jhonny9546
Master Don Juan
What’s the best way to deal with people you consider toxic, the ones you have to keep seeing or talking to because of work, family, or everyday life?
Think of ex-partners who share kids, coworkers you can’t stand, or two friends in the same group who secretly hate each other. Modern life makes this even trickier, it’s not just about real-life interactions anymore, but also social media, messaging, and visibility online.
So, we must develop tools to handle these relationships while protecting our peace of mind.
I’ve been thinking about two main approaches:
A) Selective approach: You categorize people in your life. For each new connection, you decide whether they belong in your inner circle or just your acquaintance zone. You manage your social media accordingly, close friends see your stories, your real thoughts, your private posts; acquaintances see almost nothing. It’s a structured way to protect your emotional space.
B)Free approach: You live freely and openly. You treat everyone kindly and help where you can, but you follow one rule: If someone ghosts you, disrespects you, you cut them off completely, both online and offline. No drama, just clean boundaries. But It’s a black and white way of protecting your peace.
It would be awesome to understand which mindset leads to a calmer, more focused life, withouth anxiety about it, one where you spend less mental energy worrying about others and more time building yourself. We all meet manipulators or narcissists along the way. Recognizing them is already a win, but how should we act once we do?
We should have an infrastructure about it.
You don’t want these defense mechanisms to make You paranoid or fake.
Ideally, You want them to strengthen, to protect your genuine nature, not distort it.
Think of ex-partners who share kids, coworkers you can’t stand, or two friends in the same group who secretly hate each other. Modern life makes this even trickier, it’s not just about real-life interactions anymore, but also social media, messaging, and visibility online.
So, we must develop tools to handle these relationships while protecting our peace of mind.
I’ve been thinking about two main approaches:
A) Selective approach: You categorize people in your life. For each new connection, you decide whether they belong in your inner circle or just your acquaintance zone. You manage your social media accordingly, close friends see your stories, your real thoughts, your private posts; acquaintances see almost nothing. It’s a structured way to protect your emotional space.
B)Free approach: You live freely and openly. You treat everyone kindly and help where you can, but you follow one rule: If someone ghosts you, disrespects you, you cut them off completely, both online and offline. No drama, just clean boundaries. But It’s a black and white way of protecting your peace.
It would be awesome to understand which mindset leads to a calmer, more focused life, withouth anxiety about it, one where you spend less mental energy worrying about others and more time building yourself. We all meet manipulators or narcissists along the way. Recognizing them is already a win, but how should we act once we do?
We should have an infrastructure about it.
You don’t want these defense mechanisms to make You paranoid or fake.
Ideally, You want them to strengthen, to protect your genuine nature, not distort it.