1. Seeking The Validation Of Others
As much as life is about the people you spend it with, you should not be reliant on them to make you feel happy.
If you are constantly looking for the reassuring approval and validation of a third party, you will never truly find peace.
You must, instead, realize that the only opinions that really matter are the ones you have of yourself.
Nobody else can give you the self assurance and confidence that you desire.
2. Participating In Drama
Drama can only exist if there are people willing to participate in it.
When you starve drama of your energy and attention, it fades into oblivion.
Thus, your reaction to a given situation is of great importance, for it determines how things will ultimately play out.
Make a conscious choice not to pour fuel on the fire, but to act with calm and composure, and drama will become a thing of your past.
3. Comparing Yourself To Others
Perhaps the most universal of all toxic behaviors is the need to compare yourself to other people.
This desire to look at others and weigh their lives against your own is an entirely futile exercise because of the complete subjectivity of existence.
Physical appearance, material wealth, and life experiences cannot reveal how a person is feeling or what they are thinking.
True contentment only comes when you are thankful for everything you have been blessed with.
4. Negative Self Talk
The way you speak to and about yourself has a significant influence on how you feel.
If you are forever using self-limiting language and believing the worst will happen, you’ll be unable to enjoy and appreciate the good things that enter your life.
Negative thoughts lead to negative actions and sooner or later you’ll find yourself in a downward spiral of unhelpful energy, expectations, and experiences.
5. People Pleasing
When you put the needs and desires of others ahead of your own without a good reason, you act from a place of personal insecurity.
This behavior can lead to people taking advantage of you and to you feeling resentful when you don’t receive the thanks and approval you are looking for.
6. Perfectionism
While there is nothing overly wrong with striving to do your best at something, if you pursue the goal of perfection in everything you do, you set yourself up for a lifetime of frustration and disappointment.
Perfection in its truest sense is a myth; opinions can be formed and consensuses reached among certain groups of people, but nobody can lay claim to it in any form.
We all have limits and the reality is that you will be better at some things than others.
7. Taking Things Personally
Some unkind acts and comments may well be directed at us, but there is also an unhealthy tendency to take things personally even when they are not.
When you assume that a person’s anger, annoyance, sadness, or displeasure is your fault, you begin a dangerous thought process.
It makes you believe that you are a burden to them, that they do not like or love you, and that you are undeserving of their respect.
By taking responsibility for things that have little to do with you, you decrease your own sense of self-worth.
8. Reliving The Past
The past cannot be undone and it cannot be changed; it becomes a matter of fact as soon as it has happened.
Letting your mind drift back to past events, then, has very little in the way of value.
Aside from the lessons it can teach you, dwelling on things that have already passed only prolongs the negative emotions you associate with it.
Generally speaking, past pain is felt far more vividly than past pleasure, so the past is best left in the past.
9. Worrying About The Future
Just as the past cannot be undone, the future cannot be foretold.
Here too, the effects of negative emotions are far greater than their positive counterparts.
Worry and anxiety can easily take hold of your mind, but you can never quite experience happiness over things that are yet to occur.
Having goals, dreams, plans, and aspirations is not necessarily bad, but they should be looked upon as possibilities and not outright certainties; the same should hold true for future risks.
10. The Overuse Of Technology
With the rapid pace of technological progress, the influence it has on our lives is growing almost daily.
While many of these innovations are extremely helpful and generally harmless, there are instances where your use – and eventual dependence – on technology becomes a problem.
From gaming to social media, the lure of technology can be highly addictive if it is not kept in check.
11. Ignoring Self-care
A very obvious behavior that can lead to long-term complications and unhappiness is neglecting to take care of one’s health.
Whether this is through the physical impact of abusing your body or from the lack of attention paid to the state of your mind, we’re all guilty of not caring for ourselves as we should.
If you let this go too far, however, the impact and damage may become irreversible.
12. Not Speaking Out
Not all toxic behaviors involve your actions; sometimes it is when you do not act that you are potentially harming your well-being.
One such example is when you do not speak up and speak out when you disagree with someone or something.
By not doing so, you allow others to dictate the terms by which you are then forced to live; you let them walk over you with little regard for your opinions or feelings.
13. Holding On To Loss
Life cannot be without loss; it is a big factor whether we like it or not.
We lose people, security, and even our own independence at various points during our lives.
When we grieve for this loss, it helps us to accept it and then move on, but if we refuse to let go of what has gone, it keeps us trapped in a state of perpetual sadness.
Until you can relinquish your hold on that which has passed, you will be locked in place, unable to more forward upon life’s path.
14. Resisting New Experiences
Intrinsically linked to your worry about the future is the resistance you may have to trying new and different things.
You find yourself in a comfort zone, which, while not always negative, may restrict your enjoyment of life.
You may shun the novel in favor of the known even if the former would increase your overall satisfaction.
Finally…
If you’ve noticed these traits in yourself, it’s likely they exist because of some sort of hurt and pain you experienced in your past.
But your behavior and thought-patterns are not set in stone and it is possible to change both of them.
It’ll take hard work and effort, but you’ve already taken the first step to ridding yourself of them.