the very real pain of rejection

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This is pretty amazing research.... going through a breakup or unwanted relationship pain creates the same brain activity as when you are physically hurting. Anyone who has dealt with this loss can attest to this....but here's some real research backing you up. 

I guess what I'm trying to say, is have a little compassion when your friend or family member is going through something big to them. 

Just because you don't understand their pain, doesn't make it any less real.


After working on his book for years, John Kennedy Toole submitted his manuscript to several publishers. Initially, editor Robert Gottlieb wanted to publish it, but he soon lost interest. 

The rejection hurt so much that Toole refused to look at his manuscript and he quit writing. He eventually killed himself due in part to the pain he felt from the rejection. 

Eleven years later, his mother managed to publish the manuscript, A Confederacy of Dunces, which won a Pulitzer Prize. 

A study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences confirms what anyone who has ever been rejected inherently knows—social rejection hurts as much as physical pain

Psychologists from the University of Colorado, Boulder conducted 40 fMRIs on subjects who had recently experienced an unwanted romantic break-up. 

As the fMRI scanned the participants’ brains looking for areas of high activity, the subjects either looked at pictures of their ex-significant others and a picture of a friend (who was about the same age and same sex) or the researchers prodded their arms with warm or cool stimuli. 

Looking at the images of their exes caused the participants mental anguish as extreme as the pain felt from the hot and cold jabs. 


The brain acted the same whether a person felt mental or physical pain—in both cases the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), the anterior insula, and segments of the thalamus activated.

(The dACC regulates cognition and motor control and neurologists suspect that it plays a role in decoding brain signals and dealing with rewards. The anterior insula influences self perception, motor control, and emotional responses, activation in this area might indicate that participants were aware of the pain they felt and tried to control physical responses like breathing or blood pressure (imagine trying to steady your nerves during a scary movie). And, the thalamus relays signals to most sensory systems.)

“These results give new meaning to the idea that social rejection hurts,” said Kross.

“On the surface, spilling a hot cup of coffee on yourself and thinking about how rejected you feel when you look at the picture of a person that you recently experienced an unwanted break-up with may seem to elicit very different types of pain. But this research shows that they may be even more similar than initially thought.

Comments

Rachel Marie said…
Wow, this makes me sad! I think we have to be so careful about how we treat people when they're going through something difficult. I'm glad you posted this. I love reading about interesting research, and I especially love learning about how we can all treat each other better.

http://missrachel-marie.blogspot.com/
tiff and jay. said…
This is such a touching post, and a subject that is really important to address! I think sometimes we assume someone is "okay" just because their trial seems easy (for lack of a better word) in our own eyes. Emotional pain is very real and needs true empathy and compassion. Thank you for posting this!

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