For proof that rejection, exclusion, and acceptance are central
to our lives, look no farther than the living room, says Nathan Dewall, a
psychologist at the University of Kentucky. “If you turn on the television set,
and watch any reality TV program, most of them are about rejection and
acceptance,” he says. The reason, DeWall says, is that acceptance—in
romantic relationships, from friends, even from strangers—is absolutely
fundamental to humans.
In a new paper published in Current
Directions in Psychological Science, a journal of the
Association for Psychological Science, DeWall and coauthor Brad J. Bushman of
Ohio State University review recent psychological research on social
acceptance and rejection. “Although psychologists have been interested in close
relationships and what happens when those relationships go awry for a very long
time, it’s only been about 15 yrs that psychologists have been doing this work
on exclusion and rejection,” DeWall says. The results have highlighted how
central acceptance is to our lives.
DeWall thinks belonging to a group was probably helpful to our
ancestors. We have weak claws, little fur, and long childhoods; living in a
group helped early humans survive harsh environments. Because of that, being
part of a group still helps people feel safe and protected, even when walls and
clothing have made it easier for one man to be an island entire of himself.
But acceptance has an evil twin: rejection. Being
rejected is bad for your health. “People who feel isolated and lonely and
excluded tend to have poor physical health,” DeWall says. They don’t sleep
well, their immune systems sputter, and they even tend to die sooner than
people who are surrounded by others who care about them.
Being excluded is also associated with poor mental health, and
exclusion and mental health problems can join together in a destructive loop.
People with depression may face exclusion more often because of the symptoms of
their disorder—and being rejected makes them more depressed, DeWall says.
People with social anxiety navigate their world constantly worried about being socially
rejected. A feeling of exclusion can also contribute to suicide.
Exclusion isn’t just a problem for the person who suffers it,
either; it can disrupt society at large, DeWall says. People who have been
excluded often lash out against others. In experiments, they give people much
more hot sauce than they can stand, blast strangers with intense noise, and
give destructive evaluations of prospective job candidates. Rejection can even
contribute to violence. An analysis of 15 school shooters found that all but
two had been socially rejected.
It’s important to know how to cope with rejection. First of all,
“We should assume that everyone is going to experience rejection on a
semi-regular basis throughout their life,” DeWall says. It’s impossible to go
through your entire life with everyone being nice to you all the time. When you
are rejected or excluded, he says, the best way to deal with it is to seek out
other sources of friendship or acceptance. “A lot of times, people keep
these things to themselves because they’re embarrassed or they don’t think it’s
that big of a deal,” he says. But our bodies respond to rejection like they do
to physical pain; the pain should be taken seriously, and it’s fine to seek out
support. “When people feel lonely, or when people feel excluded or rejected,
these are things they can talk about,” he says.
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