How does rejection affect the brain? How can
you overcome the feelings of being rejected?
Rejection
is a type of social-emotional hurt—a loss of something you wanted or thought
you wanted. Sadness is the emotion that helps you recover from a loss. To
change the way you feel, you must change the way you think, because feelings
always follow thoughts. According to research from Case Western Reserve
University, exposure to rejection led participants to have an immediate drop of
30 percent in cognition or mental reasoning and a 25 percent drop in IQ—which
can make it difficult to process the experience in a rational and timely
manner. Fortunately, as you recover from the hurt, the drop in cognition and IQ
can reverse. A few sessions with a good counselor often can assist with recovery from rejection. I think of
it like this: some people will always reject you; some will accept you some of
the time, but all will never accept you all the time—and really, you don’t
accept all people all the time. Here is my brain’s opinion: it is most
important to first accept yourself. Think of anything beyond that as a bonus.
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