//как для негативного пессимиста в перманентной депрессии эта статья очень важная для меня//

April 25, 2015 by Sam Dylan Finch

Person with fingers crossed over mouth
Source: Huffington Post

I remember vividly when one of my good friends from high school abruptly cut me out of her life.

“She just thinks that you’re—like—a negative person,” a mutual friend told me. “And she’s trying to cut out negative people right now.”

“Negative?” Sure. I was in the midst of a depressive bipolar episode, and I was struggling to keep my head above water.

But defining me as a negative person, as if this episode consumed my whole being? And cutting ties because I wasn’t chipper enough? It felt like I was being told that because I had a mental illness, I didn’t deserve support or friendship.

We had never communicated about boundaries, needs, or space – all of which seemed like a more reasonable approach if my mental health was negatively impacting hers.

One minute, I was her friend – the goofy and cheerful Sam – but the moment I was in a tough spot, I was now classified as a “negative person,” and our friendship expired.

This wasn’t the first time I had heard about this idea of “negative people” and the supposed plague that they brought on others.

But this was the first time I realized that this stereotype about “negative people” often functioned as prejudice in disguise.
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