An effective way to deal with people who put us down is to let them hang themselves.
Avoid responding.
Avoid expressing feelings of hurt, surprise or disgust.
Just let them stew in their own meanness.
No response is the right response, but it doesn’t mean put up with their abuse. If someone consistently tries to put you down, you need to get away from them.
But sometimes the put down artist is family or an employer who is hard to get away from.
Make plans to remove yourself from the situation – even if it is family that is putting you down.
When I was in college, I was fortunate enough to get a job at the big ABC TV affiliate in Philadelphia on camera.
Back on campus, a fellow student in the communications program got me aside and said, “How did YOU get that job?” I went nuts. He then owned me and made me feel bad about something that was really good.
Later in life I learned to use humor to nullify put down artists when I was appointed a professor of music industry at USC, a “friend” of mine said, “How did YOU become a professor?”
My response was “I guess they offered the job to everyone else first and no one was left” making fun of the put down artist who I thought was a friend.
One more thing – never believe a put down. Even if there is a kernel of truth to it.
The only person who should have access to your mind should be you. No one else gets to record negative thoughts directly in your brain.
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