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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

How To Break Through: Overcome Rejection!

Any kind of rejection, no matter if it's in love, your career, friends, a book proposal or anything else, is not something that should affect how happy you are. Rejection doesn't feel great and sometimes it feels unfathomable but it shouldn't be something you permit to take away happiness from your life. The suffering that happens when rejection occurs comes from over-thinking the "loss" that you feel you're suffering, be it loss of an opportunity, loss of a special relationship or loss of some other kind. The reality of life is that rejection will form a part of it––there will be occasions when your job application, your date request or your ideas for change will be rejected by someone, somewhere. It is a healthy attitude to accept that rejection is a part of life and to acknowledge that what really matters is finding the way to bounce back and try again.



Acknowledge that anyone can be rejected:Moreover, rejection is happening all around you, all of the time. In other words, you are not alone. Clearly, you'd have preferred that it didn't happen but it has, yet no matter who you are, rejection will happen now and then. Trying to avoid it will limit your life's experience, not improve it.

Allow yourself to feel bad initially:It is normal to feel bad, so don't try to bottle up your disappointment and sadness. However, don't allow yourself to feel this way for too long––you risk coloring your future endeavors with a negative impression if you start seeing this as something that will happen again, no matter what you do. You still have control, you still have an opportunity to learn from this experience and to approach the future wiser and more fortified.

Understand that ongoing feelings of sorrow are self-delusions:For example, if the rejection you've experienced is that someone has turned you down for a date, your continuing sorrow is a reflection of believing that you need that person in your life to feel happy. This isn't true. Being around a person, talking to people, kissing a girlfriend––these are all just pleasures. They can certainly bring you temporary happiness, but they're not permanent and they don't define your own choices to be happy within. If you continue to think that these pleasures are what constitute true happiness, you will keep fooling yourself into believing that you should feel terrible because you don't have the person or didn't get the opportunity. This chase for a pleasure based solely on what you haven't got can easily become an addiction that only brings you more sorrow in the long run.
  • Pleasures are temporary, they come and go and have no permanent place in your life. Understanding this will help you to understand that pleasures aren't the source of your happiness. Being happy is an internal process, something that comes from within. By realizing that rejection isn't loss of your inner happiness, you won't make yourself suffer.
  • There are only two ways your mood can be affected by others. Either you could have been chosen to be with someone or to do something and you'll add the pleasure of that experience to your already happy life; or, you'll experience rejection, yet importantly, nothing will have changed in your existing happiness in life––brief disappointment is normal but your happiness level should remain constant.
  • Life is not about being sad and looking for things to make you happy. It's case of being happy and taking part in pleasures that give you a boost to your already happy life.
Do not take rejection personally:This commonly stated phrase is not at odds with the fact that the rejection probably feels very personal. The point behind this sentiment is that you are often at the receiving end of something far more complex than what you're able to ascertain. To you, it's a simple case of a "no" to your request, proposal, hopes and dreams. To you, there may be weeks, months or years of planning, dreaming and readying yourself behind your request. And yet, there are still two sides to this tale: First, the person doing the rejecting is often unaware of the costs to you in terms of time, resources and energy expended. And even if that person is aware of this, you're probably even less aware of what the person doing the rejection has to account for when reaching a decision to decline your request. For example, a person may reject your request for a date because he is still disentangling himself from a long-distance relationship that he doesn't like to talk about openly. Or, an employer receives 5,000 equally excellent applications from people who have striven as hard and as bravely as you have and she has had to use very basic reasons for rejecting most of the pile in order to be able to cope with the influx of applications. Or, your oil painting might not have been accepted because the gallery has to account for ensuring variety for viewers between watercolors and oils and it had to take a tough decision because there was an imbalance of too many oils and not enough watercolors.

Often rejection is based in either the complexity of feelings of the decider or the complexity of the situation before the decider. It is more likely to be logistics, a need for simplicity, an inner uncertainty or a temporary lack of attraction that brings about rejection, as opposed to pure dislike of you or disbelief in your abilities, worthiness or acceptability. And even if you do find out that you've been rejected because your efforts are not up to a standard they need to be, this is not about your sense of worthlessness––it's about needing to keep learning, experimenting and growing into your full potential. Do not make rejection into a case of questioning your own worth––that's basically what it means to not take rejection personally.

  • Be careful if you're a "they should" thinker. This style of thinking requires people to behave in a certain way, as in "they should recognize how brilliant/talented/extraordinary I am". Leaving aside whether or not you're actually doing enough to prove the things you feel others should be seeing in you, this kind of thinking gives away power––yours––to other people and leaves you in a position of relying on their acceptance of you for you to feel good about yourself. This slippery slope thinking style risks turning rejection into a regular occurrence in your life because you keep setting yourself up to be judged and found wanting.
  • Be conscious that many people feel bad when they have to reject a request. Few people reject requests from spite or for sheer entertainment.

  • If someone rejects you, respect his or her wishes and wish him or her only good in life:You do not need to completely avoid the person (or the organization, business, etc. of which this person is a part). The people who reject you are not a necessity to life, but this doesn't mean you should hate them. Why? Because it will bring you more pleasure to wish good for others than to hate them. Try it. Hatred inflicts pain onto your own life and causes you to let the rejection take up residence in your head.
    • If you're rejected by a person, do not blame or hate him or her, even if he or she was nasty about it. Once a relationship has ended or failed to fire, there is no point in crying and making a big deal about it, since you do not need it to feel happy. You may be disappointed that the opportunities with that person have failed to materialize, but realize you didn't "need" the person to make you whole in the first place, you'll find it much easier to wish him or her only good in life. You'll feel much better (and saner) if you hold friendly feelings.
    • If your opinion does not change about the person, then there is no need to avoid him or her. If you still get some pleasure out of speaking to them, then why leave? It cannot hurt you if this person decides to not speak to you, because you haven't missed out on the real happiness in your life. You've missed out on the temporary boost that being with this person would have given you.
    • Stay polite. Whatever else is going on inside of you, be polite externally. It won't win you any favors to have an outburst or to insist in an intimidating way that the person rejecting rethink his or her approach. Politeness and patience will let people see your grace and determination to keep going.
    Avoid falling into the trap of living in hope that the person who rejected you will change his or her mind:There is nothing wrong with a faint hope that this may be the case but to be consumed by the possibility will cause you to put your life on hold and not progress on your own terms. Do not feel that you need the person to change his or her mind for things to turn right for you––you will only end up torturing yourself. If a person rejected you for a lack of attraction to you, that will likely not change and forcing it will only bring unhappiness. If a person rejected you because he or she didn't feel that you fitted the corporate culture of the workplace, that's unlikely to change if your CV is filled with the opposite of what they're looking for. It's best to simply accept that that opportunity is passed by and to move on, wiser in the knowledge of where you are likely to be more successful in making your future requests.

    Review the possibilities: In some cases, you may have a lot of control over why you were rejected. For example, perhaps you were sloppy in the way you filled out a form, or perhaps you didn't complete the right course to get promoted. In such cases, take the constructive advice that the rejection is offering and build on it to improve your lot. There is absolutely no need to sabotage your future––there are always things you can actively change. This includes such things as getting a job or promotion, sharing your portfolio around, nailing a team position and even relationships. And while you can't change whether or not a person is attracted to you, you can definitely improve your own grooming and manners, which might just improve the other person's feelings toward you. Even if it doesn't, provided you do things to improve your own sense of well-being and confidence without relying on any person to bring you happiness, then you'll attract more positive opportunities into your life.
    • Sometimes you need to ask why you were rejected, especially where there are no reasons given. Don't be shy. If it's a commercial transaction, anything from being accepted to business school to having your necklaces displayed at a craft show, there will always be people in charge to whom you can talk directly or by email. They may well give you tips or advice on what you need to do to improve your chances next time round. Most of all, don't be afraid to ask them if they're willing to coach or mentor you, or at the very least, to review your application/work/efforts, etc. before submitting or requesting next time. Most people are genuinely impressed by a person willing to learn and improve. (Just remember to be reasonable in how much you ask of others––everyone is busy.)
    Try again: In most cases, it is worth trying again. Perhaps the main exception to this is in trying to force love––only try again to ask a person on a date if you're sure that both of you have reached a greater understanding and awareness between one another and you're approaching the new request with maturity and full acceptance that rejection may well be the outcome again. In the case of jobs, sales, applications, etc., trying again is usually the only way to get ahead.
    • Some clubs, jobs and the like will ask you if you have applied before. Don't be dissuaded by such a question––it is only in the cases where the place makes it clear that "previous applicants need not apply" that they won't give you a second chance. Even then you might do well to get hold of someone in charge and find out why this hurdle exists and how you can get around it. Tenacity should be your number one motivation when overcoming rejection.
    • Be aware that rejection is sometimes used as a filter to get rid of people who lack enthusiasm and determination. In some cases, the fact that you turn up and won't take no for an answer will count very much in your favor!
    Always remember, you do not need anything external to feel happy:
    Things can only bring you temporary happiness. The only permanent happiness is found in understanding this and in acknowledging the awesomeness of being alive.

    Source

    5 comments:

    1. Rejction is such a bad feeling

      ReplyDelete
    2. i usually feel a little bit insecure, but its only happened to me once or twice,

      ReplyDelete
    3. At first I was sad, but at the advice of my friend, I started to collect rejections
      and not it's not so bad

      ReplyDelete
    4. Everyone is different and reacts differently because there are always going to be exceptions on getting a job or what not

      ReplyDelete

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