You Got Called Out. Now What?

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“No one can make you inferior without your consent.” —Eleanor Roosevelt (1940).

     We are completely powerless to what people think or say about us. Regardless of the source or consequence of the information, people talk about other people; running the gamut from complete fiction to private information that unfortunately got exposed.  Gottfried (2019) reported that 67% of women and 55% of men engage in gossip ranging from mindless chatter to an intentional attempt to cancel a person, mostly to distract themselves from their own lives. This suggests that people want to focus on other people’s lives rather than their own. 

     Calling out, initiating hostile attention towards someone for a past or present behavior, is an act of bullying. With suicide rates increasing each year for adults by 1% since 2008 (Hedegaard, Curtin, and Warner, 2020), toxicity starts early for the vulnerable adolescent subgroup, with 20% claimed to have been bullied and 15% cyberbullied (Stopbullying.gov, 2021). Although we cannot control what other people say or do, we can control how we handle the situation internally and externally.

1.      Dig Deep

How do you feel when you are the one who has been called out? Awareness of how you feel is the first step. Unplug and take a break from social media and other sources so you do not have to read about yourself. Space is necessary to process those feelings in a journal, with a supportive family member, friend, or professional.

2.     Evaluate Accuracy

Was the content complete fiction, embarrassingly true, or somewhere in between?  The truth will be reflected in your behavior and refuted by people who really know you.  Try to laugh about it; maybe not now, but hopefully, it will be a source of humor in the future. 

3.     Uncover the Blind Spot

Did you get blindsided by the truth?  Whether the truth was a surprise or a secret that was exposed or previously denied, it is time to own it; even it feels messy and thorny. Everyone makes mistakes and has the right to grow and live from them.

4.     Actions Speak Louder Than Words

If the info is fictitious, then the truth will come out by being yourself. If a painful truth is exposed, work through it as opposed to pretending it does not exist.  Everyone is entitled to grow and move on from mistakes. Being your beautiful self will put the naysayers in their place.

5.     Keep it out of the Media

Just because someone started something online, does not mean you have to finish it. There is no reason to make it a public event.  The person who does the calling out, talking, gossiping, and other forms of cyberbullying is actually the one who looks foolish. The braver and stronger person is the one who makes a phone call or sends a private/direct message to attempt to resolve the issue, person to person, without a theatrical last word.

6.     Free Yourself with Forgiveness

You might have been targeted, but rather than getting even and making it worse, work on forgiving the Instigator for yourself. Most likely, the Instigator is coming from a place of pain. Forgiving him/her/them helps you heal and move on. The Instigator will need to work on forgiving him/her/themselves to move past the situation as well.

7.     Be the Person You Need

When you see other people publically beaten up by anonymous gangs of cybermuscles, do not participate. Connect with him/her/them privately and offer support. Most of us know how it feels to be in the center of unwanted attention, especially online. It can be lonely and painful, so helping others is a must. 

     The internet is forever, so always think before posting.  Keep grievances off the world’s digital and permanent billboard. Be the stronger person and not the one to keep it going.  The Instigator should never have permission to make you feel inferior enough to respond.

Joanne Broder Sumerson, Ph.D.

ResilienceDrew Bartkiewicz