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  2. Your Ultimate Guide To Overcoming Rejection - AOL

    www.aol.com/ultimate-guide-overcoming-rejection...

    If any of these examples give you visceral flashbacks to your own humiliating, painful moments of rejection—first of all, I’m sorry. Second of all, there’s a reason these memories sting.

  3. Why shirts bunch up in the back & an easy way to fix it - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/2015-09-02-why-shirts...

    Please note that this is a regular (non-petite) shirt, on very petite, 4'11" me, so the waist of the shirt was much lower than my natural waist, resulting in the "back poof". Also, the fit of this ...

  4. Social rejection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_rejection

    MacDonald and Leary theorize that rejection and exclusion cause physical pain because that pain is a warning sign to support human survival. As humans developed into social creatures, social interactions and relationships became necessary for survival, and the physical pain systems already existed within the human body.

  5. Abandonment (emotional) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abandonment_(emotional)

    Feelings of emotional abandonment can stem from numerous situations. According to Makino et al: Whether one considers a romantic rejection, the dissolution of a friendship, ostracism by a group, estrangement from family members, or merely being ignored or excluded in casual encounters, rejections have myriad emotional, psychological, and interpersonal consequences.

  6. There's a Specific Scientific Reason Why Rejection Can Make ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/next-time-face-rejection...

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  7. Pathological demand avoidance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pathological_demand_avoidance

    Pathological demand avoidance (PDA), or extreme demand avoidance (EDA), is a behavioral profile characterized by an intense resistance to complying with requests or expectations and extreme efforts to avoid social demands. [1]

  8. Social inhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_inhibition

    The second pattern deals with unrealistic approval needs; here, individuals want to gain the approval of others and will fear rejection if they express too much. In the third pattern, unrealistic labeling of aggressive and assertive behavior depicts how many individuals that inhibit themselves may feel as though aggression or assertiveness is bad.

  9. The Epidemic of Gay Loneliness - The Huffington Post

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/gay...

    Emotional detachment of this kind is pervasive, Pachankis says, and many of the men he works with go years without recognizing that the things they’re striving for—having a perfect body, doing more and better work than their colleagues, curating the ideal weeknight Grindr hookup—are reinforcing their own fear of rejection.