Stop Being Mean to People
If you find yourself being mean to other people, you are likely dealing with your own emotional problems. Addressing the source of your negative emotions and making yourself happier in general can help you have a kinder personality. Additionally, learning to communicate with and understand others can help you reduce situations in which you are accidentally mean. You can change your thoughts, feelings, and actions to make yourself a nicer person.
Contents
Steps
Mastering Your Emotions
- Think about why you act mean. Many people are mean to others in order to feel better about themselves.
- You cannot handle your own negative emotions, so you lash out at others.
- Your ego feels threatened, so you are mean as a form of defense.
- You envy someone else’s life or accomplishments, so you want to hurt her.
- You are projecting your own negative feelings about yourself on someone else.
- You are trying to make yourself feel unique and distinct from other people by distinguishing differences between you in a mean way.
However, this approach may not really be effective, especially if you want to be nicer to others. You might lash out at someone, feel better in the moment, but then feel bad about yourself later for lashing out. Other reasons that you are being mean may include:
- Realize that your thoughts, feelings, and actions are connected. It can be difficult to determine what is a thought and what is a feeling. In fact, the two interrelate: your thoughts affect your feelings. Your feelings, in turn, affect your actions. Thus, if you want to change your actions (or words), you can start by first changing your thoughts.
- For example, if you think, “this guy is an idiot!” you may feel frustrated talking to him, and that will come across in your words and actions. If, however, you think “this person needs to learn more about the topic,” you might be more inclined to teach him, and your increased patience will come through your words.
- Remember that even when you feel that you cannot control your thoughts or feelings, you can always choose how to act. Each time you speak or act, you are making a choice about what words and actions you use.
- Gain control of your emotions before you speak. If you are speaking to someone and feel as though you are about to be mean to them, give yourself time to think before you respond. You’re more likely to give the person a productive response (and less likely to be mean) if you allow yourself to use reason first.
- If you are feeling particularly angry, resentful, hurt, or sad, you may want to wait to talk to others. These emotions can stand in the way of positive communication and cause you to lash out at someone else.
- Keep a “be nice” journal. Write entries about how you interacted with people throughout the day. If you had incidents in which you were mean, try to recall details about who you were mean to, why you think you were mean, what you said, and what events led up to the incident. If you were able to be nice to others, particularly in situations in which your tendency would normally be to be mean, then reward yourself for “good behavior.”
- Building a cache of journal entries about your meanness can help you identify whether there are people, events, or environments that seem to “trigger” your tendency to act mean. Identifying your triggers gives you the opportunity to work towards improving in those situations in the future.
- Cultivate a sense of humor. Being able to laugh easily (with people, not at people), can help humor override your tendencies to be mean. If you are beginning to feel impatient and think you might be mean to someone, try to find a reason to laugh. Finding humor in a situation or getting yourself laughing about something else can diffuse the situation by actually changing your body’s chemical reaction from anger or negativity to humor.
- Sleep well at night. You need to get plenty of sleep (at least 7-8 hours) every night to thrive.
- If you have chronic sleep problems, consult your physician or a pharmacist about safe sleep aids. Alternately, making dietary changes, such as reducing caffeine and sugar consumption, or lifestyle changes, such as reducing nighttime screen time, may enable you to sleep better at night.
Being sleep deprived can contribute to a wide range of health problems, including the inability to manage emotions properly. Getting adequate sleep can help you have the patience and understanding to be nice to others regardless of your emotional state.
- Meditate before potentially stressful events or conversations. Meditation can help you regulate your emotions, which can help you be nicer.
- Breathe deeply and slowly. Deep breaths can slow your heart rate and make you feel calmer. Your breaths should be deep enough that your belly extends outwards on the “in” breath.
- Picture a golden-white light filling your body as you breathe in. Picture that light filling and relaxing your mind. When you breathe out, visualize dark, muddy colors leaving your body.
- Once you are calm from your meditation, you should feel more ready to speak to others in a kind way.
If you are feeling as though you might be unkind to someone due to feeling angry or impatient, give yourself a little mental refresher through meditation. Find a private, quiet place, then follow the following sequence:
Being Nicer to Others
- Realize that meanness comes from within. Most people act mean towards others when they themselves feel threatened, demeaned, or bullied. Realizing that when you act mean, it’s really your issue and not someone else’s can help you determine whether your mean words or behavior are appropriate in the situation.
- Develop empathy. Empathy can help you make being kind to others a priority. Empathy can take the form of understanding another’s perspective, feeling distress at the plight of another person, and being able to relate to the emotions of another. Whichever approach you take, be sure that you focus on understanding and relating to the people that you are speaking to.
- Visualize a role model. Find someone whose words and actions inspire you and imagine how she would act or what she would say in a given situation. Then try to emulate that type of communication yourself.
- Smile at people. Smiling at people can make you seem nicer. People will likely smile back at you, and you may find that you cultivate friendships more easily. Smiling can also help you feel happier. Acting happy with good posture and a big smile can actually boost your mood; your thoughts and feelings respond to the action of smiling.
- Use positive body language. Communication is not all about words. Your words can be completely polite while your body language or actions are communicating negativity to others. Negative feelings towards others may be present in your body and send a signal to others that you are unpleasant.
- To have more neutral body language, you may want to try using progressive muscle relaxation—a process by which you tense and then release all of the muscles in your body. This can remove negativity or stress from your body as well as your mind.
- Use assertive expression of your feelings when necessary.
- For example, if your tendency would be to yell at your spouse for not folding your laundry the way you like, you could try assertive expression instead. You might say, “I appreciate your helping me by doing laundry, but it frustrates me that you fold my pants in a way that causes them to wrinkle. I feel unprofessional while wearing wrinkled pants at work. I would really appreciate it if you would fold them more carefully, or if you would just let me wash and fold my own laundry.”
Rather than expressing yourself passively (being angry without saying anything) or aggressively (exploding in a way that may seem disproportionate to the situation), try assertive communication. To practice assertive expression, use the facts involved (not exaggerated by emotion) to communicate requests (rather than demands) of others in a respectful way. Communicate clearly and express your feelings effectively so that everyone’s needs are met.
Improving Your Overall Mood
- Do something you enjoy. Taking care of yourself by indulging in activities that make you happy can help you be nicer to others as well. Doing something you enjoy can improve your mood by distracting you from a bad mood. If you can control your mood, you’re more likely to make reasoned decisions (not emotional decisions) about how to communicate with others.
- Give yourself time alone. Particularly if you are an introvert, you may need to make time alone with yourself from time to time. This can help you be nicer to others because you will feel more refreshed. This can be of particular benefit if your loved ones are the recipients of your mean behavior; taking a break from them may help you be nicer to them.
- Read a book or watch a favorite television show. Studies have shown that having vicarious experiences through others (which happens with both reading and watching well-known characters on a favorite TV show) can make you feel happier. People also experience catharsis, or a second-hand release of emotions, by experiencing events through fictional characters. Releasing emotions in a controlled environment in that way can help you control your emotions in real life.
- Exercise. There is a strong connection between moderate exercise and improved mood.
- Consider practicing yoga. It combines physicality and mindfulness, so it has the benefits of both exercise and meditation. If you can’t get to a yoga studio, try streaming an internet yoga video or downloading a yoga application to your mobile device.
- If you are feeling whimsical, you might try dancing to feel better. Dancing both gives you a bit of an exercise boost and activates the pleasure centers of your brain.
- You may find that getting daily exercise gives you more overall energy, which can help you be productive and patient without getting irritated with other people.
Regular exercise can also help you regulate your emotions in general. All of this can help lead to you feeling happier, which can help you be nicer to others. \
- Eat a healthy meal or snack. Being hungry can make you feel irritable, which can lead you to lash out at others. Eating a nutritious diet full of whole foods can make you feel healthier and happier.
- Include whole grains, fruits, vegetables, and protein in your diet. Getting healthy fats can also make you feel full longer.
- Avoid fat-free and overly processed foods. These often lack adequate nutrition and may leave you feeling dissatisfied.
- Anti-inflammatory foods and those containing Omega-3 fatty acids may particularly contribute to your feeling happier. Some specific foods that fall into this category include leafy greens, avocado, asparagus, walnuts, dark chocolate, and green tea.
- Socialize with a friend. You may be venting your frustrations on others because you feel isolated.
- If you’re unable to get together in person, talking on the phone and having a 2-way conversation (particularly with a funny friend!) can improve your mood quickly.
Spending time with friends in person can be a great way to improve your mood if you are feeling disconnected from others. Go to an early or late lunch, happy hour at your favorite bar, or dinner. If eating out isn’t in your budget, go for a walk with them or visit your local park and sit on the swings and talk.
Tips
- Be the bigger person; you do not have to be mean because someone else is being mean to you.
- Tell yourself constantly that you're a nice person so that your mind begins to accept that you are. Change your behavior accordingly to fit these new standards. Thinking you're one of the "good people" instead of a "bad person" can really make a difference to how you act. Your mind will react positively.
- If you encounter someone who is being mean to you, stand up for yourself, but don't be rude!
- Before you speak, THINK: Is it True, Helpful, Inspiring, Necessary, and Kind?
- Be a good listener. Listen when other people are talking to you.
- Like all habits, this one will be hard to stop. With perseverance, however, your defensive meanness will change.
- Be sincere. Don't be nice as a means to an end. If you just want to be nice so that you can gain preferential treatment, it's quite the opposite of being nice -- it's deceptive, shallow and cruel. Be nice because you want to look back on your life and know that you were a nice person, no matter what.
- Resist judging other people. Judging can be the source of unpleasant thoughts about others, which can come out in your interactions.
- Really think about what you want to say. Don't say the first thing that you think as it won't help your situation.
- Be courteous, patient, observant, and considerate. And be positive. Don't be negative or critical. Keep looking for the positive in any given situation.
- Whatever you do, don't bully.
- Be helpful, nice and kind but if need to give attitude.
- Before doing anything quickly ask yourself: "Will this thought/action/comment make the world a better place for me, or anyone else?" If not - don't do it, and save yourself the repercussions. There's no point expending effort in making yourself or others unhappy.
- It is not necessary to compliment people to stop being mean. You need only speak to them with respect.
Related Articles
- Stop a Mean Girl
- Get Through Tough Times
- Stop Envying Famous People
- Stop Taking Things Personally
- Let Go of Painful Memories
Sources and Citations
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