HOW TO KNOW IF YOU’RE THE TOXIC PERSON EVERYONE’S TRYING TO AVOID
While it’s true
that other people’s opinions about us don’t matter in the way we fear they
might, it’s also true that other people’s collective response to us can tell us
pretty much everything we need to know about who we are.
It is a brutal
course in self-awareness, to realize the pattern in the way people react to us
so much about how we are in the world.
And yet it is so
true.
It’s a good sight that you’re
willing to wonder how your actions affect other people. The most toxic among us
are also the least self-aware. They are the last to admit that they are the
problem.
If you are a toxic
person, you’re not going to resonate with the warning signs that are listed for
people trying to identify one in their lives. If you’re well enough to at least
recognize it and try to work on your poor relationships with other people, you
will likely resonate with any of the following.
·
You have severe social anxiety and fear of public humiliation.
·
You avoid and criticize people as a means of dominating them.
·
When friend share part of their lives with you, you pick out
what’s wrong rather than expressing happiness for them.
·
You are constantly trying to coach of “fix” the friend or
family member with whom you have a poor relationship. You are constantly
harping on why their behavior is unacceptable, but at the same time you don’t
remove yourself from your relationship with them.
·
You have very few friends, and are highly attached to the ones
that you do.
·
You only express love or admiration when you need something.
·
In the past year, you have not once admitted to another
person, I was wrong, I will do better.
·
You oscillate between feelings as though you have a grandiose,
god-like purpose on Earth, and feeling as though you are one of the most
disgusting, unworthy beings to ever exist.
·
You do not get along with many people fundamentally, but you
know you’re able to charm them into liking you one way or another.
·
You notice that people tend to step away from relationships
with you, and seemingly avoid you.
·
Many people have negative things to say about you, but there
seems to be a consensus about what those negative things are, and you seem to
make enemies virtually everywhere you go.
·
You are at least marginally aware of past trauma that’s
keeping you feeling vulnerable, exhausted and in pain almost all of the time.
Whether or not any
of the above resonates with you, the final litmus test is this: are you a
consistently negative presence in someone’s life, and yet seem to always manage
to convince them to keep you around? Are you at least somewhat aware
that you’re hurting someone, and yet feel too afraid to apologize, or stop?
The first thing
you need to know is that you are not alone, you are okay, but you have a lot of
healing to do.
Your toxicity in
your relationships with other people is actually an extension of the toxicity
in your relationship to yourself. What you have is not an issue with how you
relate to others, but a fundamental trauma that is preventing you from being at
ease within yourself. That is what you must address. You can enlist the help of
a medical professional to help you, and in fact, you should.
But the first thing you
need to do is listen. If someone tells you that you are hurting them, do not
respond with a list of reasons why you are not.
Do not deny that
you are negatively impacting someone’s life if they claim you are. People do
not say such things for no reason.
Right now, empathy
might feel like too huge of a shift to fathom. That’s okay, you don’t have to
begin there. Start, instead, with trying to have compassion for yourself, and
gently removing yourself from relationships in which you are not a positive presence
in another person’s life.
The coming weeks,
months and even years will be a time for you to spend by yourself, sorting out
your own traumas. You are not hurting others because you are a bad person, you
are hurting others as a defense mechanism. That doesn’t make it okay, but it
does give you an explanation.
And most
importantly, it means that you have to heal.
If not for
yourself, but for the sake of others.
Do not allow your
legacy to end like this. Do not allow your life to be like this.
Apologizing is a
start, but it doesn’t solve the problem. The work that is yours is to change
who you are. It is time to be selfish in the sense that it’s time for you to
stop worrying about what’s wrong with everyone around you and start really
focusing on what needs to change within you first.
The happier you
are, the kinder you will be. You are not helpless, you’re just wounded. There is
a light, and you can see it.
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