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Rejection - Good or bad? Part 1 of a Series By Harlan Jacobsen
Everyone has a bit of a problem with rejection; some have only a
light, momentary, slightly bad feeling about it.
Others’ behavior and actions are greatly affected by fear of
rejection and their sense of well being is tied up by who rejects them.
Many are rejection cripples and are emotionally damaged every time
they are rejected.
In helping get people from an emotional “rejection cripple” stage
to “I like and readily accept
rejection” stage, we deal with three different facets of rejection.
TIME REJECTIONS - RELATIONSHIP ACCEPTANCE ENDS.
They had accepted and approved you and now they no longer do.
You feel short-changed, mad—your expectations that this was going
to be forever were not fulfilled. They
got out before you did and that hurts and worst of all, they didn’t check
with you first.
Now you must go through a stage of addictive withdrawal similar to an
addict going through withdrawal period and it hurts; it is painful.
Someone graduated from the relationship and you weren’t ready.
We need to realize in dealing with time rejection that people’s
values change very much faster now along with needs and priorities changing
as they grow over time. Everything
and everyone is changing at an accelerated pace.
Our thinking and expectations are geared to another time when people
and things changed not at all or very slowly.
The three D’s of time rejection are Divorce - 50% of the population
will experience it at least once.
Deceased - 50% of the remaining marrieds will have to deal with
rejection by death. Psychologists
say death is the ultimate form of rejection.
Dealing with loss through death is very little different than through
divorce.
One widow was heard to exclaim as they lowered the casket, “How can
you leave me now, you dirty S.O.B., just when I needed you so much.”
Desertion - the poor man’s (and increasingly woman’s) divorce.
About 5% of the population use this method of ending a marriage.
If you are a woman your statistical chances if you are married are
about 80% that you will have to deal with one of these three methods of time
rejection. That’s 3 to 1 odds
that if you are a married women you are going to have one of the three D’s
in your future. And as a
single, you have to handle time rejection regularly.
Time rejection is a fact of life.
We might as well recognize that and learn to handle it more easily.
Temporary is factual; permanent or “forever after” is a fairy
tale. You are here on earth
temporarily; it is upsetting to know, realize and face the fact is it’s
not forever. Life is good even
if it is tempor-ary, for however long it lasts.
All relationships are temporary and they are good for however long
they last. We find it difficult
to face the fact that all relationships are temporary. People know that
relationships change and move on. Growing,
graduating from a relationship, is a fact of life but we find it difficult,
preferring to hold on to our fairy tale belief that if the “love” or
relationships are true or any good they go on forever.
They don’t—and we need to accept the facts of life that we are
either going to be rejected over time or reject others— or both.
The second type of rejection we are dealing with now is what we call
INITIAL REJECTION. Initial
Rejection is when someone rejects you on first impression and you are the
rejectee the person rejected. About
10% of the people you meet will seem to accept and approve you but promptly
discard you, which is in effect also rejection, only with a slight delay.
Most of us who are rejected initially will rarely make another
attempt. I know it took me
almost four years to be where I would ever ask anyone to dance again that
had ever turned me down for a dance even once.
Look at Rover—the mangy mutt comes in wagging his tail and rubbing
against you—he wants a pet, but you turn him down.
Doesn’t bother him; he goes on to someone else and finds someone
willing to give him some pets. Now, when he comes in again tomorrow he doesn’t hold a
grudge—he offers himself again, and if he is turned down he’ll try again
tomorrow. It is a long time
before Rover gives up on you.
We say rejection today is rejection for now only.
Maybe I have my eye on someone else right now and though you seem
interesting and exciting I want to check out this other person first.
Next up and most difficult for some people is THE ABILITY TO REJECT
OTHERS. It’s the ability to
reject is the ability to stop being used, to be able to reject unwanted
advances, so you can stop being “thinged” by everyone who finds you
attractive. The ability to
realize when to say no, be able to say it pleasantly and without
embarrassments.
We find that many second time arounders have what I call a
“bananas” or extreme
rejection policy—one extreme or the other.
They either reject everybody or they reject no one - sort of “I
can’t get hurt by being rejected if I reject them first.”
Or “Rejection hurts so bad I just couldn’t hurt them by rejecting
them so I pretend I accept them.” I
waste their time and mine and when I get fed up and have resentment enough,
then I reject and “hurt” them. When
you don’t really like them but can’t reject them, then you feel used.
If you are a rejection cripple,
1. You feel defective
when rejected.
2. You are upset, blood
pressure goes up. (Stress)
3. You feel like you
failed or you are a failure.
4. You are “afraid”
of trying again.
5. You won’t let
anyone get really close again; you’ll sabotage the relationship if it gets
close.
6. You hide out at home
a good part of the time; no risk of being rejected there; deal me out of the
game.
7. You reject others in
advance so they can’t reject you. (Let’s
go, nothing but a bunch of losers here.)
8. You date people way
below your capability because you know turkeys won’t reject you.
(No use asking sexy Pat to go to coffee, I’d probably get turned
down. I’ll ask Susy Klutz (or
Harry Slob), I know she’ll accept me.)
9. Date only people you
really don’t like or respect so you won’t get involved and get hurt by
time rejection later.
10. If you are a rejection cripple, rejection causes you great inner
turmoil, the greatest source of tears, etc., physical ailments.
11. You refuse to reject most other people and waste their and your
time because you lack the courage to do such an “awful” thing to someone
else. You
“resent” their wasting your time but refuse to reject them.
12. You are so busy spending too much time with people you refuse to
reject (or refuse to reject you ) to save “hurt” feelings that you
don’t have time to get on to the “special” people you should be
meeting.
There are several grades of rejection:
1. I can’t stand you;
leave me alone.
2. I’ll pretend to
accept you to be nice, but I really don’t like you.
3. I like you, but boy,
have I got a lot of plans to straighten you out.
4. ACCEPTANCE:
I accept you and like you just as you are.
(More
next issue.)
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