Recovery from Rejection

by purplesofa 11 Replies latest jw friends

  • purplesofa
    purplesofa

    Thought someone besides me might find this information useful. I think it can be used to help those that are DF, shunned, or just leaving the organization.

    http://www.boblivingstone.com/content/recovering-rejection

    Recovering from Rejection

    We all get rejected at different times in our lives. Our lovers unexpectedly break up with us. Friends terminate relationships sometimes without rhyme or reason. The job that seemed a shoe-in was not to be had. The college you banked on accepting you with open arms sends a terse rejection letter.

    Rejection hurts whether you are prepared for it or not. There is a whole series of emotions you go through when you are snubbed. These emotions are similar to what one goes through while grieving. At first it is extremely difficult to take in the rejection experience. It often feels like being totally abandoned and left to fend for yourself. Denial is the state that occurs here. The rejection does not feel like it actually happened. It feels surrealistic, a trauma someone else is facing, not you.

    The next emotion experienced is rage. You are angry with the person who rejected you. You may feel this anger intently or it may be experienced as more distant. Often the rage becomes self-directed. You express anger at yourself for not being "good enough" for the rejecter. You dwell on second guessing and wondering what could have been. You blame yourself for his leaving and at that point you are indeed broken hearted.

    The next stage, as grief expert Elizabeth Kubler Ross explains, is bargaining. You say to yourself, "If I keep living the clean life, she will come back to me." If I stop smoking, I will be reunited with my boyfriend." The next stage is depression when you begin to realize that the person who rejected you is not coming back. This stage is filled with sadness where the tears fall and the longing ache for the rejecter is realized. Bitterness is also part of depression. It is at this point that you feel extremely resentful that you gave so much of yourself to your lover and now he is gone. You also realize that your vision of your former lover is tainted and he is not the virtuous person that you believed him to be. It feels like he bought the heaviest boots he could find and stomped all over your heart.

    The final stage is acceptance where you understand that the time to dwell on this loss is over and it is time to move on.

    Theses stages don't have any set sequence and you can experience more than one simultaneously. It also takes time to work through rejection. It is not a matter of snapping your fingers in order to instantly remove the pain.

    Some folks are so devastated by rejection that they avoid social situations or other settings that may lead to rejection. They learn to not take any risks that even hint at the possibility of becoming emotionally wounded. There lives become safe, but lacking passion and fulfillment.

    Other folks attempt to escape the pain of rejection through drugs, alcohol, overwork or other nonproductive means of escape.

    Often times the most recent rejection triggers intense memories of earlier rebuffs. Most likely the earlier rejections have not been worked through and resolved. These rejections are experienced as abrupt, horrifying abandonment.

    We are not taught by our parents or society at large how to effectively deal with rejection. First of all, we need to be aware that rejection is an essential facet of life. If we take chances and risks like trying out for a play, writing a book, applying to college or asking out the attractive man, there is the distinct possibility that none of these pursuits will work out. Will your feelings be hurt? Of course they will, but if you don't follow your dreams, your life will be restrictive and perhaps most of all, boring.

    The second truth about facing rejection is that you can recover from it. However, you will never resolve this loss if you push it away through denial or other self-destructive behavior.

    You can take the following steps to recover from rejection:

    1. Be aware of the different stages of grief you are experiencing. You may be experiencing denial, anger, bargaining, depression, bitterness or acceptance. Knowing what stage or stages you are going through help put your loss in perspective and provide a road map for recovery.
    2. Keep repeating to yourself that rejection is part of life and if you continue to pursue your dreams, they will eventually come true. I vividly remember getting stacks of rejection letters from literary agents and publishers. I did feel hopeless at times, but I knew that rejection was as natural as the sun rising and if I kept pursuing my dream of being a published author, it would happen and sure enough it did.
    3. Make plans to actively face the pain of rejection by writing about it in a journal, talking to your friends and family. Don't isolate yourself. Talking and writing about your pain are proactive means for reaching resolution. While isolation and silence prevents the pain from being felt and released.
    4. Begin a regular exercise program and feel the pain of the rejection eventually move through your body until you feel the weight of it lift and float away. When you are exercising, the endorphins are kicking in and you are able to face rejection in a calm, confident manner that does not occur when you are sedentary.

    Bob Livingstone, LCSW, has been a psychotherapist in private practice for almost twenty years. He works with adults, teenagers and children who have experienced traumas such as family violence, neglect and divorce. He works with men around anger issues and adults in recovery from child abuse. He is the author of the critically acclaimed Redemption of the Shattered: A Teenager’s Healing Journey through Sandtray Therapy and the upcoming The Body-Mind-Soul Solution: Healing Emotional Pain through Exercise (Pegasus Books, Aug. 2007). For more information visit www.boblivingstone.com.

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    Good stuff.

    S

  • SnakesInTheTower
    SnakesInTheTower

    bookmarking for later read. thanks purps...

    Snakes ()

  • golf2
    golf2

    Good info. One should remember, everything takes time. We all experience rejection, it's knowing how to cope with it. Thanks for sharing.



  • Preston
    Preston

    I think when it first happens you feel like its the end of the world, but the longer you live you put things in perspective.

    I have had good friends in the past that have fallen off the face of the Earth and have been through the shunning process as a JW and what I have learned is that people are.... pretty much the same all over. You'll find social climbers, people who develop friendships out of convenience, people who cut you off at the drop of a hat. Things like loyalty and kindness are in short supply and this is the era of easy come, easy go.

    People are notorious a-holes when you're in your teens and twenties but when you get older I think time makes monsters of us all and some work on developing their personalities a little bit better.

    That being said, I'm still looking for genuine people.

    - Preston

  • AWAKE&WATCHING
    AWAKE&WATCHING

    Good post purps. Thank you.

  • Hortensia
    Hortensia

    Helpful advice, thank you. I got a little bit of a handle on rejection when I heard a really charismatic sales person talk about rejection. He said it takes 99 rejections to get to the first sale and that is how life is. We need to develop ways to soothe ourselves and move on to the next opportunity. It's an idea that was probably not new to anyone but me, however it helps me frame rejection in a way I can accept. I still get pissed off now and then, but mostly I can handle it now. Well, that's brave talk. I still prefer self-employment because job interviews are painful. So I don't handle that kind of rejection very well, do I?

  • Devilsnok
    Devilsnok

    Spot on Preston!

  • free2think
    free2think

    Good post Purps, thanks for sharing the info.

  • AnneB
    AnneB

    That article seemed to me to be playing "one up"; that the person (or group) doing the rejecting had the freedom to reject an individual and that individual had no choice but to learn to accept and cope.

    That's all very fine for when the person has a "right" of rejection, but what about when they don't?

    In cases of DF'ing the rejection is mandated by people who don't have a real right to force their decision on anyone else, but do, so that 6 million+ people will reject an individual without ever really making up their own minds whether they want to or not.

    What about people who are too immature to really know what they are rejecting as in the case of a child or an ill-informed person?

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