How to Deal with Annoying People


Annoying people have that subtly prodding and poking nature to them that at first only slightly irritates—like that of a persistent fly or mosquito hovering around you on a hot day—but, compounded over time, can transform you, the unwilling recipient, into quite the impressive hothead or hermit.  It’s therefore important to learn how to deal with the most irritating types in the healthiest ways possible. To save your sanity from losing its grip and exploding (or imploding, depending on your personality type), it’s best to identify the types of people who irk you the most, and seek out the most effective ways to deal with each type of nuisance. 

In no specific order, here is a list of the Types of annoying people, why they are the way they are, and what we can do about them to better brace ourselves against their constant testing of our patience.  

The Complainer

We’ve all had to endure the person who seemingly can’t do anything but complain about the world and people around them. Day in and day out, there is something The Complainer must grumble, moan, or gripe about. It’s almost as if this type of annoying person finds catharsis in releasing their pent up frustrations in the form of complaints. Sometimes the complaints are warranted, most times they’re insignificant and irritating to everyone. As the complaints pile up, our patience and tolerance for them dwindle in an inverse correlation until we can no longer stand to even be around this type of person. 

Why: Why is a Complainer such a complainer? They learned growing up that all they needed to do was complain to others to get what they wanted. A worn out, tired and/or enabling type of parent, seeking a moment’s peace in the household, relents to The Complainer’s constant griping by providing them with that which relieves them of their barrage of complaints, inevitably reinforcing their behavior. The Complainer learns with time that they can simply complain about everything in order to get relief from it through others. This is a very self-destructive type of annoying person. Their learned behavior to complain as a means to get what they ultimately want inevitably affects their attitude, transforming them into habitually negative-minded individuals. Habitually negative attitudes lead to even more negative behavior—in this case, in the form of complaining—and the cycle continues in a positive feedback loop system . This self-perpetuating cycle cannot cease to exist until The Complainer learns to act and react differently to their environment and daily circumstances.

What We Can Do About The Complainer: To save your own sanity and prevent falling into The Complainer’s trap of being the recipient of their constant barrage of complaints, you must not positively reinforce their behavior. 

Positive reinforcement in Psychology is the act of supporting a specific type of action or behavior through rewards. Whenever you appease The Complainer by providing them with exactly what they want when they complain, you are reinforcing their bickering nature, subconsciously teaching them that if they complain, they will get what they want from you. You must deter their complaining nature instead through negative reinforcement, removing a positive reward from them—in this case, your listening and appeasement of their complaints—in order to stop them from continuing this highly irritating behavior. The next time you find yourself caught in the middle of The Complainer’s tirade of endless bickering, simply walk away and ignore them. This will teach them that if they want you to do something for them, they’ll need to approach you in a healthier, more productive—and far less annoying—way. You’re doing yourself, and them, a favor when you do. 

The Braggart

The pretentious nature of The Braggart subtly gnaws at our sanity with each unbearable conversation we have with them, centered solely around themselves. At first conversation, you may find The Braggart to be a source of inspiration as you listen to how ‘successful’ or ‘smart’ or ‘super talented’ they are about their endeavors. But with time, perhaps even in that initial conversation, you realize that the only prowess and intellect they possess is the one to have initially fooled you of all their wild achievements. Once you discover their true windbag nature—that their badges of honor and achievements they’ve prattled on and on about are nothing more than blowing wind—you grow resentful of the time squandered listening to a hopeless achiever who is incapable of separating their dreamed up self-image from their underachieving, real one.

Why: What leads a person on the futile path—futile, because no one stays to listen to them for too long—of The Braggart? Low self-esteem from lack of motivation and achievement is one reason. Another, according to renowned author of The Art of Seduction, Robert Greene, is selfishness:

“Words have a place, but too much talk will generally break the spell, heightening surface differences and weighing things down. People who talk a lot often talk about themselves. They have never acquired that inner voice that wonders, Am I boring you? To be a Windbag is to have a deep-rooted selfishness.”

Looked at from this perspective, it’s only rational to assume that people who can only talk about themselves are incapable of caring for anyone but themselves. And that is essentially a fact about the Braggart with which you must come to terms: In any given situation, their self-interests will always supersede yours. That doesn’t make for a good friend or individual, now does it?

 In a nutshell, The Braggart is nothing but bullshit fluff that has puffed itself into meaning—for a brief, passing time. Their self-centeredness and assuredly selfishness render them unsociable. Despite all the airy, self-enhancing words they pair themselves with when bragging to others in the desperate hope that one of them will actually stick, The Braggart is nothing more than a self-centered underachiever in denial. You’re simply wasting your time listening to and believing what they have to say about themselves.

What We Can Do About The Braggart: 

The Braggart has a lot of self-esteem and egocentric issues to work out with themself. That is not the responsibility of their begrudging listeners. Perhaps speaking with a professional therapist can relieve them of their deep-rooted issues.  If you are not a professional psychologist, there is nothing you can do about The Braggart’s incessant boasting except nod a few times in conversation and find an exit, lest you be stuck listening to their prideful drivel for hours on end. You could also call them out on their bullshit, every time they start a monologue about themselves, but I’ve seen where that goes in the long run: nowhere but the burrows of their subconscious, to be willfully forgotten. 

The Negative Nancy

A little rain in our lives every now and then is good and healthy. It keeps things in perspective. It prevents us from taking big risks with little reward due to an overly sunny perspective. Think of literal rain in driving conditions: speeding on highways during fresh rainfall is a huge life-threatening risk with very little reward: you may get to the store or back home ten to fifteen minutes earlier, but at what risk and at what cost? Is the high risk and cost of injuring and killing others and yourself on the freshly rained on road worth it to save ten to fifteen minutes of your commute time? 

Negative perspectives on high-risk low-reward matters like driving on a freshly rained on road is one thing. A constant, chronic negative outlook and mindset on every matter is a whole other situation.

The issue with a Negative Nancy is that he or she looks through rainy glasses on a daily basis. Literally everything is viewed in a negative light for the Negative Nancy. Nothing is worth doing out of one’s comfort zone when the outlook always looks bleak and pointless. That is why a Negative Nancy’s lifestyle is as disappointing and disillusioned as their own thought processes. Through a self-fulfilling prophecy backed by the “What’s the point? Everything sucks” mentality, Negative Nancies dig a deeper and deeper Hole of Discontent for themselves and anyone else nearby they can drag in with them. Misery likes company, after all.

If Negative Nancies resorted to negative thoughts only to themselves, that would be one thing. But they spread their negative thoughts onto others like an infectious disease. With enough exposure, others will start viewing the world similarly to that of a Negative Nancy, corroding their optimism into sheer hopelessness. As Joe Rogan put it, “Negative people are cancer.”

Forget Negative People – Joe Rogan

Managing risk is fruitful; avoiding risk, and therefore reward, entirely because of a chronic, negative outlook on life is a death sentence on your soul. 

Why: Why are chronically negative people so negative? My guess is that they grew up too fearful of risk-taking. Perhaps their Negative Nancy parents always focused on negative outcomes instead of positive ones, and taught their children the same. Perhaps they were always sheltered growing up, and so they never left their comfort zones, which ultimately led them to a no-risk no-reward lifestyle. This in turn led them to see the world as disappointing and non-rewarding, which further reinforced their already negative mindset. 

Negative Nancy mindsets can also be triggered due to depression from external factors and circumstances. In a bad economy or corrupted political climate, it can be too easy to see nothing but the bleakness of those current realities. Unless one takes risks, puts themselves out there in the open in uncomfortable situations to change the current situation into something better, there is seemingly no hope for correction and improvement. This is what keeps a Negative Nancy forever in a self-perpetuating feedback loop: there is seemingly no reward on the other side based on their corrupted outlook, so the Negative Nancy doesn’t even bother to act for positive change. Their refusal to act digs them deeper into their self-constructed Hole of Discontent. And the cycle continues forevermore. They will continue looking only at the dark half of the planet, when the other half is soaked in sunlight.

What to do About the Negative Nancy: I don’t want to illustrate all cases of annoying people as hopeless, but the Negative Nancy is one of the most difficult to change, simply because their pernicious mindset leads to inaction and impotence. To correct that mindset takes years of therapy for them to get to the root of their issues. 

An exceptional individual who can tolerate a Negative Nancy’s constant negativity could miraculously lead them on a more lighted path through demonstration and perseverance. But what’s more likely to happen is the infiltration and infection of their negativity onto you if you stay too close to them. That negativity is so insidious you won’t see it coming until it’s already gnawed away at you.

Confronting the Negative Nancy about their pessimism is a start (“You should learn to see things in a more positive light”), but providing them with a rewarding incentive for action is best (“Maybe you just need to talk about these negative thoughts with a professional. They could help get to the root cause and help you get back on track.  Here’s a therapist I recommend…”).  

The Naysayer

The best way to crush someone’s dreams and aspirations is to introduce them to a Naysayer. The Naysayer is my least favorite of all annoying types of people for this exact reason.  Rather than just rain on your parade like a Negative Nancy, or complain to the point of saturation by The Complainer, or make your ears bleed from the nauseating self-promotion of The Braggart, the Naysayer goes directly for your life goals and dreams. 

“You cannot” are the two most destructive words to one’s self-esteem and happiness. And Naysayers are far too happy to offer up these words to others without second thought of their insidious effects. How many people dreamed up an ideal version of themselves, only to be scoffed at and told that it was impossible for them to achieve? How many disheartened adults grew up to be that way, unknowingly, because they were reared to believe they couldn’t when they definitely could have? How many people do we know in this world today whose souls were crushed once they sold their souls to the stagnant office life, chained to their desks, damned to an unhealthy sedentary lifestyle, locked indoors away from sunshine and opportunity, when they personally craved the excitement of exploration or the exhilaration from taking a risk to pave their own way in life through their passions? We all know far too many people with this ensconced lifestyle.  Most were victims of The Naysayers.

Why: What leads a Naysayer to crush someone else’s dream? Believe it or not, the dream crushing isn’t The Naysayer incentive. Rather, the Naysayer simply believes things are more often impossible than possible. 

They never took any risk in their lives or worked diligently towards a goal they strove to achieve. Whenever they did strive towards something, they gave up too quickly on it. They never learned to never give up. They grew up learning that getting a job to afford things was the end goal. Work was work, not something pleasant to dive into and obsess over. They never had a passion for something, and they never deemed something too important to disregard for the sake of a monotonous, normie lifestyle. 

The Naysayer is a perpetual follower of the societal norms they willingly chain themselves to in the hopes of “fitting into society.” For them, it’s better to be a boring but secure follower than a standout albeit standalone leader. Even worse, they feel the need to express this narrow minded perspective as loudly as they can whenever someone they know expresses the slightest interest in pursuing an unorthodox career path or, gasp, aims to strive for their dreams.

What We Can Do About The Naysayer:

The solution to dealing with my most abhorred annoying person is also my absolute favorite one.  The best way to completely silence a Naysayer is to simply prove them wrong. 

The best way to prove to them that achieving something great is possible, is by going out and doing the seemingly  impossible. Make them eat their own words and relish in the aftermath it instills in them. 


This is obviously one of those examples of easier said than done. It is a simplified proposal for a matter that can, in reality, take years to accomplish. But the longer it takes to prove them wrong, the more flavorful the reward. Don’t let the Naysayer mentality become ingrained in your belief system. Let their mentality be the “push” you need to put all your chips on the table, act on the pursuit of your dreams, and never look back. You will be happiest when you do. 

Voting Red or Blue Has NOTHING to Do with You

Whether you vote Red or Blue, “they” are colorblind to you.


It’s a nice sentiment to be part of a team playing for the same goals. That’s why we’re such fanatics for sports.  We root for our team the loudest and proudest we can be, in hopes of seeing our team come out on top to represent, in some way, who we are and what we’re about. 

That’s all well and good when we’re dealing with sports teams, junk food, and fans synchronously in a drunken stupor at a sports stadium, but it’s a whole other thing when we crusade and parade similarly along more dangerous avenues, specifically when dealing with the menacing essence of politics.  Politics is a dangerous game we’re all connected to in some way, and the stakes can be very high for those most affected and influenced by it. It’s a serious game for all of us who are forced to abide by the legislation decided by the few in power. 

Why, then, do so many people treat politics and political parties like a sports match between two different teams instead of the more serious matter that it is?  Why do the Republican supporters call the Democratic ones “sensitive snowflakes,” and the Democratic ones to the Republicans as “uneducated rednecks,” the same way we name-call different sports teams and their fans?  Why do Red voters scoff at “all those idiots who watch CNN,” and Blue voters do the same for those “who only watch FOX News?”  Why do Red and Blue voters both blame each individual player from the other side for any supposed injustices committed? While the psychology of human tribalism provides a partial answer, the true answer unravels a far more elaborately woven plan they have devised.

They have managed over the years to cunningly and calculatingly divide us into groups that passionately oppose each other over the most trivial matters that are—somehow—emotionally triggering for us. The perfect current example of this: Florida governor’s recent controversial law passed banning teachers kindergarten through third grade from teaching anything about gender. There are more troubling matters relating to education, such as the current predation on young “adults” pursuing college who begrudgingly inflate the already massive $2 trillion student loan bubble for a chance—not even a guarantee—at finding a job immediately post-graduation to repay the debt plus interest. Is this, gender studies and awareness, the most salient concern of ours worth prioritizing over everything else education-related?  This is just one example of how more pressing matters take a backseat to issues of much smaller portent.

 They not only distract us from more alarming issues by constantly barraging us with news of minor urgency (How about them aliens? UFO stories have been used to distract us from larger issues as early as the 1950s), but they also deceive us with false accusations of the other team (2020 election fraud, anyone?). This is done surreptitiously to avoid detection from us, and we take the bait every time. The American people who would otherwise hold the power to decide which legislation is most important and which is most irrelevant to the current times are too distracted bickering amongst themselves over comparatively lesser issues such as LGBTQ discussions in elementary school education. 

Divide and conquer, as it’s appropriately called, is not a new occurrence by any means. It has been used throughout the ages to keep the people in check while they retain the power to rule over everyone.  It’s actually pretty common knowledge if you open your eyes to your surroundings without any political bias  towards one party or the other. This Renaissance actor does the best job at summing it all up:

“They” are the wealthiest, most powerful figures at the top of the world presently. They have nearly full reign to decide what we, their sheeple, can and cannot do. Political matters affect everyone, but only these few members of society dictate the legislation and policies that everyone else must adhere to save themselves. And if you think they only belong to one party or the other, think again. They are not affiliated singularly with either the Democratic or Republican parties. 

They are their own underground—more appropriately “aboveground”— network of elitists, motivated by one goal only: to collect as much wealth as possible in order to remain at the top of the political power spectrum.  For why would they want to distribute any of their massive amounts of wealth and privileges when it bestows upon them the power to rule over everyone else like the gods they envision themselves to be? 

Look at our Senate Minority Leader, Mitch McConnell. Boy this guy is HATED right now. The senator of one of the poorest states, Kentucky, since 1985, he has amassed a net worth of over $134 million since 2019.  Do you think he’d share some of that wealth to his poor residents of Kentucky when they needed it most, such as during the Covid crisis? Of course not! He relentlessly fought against providing Americans $2000 stimulus checks for Covid relief in 2020, infuriating not only his natives from Kentucky, but everyone across the country.  Just look at the comments from his most recent Facebook page posts (from 2020, mind you):

If you return to that list of US Congress members by wealth again, you’ll notice how it is equally comprised of both Democratic and Republican members.  Of the top 50 wealthiest Congress members listed in this table, 31 are Republicans and 29 are Democrats.  The wealthiest congressman, Republican Senator Rick Scott of Florida, leads by nearly $50 million at a whopping net worth of $259.7 million, with Virginia “Democrat” Senator Mark Warner following behind at a net worth of approximately $214.1 million. Speaker of the House “Democrat” Nancy Pelosi is ranked #10 on that list, with a net worth over $114 million. She amassed tens of millions of dollars during the height of the pandemic with stock trades that had prominent figures like Joe Rogan and many others speculating insider trading dealings:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8TRVp-7l3Q&t=336s (start at the 3-minute mark)

How can a woman worth over $110 million understand the typical struggles everyday Americans face each day?  The short answer is, she can’t.  Neither can Mitch McConnell or any of them for that matter.  My point here is—and this is assuredly a difficult pill to swallow—whether they are affiliated with the Republican or Democratic party, they’re all the same. They may appear to vehemently oppose each other, but in reality, they are of the same super wealthy, elitist group who are only concerned about accumulating more and more wealth for themselves and their kin until the day they die, and even then, beyond the scope of death by bypassing the IRS estate tax through this loophole. 

They are so filthy rich, they can’t even guess the prices of normal everyday items at the grocery store, probably because they haven’t stepped foot in a grocery store for years (Don’t you have maids and assistants at your beck and call running all your errands for you, too?).  If they are so far separated from our way of living, how can you expect them to understand anything about our livelihoods? How can they possibly relate to us on any scale? Their opulent lifestyles, lush with golden toilets, marble staircases, and expansive mansions, so contrast with our own that they can’t possibly understand what it’s like to live under the current economic circumstances—soaring house and rental prices nationwide, inflation, and stagnant income to name a few—that we struggle with each day.

Their legislation reflects their ignorance of the average American’s current circumstances.  Towards the beginning of the Covid pandemic in 2020, when the federal government was handing out federal unemployment compensation, they were so out of the loop about our lifestyles that they were handing out $600 per week in addition to state unemployment which, when summed together, outearned the real monthly working wages of the average American. They actually believed that average Americans were earning more than they actually do. I wonder how that could affect their policies over us? (Premium costs on healthcare, income tax (only for the middle class, mind you; the wealthy elitists dodge their annual taxes), rental and housing, gas, and everything else they can capitalize on at our expense?) Of course, once they learned of their miscalculated errors on the average American income, they immediately and consequently decreased the Federal Unemployment earnings. Shocking behavior.  

They have committed far too many atrocities and willfully neglected the proper care of the American people to expound upon here. Considering the suggestive data here alone, though, it’s astounding how anyone could support these supercilious fools in power. They look down on us and separate themselves from us, as if they serve some higher purpose, so that they can shamelessly prioritize their avarice over our basic necessities for a comfortable, modern lifestyle. They neglect our basic needs to survive for the sole purpose of filling their already steep pockets further with disturbing amounts of wealth. And yet we blindly support their baseless words and promises, choosing to bicker amongst ourselves like indignant fanatics witnessing a foul play at a soccer game. 

We indulge in social media debates amongst ourselves, accusing this party of such and such monstrosity. We protest, violently in many cases, against the “other” political party, but the “parties” are merely a distraction for their end goals. The old accuse the young and vice versa; the right and left disrespectfully shoot each other down; the melting pot of races that should bring all Americans together instead segregate themselves; and we argue ad nauseum over frivolous matters such as pronoun usage and job thievery by “aliens”—a very divisive word in itself.  This divides us further and further, consequently weakening us more and more, while they all too comfortably sit atop their gilded thrones of disproportionate luxuries and look down upon us, smiling, knowing full well that they will be the ones who ultimately win this battle without so much as lifting a professionally manicured, opulently jeweled finger.

This disturbs me greatly, each revelation shooting flaring warning signals through my nerves to my core. I see what they’re doing—through the manipulative media and their unproductive press conferences—and what their true intent is. I can’t help but notice how they have corrupted our minds with their countless lies. I’m in disbelief over how successfully they’ve deployed their obsequious supporters to do their bidding for them. Their supporters willingly oblige, defending them far too loyally, oftentimes without receiving a single penny in compensation for their efforts online and in personal debates, maddeningly enough. I cannot ignore how utterly torn and divided We the People truly are at this time, our power waning with each successive political agenda or intentionally misleading social media post thrown into the mix. Like a visionary glimpsing into the future, I fear the prophecy that is coming to fruition: that we shall always be at their mercy, powerless to do anything to save ourselves. Our heads are so buried in the sand on these matters of most alarming import that we are suffocating ourselves, yet we insist on drawing our last breath justifying their misdeeds.  And they are all the while having a laugh at our expense—no, at our very livelihood.    


“Yes, we are overcharged for everything nowadays. I should fancy that the real tragedy of the poor is that they can afford nothing but self-denial. Beautiful sins, like beautiful things, are the privilege of the rich.” -Lord Henry, character from Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890)

Overmedicalized Civilized Nation Part 2: The Numbers

Statistics are boring (well, for most people). What I aim to do here in order to make this as brief yet interesting as possible is to break the info down and delve deep into the meaning of these Numbers with a capital N. 

The last blog post about this discussed anecdotal stories of how over-prescribing medication in the US is doing more harm than good. For those who don’t like anecdotes as partial evidence, there are tons of statistics out there to support this theory of an overmedicalized society. Just Google “prescribed medication history in the US” from earlier years to present day. Using Google Scholar will get you peer-reviewed articles from PhD level scholars in the fields they study.

Continue reading “Overmedicalized Civilized Nation Part 2: The Numbers”

America’s Doped Up on Drugs: The Overmedicalized Civilized Nation Part 1

Depression and anxiety hurt, but the medications for treating them can hurt more. Photo credit: Henry Rowan Photography

Disclaimer: I am not a doctor and as such I don’t want to be treated as one! Please consult a doctor you trust on any mental health advice you’re in need of. This blog post is meant to bring to light the overmedicalization of America, but I do realize and accept that medication is necessary to take for some patients. 

Continue reading “America’s Doped Up on Drugs: The Overmedicalized Civilized Nation Part 1”

A Story of Revenge?

Fall 2012

When a past close friend of mine once told me, “Chloe, no matter how much you train in a martial arts, you’ll never be able to beat a man, because men are bigger and physically stronger than women,” and challenged me to a sparring match right then and there, I had no idea what I was in for.  And I certainly didn’t know that my future path in life would change because of that moment.

Continue reading “A Story of Revenge?”