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Hypersensitive People
I am the worst employee.
No man will ever love me.
I’m so stupid.
I deserved it. We've all echoed downer declarations like this at some point in our lives. They are the very real reactions from anyone who has faced rejection.
Being fired from a job, going through a bad break-up, or not being accepted to your first choice college is simply part of life. It stings, makes us question ourselves, sometimes teaches us and toughens us. But, eventually, after the new job, the stronger marriage, the hard-earned graduate degree, that rejection is just a passing scene in the rear-view mirror.
But, for those who are overly sensitive to rejection, these experiences can leave a lasting impression, so much so, that all encounters are spun negatively. While most of us can just adapt to rejection and take it in stride, others are deeply affected by even the slightest snub, real or imagined. A handshake not firmly returned, an email unanswered, an elevator door not held, exclusionary conversation among the other dinner guests all may feel like emotional deportation to a person hypersensitive to rejection.
Rejection
According to Linda Stafford, Ph.D., the issue comes down not so much to the rejection itself, but how the person chooses to interpret the experience of being rejected. Her recently published study, “Interpersonal Rejection Sensitivity: Toward Exploration of a Construct,” in Issues in Mental Health Nursing explores the concept of the hypersensitive person’s reaction to rejection.
“Everyone gets rejected ? one way or another, at some time or another,” says Stafford, an assistant professor of nursing at The University of Texas School of Nursing at Houston. “Some people are just more sensitive than others.”
Childhood messages live on The way we see ourselves ? positively or negatively ? can be traced back to our childhoods and may be related to the way our parents or caregivers raised us. “Our sense of self or self-concept certainly is very much related to early experiences and continued experiences through growth and development,” Stafford says. “When you think back on some of your earliest memories of your parents, other adults, and your peers saying positive things about you, those became part of what’s called a self system.
Messages
You learned to expect that it’s not impossible for positive things to occur in your life.” However, she continues, “if you were given predominantly negative messages ? ‘bad girl’ or ‘bad boy’ ? those can follow you through life.” Any message delivered consistently enough, often enough, can become a pattern, constructive or destructive. A poor or strong self-image is in part built by message patterns that children receive?and reverberate into adulthood. Stafford explains that becoming overly sensitive to rejection is likely caused by a continuous pattern of negative experiences. “Chances are one incident is not going to change one’s whole self concept,” she says.
“It’s more likely to be cumulative experiences through the years that lead a person to misinterpret all negative events as being validation of their own lack of self worth,” Stafford says. The negative interpretations morph into proof that they are undesirable “and no one will want to be around them in an intimate, social, or occupational relationship.” A domino affect eventually flattens the hypersensitive person, corrodes their relationships or reinforces the very fears of rejection that plague them. In effect, as Stafford describes in her paper, “Such cognitions tend to confirm the reality of the feared rejection by others, often referred to as a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Reframing the picture
” “Rejection is an inevitable part of life, but it’s how we interpret these events mentally and how we respond to them that makes a big difference,” Stafford continues. “A person who already has a good sense of self would frame it very differently.” Take the young college woman who wants to join a particular sorority but ultimately isn’t invited to pledge. Stafford gives two examples of how the woman could choose to interpret this form of rejection. “One person might say, ‘Well, there are other sororities, and I know I’m a worthwhile person, and this doesn’t change who I am,’” she says.
“The hypersensitive person might say, ‘My mother and sisters were in that sorority. I’m a complete failure. No one will ever want me.’ Scenario Two: A software engineering company downsized 20 percent of its employees to cut costs. “One person will take it as, ‘This had nothing to do with my productivity as a worker. It was a corporate decision, and I will assertively seek out a new job,’” she says. “Whereas, the hypersensitive person will think, ‘This is just one more example of how inadequate I am. If I had really been as good as I should be I wouldn’t have been one of the people laid off.’”
See? I knew you’d leave People’s immediate reactions to dealing with rejection can vary from sadness and depression to isolation and even aggression. “Some people will feel guilty and ashamed, and others will respond in very angry and negative ways,” she says. “There are a lot of paths a person can take.” Further fear of being rejected may lead to forming types of coping mechanisms, like avoiding meeting new people or limiting social interactions to situations where they feel most comfortable. “The individual creates barriers to forming and maintaining relationships, which may be conveyed to others through avoiding new experiences, such as always having an excuse for not attending a social function,” Stafford says.
“People who are avoidant very much want a relationship or they want to be engaged with people, but the thought of being rejected is so painful that they will really isolate themselves.” Not getting invited to a friend’s dinner party, being overlooked for that sweet promotion, or never receiving the promised “I’ll call you” phone call can lead anyone to feel unwanted, at least temporarily. However, for the person who is hypersensitive to rejection, experiences like these seem to snowball. A person who expects rejection is likely to get it. Stafford writes, “Responses of family, friends and intimates that were initially supportive to the individual can change to frustration and detachment,” which eventually emotionally drains and distances these loved ones from the hypersensitive person.
“These individuals not only come to expect rejection but are hypervigilant to the slightest implication that they are less than adequate in some aspect of work performance or social skills, as well as in intimate relationships,” Stafford says. “It’s almost as though they are looking for evidence that they are not regarded as well as their peers.” Sensitivity to rejection operates on a continuum from mild forms of anxiety to individuals who live with the fear of being rejected.
For those with intense sensitivity to rejection, Stafford says help can be found through therapy where the person can learn more effective ways to think about rejection. Through awareness and support, we can offer help, too. “People who experience this relatively mildly, you would hope that others will see this as a call to be supportive and sensitive,” she says. “If you know someone who you feel is interpreting everything in a very rigid, good/bad, black/white, manner, challenge them on that. If someone is interpreting her life very negatively, challenge the person to reframe her thoughts ? not only about herself but how she interprets events with other people and all those things we have to deal with.”


J. E