objectively just how healthy these people are in terms of your
overall well-being and composure. Do they bring out the best in you or
do you serve as a sponge for all their problems and miseries? If the
latter is the case, for your own sanity and well-being, let them go.
This might be really hard initially because of the expectations and
sense of obligation
that builds up in relationships but staying with people who lead you
into constant misery isn't going to be rewarded, so don't subject
yourself to it. Disengage yourself from their company politely by
minimizing contact until a healthy distance can be maintained. You need
this time to ponder and reflect on saving and preserving yourself, drawing on the optimism, hope and positive energy you have within.
- There is a primal instinct in each of us to mirror others we're
with. It's a survival and a social technique. And if that mirror is
murky, negative, and lacking in self-esteem, it's a mirror you need to
throw a drape over for the sake of self-protection and moving forward.
Remember that you can't change another person, only yourself, so don't
bog yourself down with excuses about being responsible for them or
feeling pity for them. You can only truly help a negative person when
you're no longer influenced by them.
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| Listen selectively when engaging in any conversation. |
Listen selectively when engaging in any conversation.
Seek to hold onto the positive and constructive aspects of any
conversation. Train your mind to consciously throw out the bad essence
of the conversation. It becomes a matter of choosing what it is you wish
to dwell on; allow the good side to hold stronger for you and to serve
as the thoughts you focus and ponder on. When negative Ned starts
getting really trying, return positive energy through positive words
or suggestions that are supportive. Doing this creates a space between
you; while the other person may be internally struggling to refute to
your positive insistence, it is clear to them that you aren't going to
be won over to the dark side!
- Create a personal signal to remind yourself to keep deflecting the
negative conversation and signals beamed at you from a toxic
personality. It might be pulling a piece of your hair, digging your
thumbnail into your palm, flicking your wrist, tapping your knee, etc.
This minor action is a protective mechanism to remind you to consciously
note that negativity is being sent your way and to make a conscious
effort to refuse it entry into or lodgings in your own thoughts.
- When dealing with blamers, shift the perspective. While the toxic
personality wants another person to take the blame for a situation, stay calm and keep insisting that the problem
be solved instead of discussing whose fault it is. Seeking to blame
someone keeps things static, and stuck in time, and a solution won't be
found because it has been lost from sight and the blamer doesn't want to
take responsibility for improving their own situation anyway. Stick to
the facts and point out what needs to be done to fix a problem. If they
become hot-headed or violent, remove yourself from them and allow them
the space to calm down.
- Use empathy
and compassion with those who seek to spread fear. Limit your exposure
to their fear talk by turning their negative talk back on itself. For
example, if they insist that your business venture is going to fail, ask
them "Well, what if it doesn't?". Help them to see the possibilities
rather than endless negatives. And when they really get to you, see
their fear as a form of being upset and tell yourself over and over
again that this is their reaction, not yours, and that you have the choice to remain grounded and true to your goals.
- Always remind yourself that negative emotions have a time limit;
they do not last, they will soon pass. You do not need to carry the ball
of negativity with you beyond the encounter.
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Develop a beautiful mind.
|
Develop a beautiful mind. This can be achieved by accepting the
reality of things that cannot be changed. Let bygones be where they
belong – in the historical archives of repressed memory.
If these emotions become too difficult to attain closure, seek help to
close this chapter fully and finally. In this way, you won't allow the
negative thoughts to fester and control your present and future self;
understanding and learning to accept what has been as a lesson in growth
rather than a crystallization of who you in time for all time is the
way to break free from negativity. Acceptance
forms a great part of this beautiful mind, bringing closure and leaving
the mind and body free to achieve a more fruitful and higher quality
lifestyle.
- Take up practices that help to ground you. Some things that might help you include meditation,
yoga, reflection in nature, martial arts, endurance sports, a hobby
that fulfills a passion, etc. Find something that calms and centers you
and to which you can retreat when you need to re-energize yourself.
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| Know what your needs and desires are. |
Know what your needs and desires are. Take time to decipher what is
important to you. Know what your likes and dislikes are and develop some
idea of where you would like to see yourself in the future. Write down
your plans
on paper. Paste it on a wall where you can constantly remind yourself
and stay focused. This will also help you when times get tough and you
feel the gripping desire to fall back into older negative habits. More
importantly, knowing what you want in life acts as a shield to prevent
you from taking on board other people's expectations for you and
treating those as your own instead. By all means remain open to hearing
what others have to say but don't be swayed by what doesn't fit with
your needs and desires, or by what stops you from being true to yourself.
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Stick to your own beliefs and be comfortable with yourself. The doubts, regrets,
and misgivings that others feel should be of no consequence to you and
the paths you follow in life. It is commonplace to hear such comments as
"My parents wanted me to do X, so I did", or "My spouse wanted to go to
X city, so we did" and then to see the speaker behave as if their life
were determined by someone else's choices. Or, there is the perennial
"If only I had done things differently, I'd be famous/rich/important by
now, but X held me back." None of these thoughts about the past are
helpful to the person you are now; don't allow other people or their
preferences to serve as your excuse for a lack of an internal moral
compass and set of beliefs. Your faith and confidence
in your own beliefs will get you to where you want to be. Once again,
listen if you have to, but do it selectively. Keeping away from people
who confuse you is the next very best choice to make – make excuses to stay away.
- At times, you will need to make compromises
with the people close to you or who impact your professional life but
do so knowingly and confidently, and not because you feel bludgeoned
into making choices by a toxic personality.
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| Find like minded people. |
Find like minded people. As we all know, no person is an island – we
humans are social creatures. As time progresses, your entire being will
become accustomed to happy
and wholesome interactions. What you will discover when you focus on
sustaining an optimistic mindset and refusing to dwell on the negativity
is that you will attract people with a similar mindset to you. Mingle
with company that helps you to develop a healthy body and mind – be with
optimistic, upbeat, and happy people. The more time spent with people
of this nature, the happier and brighter you will feel. Their
nourishing, healthy, and positive attitudes
are contagious in a good way and will help you to stay on an even keel.
Equally, once you reach the point whereby anything or anyone who
disrupts your sense of balance and inner peace starts to irritate you,
you know how to politely deflect them, and this confirms that you're
well on your way to a greater and more contented life.
- Pass it on. Use the inspirational example of the more positive
people in your life to guide yourself away from the toxic thought
dwellers. In turn, become more like the optimistic people by seeing the
best in others and complimenting
the good you see in people. Be the source of a "healthy chain of
emotions" by remaining upbeat when interacting with others; accept and
give compliments with thankfulness, maintain eye contact with them, and smile.
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| Strive to become one with yourself, the environment and your needs |
Strive to become one with yourself, the environment and your needs.
This may be difficult at the onset but given time, the routine of seeing
everything as a wonder and finding the good and positive in everyday
interactions will eventually fall into place. A calm and collected mind
is ingenious and complements productive and sensible th
Tips
- Strive to see the best in everything you do. Once the voices on the
inside echo louder than the voices on the outside, then you have
achieved a higher level of thinking within yourself.
- It matters not if people think of you as antisocial or arrogant;
such terminology is all too easily applied to a person who assertively
strikes forth to make a mark in the world and to better themselves. You
need to become the most important person in your own life. If their
presence brings you undue grief, the you are better off without them or
their presence and this is not disloyal or snobbish; remember that toxic
people will attempt to make you see it that way so as to drag you back
into their toxic worldview but even their judgment of you is wrongheaded
and in reality an excuse for their own behavior rather than a
level-headed summation of who you are.
- Find one thing a day to be grateful for. Force yourself to do this
until it becomes a daily habit you cannot live without. You will
discover that it causes negative encounters to move away from your
thoughts and will replace these with more harmonious, happy, and
productive thoughts.
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By remembering the above steps, your mind and psyche stands on guard
against those to knowingly or unknowingly put you down or create
misgivings about your own potential and capabilities.
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