Mean people are all around.
They lie in wait hoping to spring their meanness on others.
They can be avoided. Simply don’t do anything productive and they will leave you alone.
Yet try doing something. Try producing art. Try taking a stand. Make an attempt to make the world better and you will be ambushed.
Mean people are like wasps. They take movement as a threat so they attack. Stay still and you are safe. Move and you are the enemy. (See: Don’t Be a Facebook Piranha)
Good people, however, have to move. We have to fix problems, find solutions, challenge the status quo. Good people can’t stay silent when injustice abounds. We can’t sit still when there is work to be done. We can’t do nothing when there is art to create.
Good people must act.
Mean people will attack the actors.
Which leaves one relevant question: how do we deal with mean people?
The most powerful approach to mean people is to simply ignore them.
It doesn’t always work.
It isn’t always an option. (See: The Ends Don’t Justify the Mean)
Yet far more often than we realize, the best thing to do with a mean person is to do nothing.
Ignoring someone has great power, because most mean people are looking for attention.
Like a two-year old who hasn’t learned how to get attention in a positive way, they get attention the only way they know how—by acting out.
Obviously a parent can’t ignore every bad action by a child, but energy is better spent by engaging good behavior and ignoring bad behavior.
Ignore what you can.
- Don’t respond to rude comments.
- Don’t react to obvious slights.
- Don’t passive-aggressively write a Facebook post about them.
Simply ignore bad behavior.
When ignoring is not an option and you have to respond, consider the following:
Don’t fight fire with fire. Mean people do not give you the right to act mean. By doing so, you become no different than them.
Don’t play the one-upmanship game. The danger of responding to a mean person is the temptation is to be more mean than them. They are then tempted to be more mean than you. Eventually the ugly conversation turns brutal.
Be firm. There is a difference between being mean and being firm. The first is inappropriate; the second is necessary. Mean people are used to walking over people; they are not used to someone standing firm. Stand firm. Be unmoved by how they respond. You are in charge of your emotions; do not hand control of yourself over to them. (See: The Number One Rule of Disagreement)
The meaner they get, the kinder you get. Make it a game. Mean people want others to be mean so they can justify themselves. Kindness takes away the justification.
Love. The command to love is not saved for only those who love you first. Just because someone is mean doesn’t give you the freedom to stop loving them. Remember, Love Doesn’t Always Feel Loving so don’t confuse being walked over for true love. But do figure out the most loving action to take toward the person and love them.
Mean people are all around, but their meanness says more about them than it does you. Rick Warren says, “hurt people hurt people.” When a mean person tries to hurt you, remember they are the ones who are hurting.
For more, check out:
10 Responses to How to Respond to Mean People
Linda Scarbrough July 18, 2013
While in the nursing home visiting my sister. A woman who is over 90 and Christian bent to make everyone at the nursing home abide by her (Christian) rules.
But needless to say, I was caught up with this mean and angry woman who attacks with malice.
Then as you said above Kevin, I tried to hold my ground with this woman, all the time she became meaner and meaner.
I walked away thinking of the test I failed.
How this woman’s meanness was placed in my heart.
I thank you for your words of wisdom and pray that I can do something kind for this woman. There is no question she is angry and mean for a reason.
Dan La Rue November 13, 2015
Kevin I hear what you are saying, But it won’t always work that way. Some times the nicer you are to someone the meaner they get. they won’t always let you walk away. These people think you are weak and won’t leave you alone. Its kind of like the big guy picking on the little guy. The big guy likes to push and shove. and you can’t get away. Its like going into a battle with out a gun. It just won’t work. If every one is like you are it would be a perfect world. The little guy has to learn how to protect his self with out causing a fight. And that is hard to do. after you have proved your self, you can be nice and walk away. That mean person needs to be able to look at you and know he can’t push you around. You are a nice person, and could go any place and work with out any problems. But there is always that one person that likes to cause a problem. In all the years I worked in management I could pick this person out. and that was the person that I would try to win-over. If you can make this person feel good about his or her self the rest will fall in place. You Know they say there is some good in every one. But you just have to find it. The mean person will always pay the price, They are really the weak ones.and strong people are not always the big person. But you still need to know when to walk away.
KAS December 21, 2015
I failed the test too but, this article was helpful. Sometimes we forget to do the right things ourselves. Ignoring people has not helped me, but I do try.
tani March 4, 2016
dan la rue,
i agree with you,they think you are weak
Jeff warren June 9, 2016
Jeff
Resently l’ev been ln contact with several mean people. And didn’t respond back in the same maner. But later was angery at myself. So thank you for the encouragement. And reminding me why God transformed me.
tuckerfamily July 3, 2016
i have a mean familys slap people in face