Have you ever had that one
negative friend who never has anything positive to say? If you have, you will
know that sometimes that negative energy can effect you as well. Life is not as
easy as we think it to be. And sometimes things like negative thoughts make it
more complicated. Specially when people around you are negative. So here are
some ways to deal with them instead of avoiding them.
1. Dig deeper, but stay out
of the hole.
It’s always easier to offer
someone compassion if you try to understand where they’re coming from. But that
can’t completely justify bad behavior. If you show negative people you support
their choice to behave badly by reacting with the same bad behavior, you give
them no real incentive to make a change (which they may actually want deep
down).
It may help to repeat this
in your head when you deal with them: “I understand your pain. But I’m most
helpful if I don’t feed into it.” This might help you approach them with both
kindness and firmness so they don’t bring you down with them.
2. Remember the numbers.
Research shows that people
with negative attitudes have significantly higher rates of stress and disease.
Someone’s mental state plays a huge role in their physical health. If someone’s
making life difficult for people around them, you can be sure they’re doing
worse for themselves.
What a sad reality, that
someone has so much pain inside them they have to act out just to feel some
sense of relief–even if that relief comes from getting a rise out of people.
When you remember how much a difficult person is suffering, it’s easier to stay
focused on minimizing negativity, as opposed to defending yourself.
3. Don’t try to solve or fix
them. Just aim to help them.
This goes back to the ideas
I mentioned above. I know my depressed friend will rant about life’s injustices
as long as I let her. Part of me feels tempted to play amateur psychiatrist,
get her talking, and then try to help her reframe situations into a more
positive light.
Then I remind myself that I
can’t change her whole way of being in one phone call. She has to want that. I
also can’t listen for hours on end, as I’ve done in the past. But I can listen
compassionately for a short while and then help her focus on something positive
right now, in this moment.
4. Maintain the relationship
based on reality as it is.
With my friend, I’m always
wishing she could be more positive. I consistently put myself in situations
where I feel bad because I want to help, because I want her to be happy. I’ve
recently realized the best I can do is accept her as she is, let her know I
believe in her ability to be happy, and then give her space to make the choice.
5. Question what you’re
getting out of it.
Like I mentioned above, we
often get something out of relationships with negative people. Get real honest
with yourself: have you fallen into a caretaker role because it makes you feel
needed? Have you maintained the relationship so you can gossip about this
person in a holier-than-thou way with others? Do you have some sort of stake in
keeping the things the way they are?
Questioning yourself helps
you change the way you respond–which is really all you can control. You can’t
make someone think, feel, or act differently. You can be as kind as possible or
as combative as possible, and still not change reality for someone else. All
you can control is what you think and do–and then do your best to help them
without hurting yourself.
Text not mine;
credits to
credits to
http://theprayingwoman.com/2014/01/15/5-ways-to-deal-with-negative-or-difficult-people/