Learning to Face Rejection
My longest adult relationship before marriage lasted about a year. But it limped along for six months too long.
For quite some time after we broke up, I wanted to blame him for my heartbreak, for all the ways that the break-up shaped the next few years of my life. After all, he was the one who kept waffling, telling me he liked me, telling me he might fall in love with me, but then saying he just didn鈥檛 know yet.
His fault, right?
Of course, it鈥檚 not that simple.
I was the one who stuck around hoping that he would fall in love with me, believing鈥攚ithout a shred of evidence鈥攖hat the more I tried and the harder I pulled for us, eventually his feelings would catch up. I put all my hopes into the relationship, investing so much of my energy, my plans, myself.
And the more I clung, the more fear took over.
I was afraid that if we broke up I鈥檇 never find anyone else. I was afraid of being alone. I was afraid of being hurt. I was afraid of feeling unworthy and unloved. For whatever silly reason in my 23-year-old brain, I thought that this was my last chance for love.
At the root of it all I was afraid of being rejected and of what that would say about who I was.
The Sting of the Slam
Eventually, my fears were realized. He broke up with me. I remember him saying something like, 鈥淎ny two people could probably make it work if they had to, but it wouldn鈥檛 make for a good relationship. Don鈥檛 take this as a slam, but you鈥檙e just not right for me.鈥
I took it as a slam.
He was right, though. Sure, he should have done some things differently鈥攂ut I should have too. I was so afraid of rejection that I hung on to a relationship that was doomed three or four months after it began. I saw the signs of unhealth from the outset but refused to acknowledge them: the conversations that were like pulling teeth; the complete lack of overlap in interests, hobbies, and outlooks; the wariness of my friends and family who were looking on; not to mention the fact that we were on completely different pages when it came to how committed we were to the relationship.
My fear of rejection ruled me. I was too afraid to break up with him. And I was afraid that if I mentioned the red flags, he鈥檇 break up with me. It was a sinking ship, but darn it鈥擨 was goin鈥 down with the boat.
Risking Rejection
I鈥檓 not exactly sure when my fear of rejection began. The above example, while highlighting the idol my fear of rejection became, is certainly not the only story I could share. I鈥檓 full of examples in which my fear of rejection takes on gargantuan proportions. If it鈥檚 not sinful, it at least toes the line. Of course no one likes rejection. But when you fool yourself into staying in an unhealthy, doomed relationship, you have a problem. It could stem from my desire to avoid conflict or my need to be liked, or maybe it鈥檚 an offshoot of my fear of failure. More likely it鈥檚 all of those things rolled together.
But it is not a very winsome quality. It can come across, at best, as skittishness caused by discomfort, and, at worst, as clingy and desperate. And it can manifest itself in so many ways. It can keep you from seeking out actually fulfilling relationships or a new job, or stop you from simply being yourself. It hinders just about any choice or decision that isn鈥檛 a sure thing; it sneaks its way into interactions and relationships and choices of all sorts and is the impetus for lost opportunities. It keeps us from living authentically and fully and confidently.
And God certainly wants us to be confident. Not the confidence that assumes we鈥檙e entitled to whatever we ask for, but the confidence that comes by trusting him. Trusting in the gifts God鈥檚 given us, trusting that he wants the best for us, trusting that he won鈥檛 lead us astray.
When I refuse to say something or speak up for myself because I鈥檓 afraid of rejection, I am brazenly refusing to trust God. I am saying to God that it鈥檚 more important for me to maintain my fragile ego than it is to follow him and trust in his goodness and grace. Because the truth is that if I do step boldly into something uncomfortable鈥攊f I do face the possibility of rejection and it comes to pass鈥攎ost of the time, all I really risk is a hit to my pride. And if we can鈥檛 even risk that, what will happen when God asks us to risk even more?
Trying to Trust
These days I鈥檓 not afraid of losing a relationship, but I am still afraid of rejection. My path away from fear is long and slow and seemingly never-ending; my fears change but the struggle continues. Here鈥檚 just one example: I have always loved to take on artistic pursuits, but I鈥檓 afraid of where they鈥檒l lead鈥攐r, rather, I鈥檓 afraid they won鈥檛 lead anywhere. I have a stash of unfinished stories, novels that haven鈥檛 gotten further than one page (or sometimes one paragraph), and dozens more ideas percolating in my imagination. But rarely do I even write my ideas down. Forget all the rejections from publishers I鈥檇 be likely to receive if I were to finish a story; I鈥檓 afraid of what anyone would say. It cripples me before I even begin. And that is a waste of a gift God has given me. What a shame.
But I keep moving forward with hope, trusting that, with God鈥檚 help, each time I make the choice to risk rejection, I am overcoming my fear.
Of course, even if we do overcome the fear of rejection, we are still not promised an easy road. There鈥檚 no guarantee of a perfect relationship, or a perfect career, or a perfect life. The path ahead will be bumpy鈥攖hat we can be sure of. But we are always asked to trust in the goodness of God.
It is as simple and as complex as that.
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