avatarE.B. Johnson

Summary

The article emphasizes the importance of overcoming the "me vs. them" mentality to foster healthier and more connected relationships.

Abstract

The article "Dropping your 'me vs. them' mentality once and for all" by E.B. Johnson on Medium discusses the detrimental effects of oppositional thinking in relationships. Johnson argues that the competitive and individualistic mindset encouraged by modern society leads to conflict, corruption, and unhappiness. Instead, the author suggests that by reshaping our perspectives and embracing collaboration, we can build lasting connections and friendships. The article outlines how oppositional thinking erodes trust, fosters resentment, and ultimately pushes people apart, damaging both personal and professional relationships. To combat this, Johnson recommends introspection to understand personal hang-ups, realigning goals with partners, reconnecting through joy, consciously shifting one's perspective, and embracing change as positive growth within relationships.

Opinions

  • Oppositional thinking is seen as a remnant of evolutionary history that is no longer beneficial in modern society.
  • The author believes that happiness and success are not achieved by conquering others but by creating a supportive environment where everyone can thrive.
  • Johnson suggests that the need to separate oneself from others with "otherness" is detrimental to building meaningful relationships.
  • The article posits that trust and vulnerability are impossible in a relationship where partners view each other as adversaries.
  • It is emphasized that resentment and contempt are byproducts of oppositional thinking and are toxic to love and affection in relationships.
  • The author argues that aligning future goals and objectives with one's partner is crucial for a relationship to feel like a partnership rather than a competition.
  • Johnson encourages couples to break out of routine and find excitement in their relationship to strengthen their bond.
  • The article advises individuals to be mindful and present, actively working to shift their perspective from combative to collaborative.
  • Embracing personal growth and change within a relationship is presented as an opportunity to form new, deeper bonds rather than as a threat

Dropping your “me vs. them” mentality once and for all

It’s not about oppositional thinking. We have to work together in order to build relationships we can thrive within.

Image by @Andrew_Paul via Twenty20

by: E.B. Johnson

If we’re looking to build relationships and friendships that last, we have to find better ways to connect and enjoy one another. The world we live in today encourages us to adopt a “me vs. them” way of thinking, or a highly individualized approach. We’re encouraged to put ourselves first, and see others as a threat to our personal sovereignty — rather than an important piece of it. This oppositional thinking, though, leads to corruption and conflict which only makes us more unhappy over time.

Rather than seeing the world in such negative terms, you have to reshape and restructure your perspective. In order to be happy, you don’t have to conquer or vanquish someone else. There’s enough space in this world for all of us, we just have to put ourselves in the right state of mind, and in the right environment, to bloom. Stop looking for battles, and start looking for better ways to connect across your differences and your insecurities. Then, you can build a life (and a future) that is filled with the love and companionship you seek.

Oppositional thinking isn’t healthy.

Are you someone who regularly engages in “me or them” thinking? If so, you aren’t alone. As humans, we are competitive and comparative by nature. These urges are leftover remnants of our evolutionary history, little remains from a time when life was far more brutal, and isolating yourself from strangers was a literal matter of life and death. Things have changed now, though, and that includes our society and the relationships that form our friendships and even our families.

Oppositional thinking occurs when we get stuck in a competitively resentful way of looking at things. We have to let go of this and open ourselves up to the possibilities we find in other people. Instead of seeking to put ourselves above them, we should seek always to bring them up beside us. After all, each of us is only as good as the weakest among us. When one person falls, we are all brought down by their pain.

Cultivate happier and healthier relationships by letting go of this undeniable need to separate yourself with “otherness”. We are all flawed and hurt; doing the best we can with what we have to create something better than what was. Figure out what’s behind your need to draw these battle lines, then open up to the people who mean the most. Get excited about getting on the same page with them, and then embrace their wins (and their losses) as a part of your entire journey.

What it does to our partnerships.

There are few things more toxic for a relationship than oppositional thinking. You have to work as a team in order to build a life that works for both of you. Without this teamwork, battle lines get drawn and trust levels erode. You stop seeing one another as partners and come to see one another as adversaries in a corrosive relationship.

Drawing battle lines

When we engage in “me vs. them” thinking, we actually draw battle lines where there don’t need to be any. Challenges are going to come our way in any relationship we have. Sometimes, we ‘re going to have differences and we’re going to disagree. In order to stay connected, we have to open up and work with one another across these differences — rather than seeing them as personal affronts which need to be punished or avenged.

Eroding trust levels

How can you trust someone who feels as though they are competing with you? Or trying to be superior to you in some way? Trick question: You can’t. For us to truly feel comfortable being vulnerable or trusting with someone, we have to know that they have our best interests at heart; wen need to know they want to lift us up. When they approach us as enemies, we come to believe that perhaps they don’t have the best intentions (and we’d be right).

Simmering resentment

Oppositional thinking is so corrosive when it comes to the love and affection we hold for those in our lives. It pits you against one another and encourages negative emotions like resentment and contempt to lurk in the darkest edges of your partnership. We don’t love people we see as competition. We see them as roadblocks. This perspective to hand, it’s easy for the resentment to take over and divide us even further.

Pushing us outward

Looking at your relationship as a battle — and staring down the barrel of eroding trust and endless resentment — it’s not hard to understand why you and your partner might be driven away from one another. Life is a bumpy ride. If you and your partner don’t get situated with one another, one of you is likely to get thrown off along the way. Stop allowing yourselves to be divided by erroneous “me or you” thinking. Get back on the same page.

Increasing isolation

Outside of our romantic relationships, oppositional thinking has a way of destroying all our other relationships. If you can’t even look at someone you love without making it a competition, what are you likely to do with strangers and co-workers? We become miserable and competitive with everyone around us and it turns our entire lives into an exhausting (and unnecessary) battle that never ends. This turns people off, and it turns them away.

How to drop your “me vs. them” mentality.

You can’t hold on to the “me vs. them” mentality forever. This holding on will only bring you loneliness and heartbreak, so figure out why you’re engaging in these endless battles, and find a way to get back on the same page with the people who matter most. Then, you will be empowered to reconnect in joy and shift your perspective to a more positive point of view.

1. Figure out your hangups

In order to overcome your “me vs. them” mentality, you’re going to first have to look within at what leads you to adopt such outlooks. For some of us, our confrontational or competitive nature comes from a fountain of hurt that haunts us from the past. For others, it doesn’t run that deep. Either way, overcoming this divided perspective requires that we get down and dirty with any hangups that might be contributing to our oppositional thinking.

Detach yourself from your relationship and any current thoughts; look at your emotions — then, look backward. Are they rooted in this moment, or is part of your response and behavior coming from a place in your past? Looking backward allows us to see old patterns and their originating point in our timeline.

What has caused you to see the people you love as enemies, rather than friends? Were you taught that loving someone wasn’t safe in childhood? Did toxic past relationships cause you to believe that you have to draw lines in the sand before the other person gets a chance? All of these answers are relevant, and can help us see the projections we’re placing on the world all around us. Once we look past our hangups, we can stop seeing our partners as competition and embrace them as allies.

2. Get on the same page

Very frequently, we develop oppositional thinking with our partner because we drift away from them and find ourselves in completely different places. Part of building a long-term relationship requires us to align our future goals and objectives. When we become divided on these core elements, our relationship stops feeling like a partnership and starts feeling like a competition. Both parties are pushing, but they’re pushing toward different things.

If you want to get yourselves back on the same journey, you need to get realigned and reacquainted with your mutual goals and objectives. That means sitting down and talking to one another, both about what’s going wrong and what’s going right. Do you both still want the same things from one another?

Once you have everything out on the table you can breathe easier and be honest with one another. That’s where the real work and compromise come into play. You can keep looking at one another as the person you have to work against, or you can make life easier for yourselves and get back on the same team consciously and with intentional healing. Open up. Be candid. Tell your partner what you want and then allow them to do the same.

3. Reconnect in joy

Piecing together a life with someone else isn’t easy. We all have different ways of looking at things, and we all have different needs when it comes to being seen, heard, and valued for who we are. That’s a lot to juggle when we’re also dealing with all the other stress and responsibility that comes with our lives outside of the relationship. To do this, we have to keep seeing one another in joy, and we can do that by getting excited with one another again.

Break yourselves out of the same old routine and find some excitement again. Make time together a regular thing and fill it full of new experiences, fun, and laughter. It’s easier to let your guard down with someone you enjoy being with, so learn how to enjoy simply being in the presence of one another again.

Drop the defensiveness. Be open to one another in the moment. Look for that person you first connected with, and let down your own walls. Life spent with someone else isn’t something that should be miserable. It’s work, sure, but it should be joy too. Make time to have fun together, and don’t just do it on special occasions or holidays. Come back together on a regular basis and give yourselves something to look forward to when you do. Break outside of the monotony.

4. Consciously shift perspective

Getting to the root of your problems is certainly a starting place, and so is reconnecting with your partner in more positive ways. All of that only brings us so far, though, if we don’t consciously shift our perspective and commit to dropping our oppositional way of thinking. Habits exist, and understanding where they come from only allows us to create more effective means of overcoming them. You still have to do the work of shedding the negativity.

Be more present and mindful about your intentions and your state of emotion. When you feel yourself sliding back into that defensive or combative way of seeing your partner — pull back. What positive thoughts and emotions can you create a road block out of? How can you stop this “me vs. them” approach and come from a more positive place?

Don’t allow yourself to go back into that place. Be aware of your thoughts and what you really want. Is battling your partner worth losing the future vision you’re building? Is seeing them as an enemy doing anything to repair the damage that’s lurking on the edge of your relationship? If the answer is no, then you have to put your foot down with our inner voice and put the comparisons and contempt to bed once and for all.

5. Embrace change as a positive

When we fall in love with someone and build a life with them, many of us expect that life to stay the same forever. That’s just not possible, though, as we (as individuals) are always in a state of growth and change. We have to embrace this change and the differences it brings to our relationships. The alternative is coming to see ourselves at odds with someone we love; someone who is becoming a different, and better, version of themselves.

Are you in a state of panic? Do you see your partner changing, or see yourself changing within your relationship? Embrace it. Becoming different people doesn’t automatically mean your enemies. Changes are sometimes the greatest shift our partnerships can encounter.

Look for the silver lining. Stay open with one another and don’t hide your transformations together. You both deserve to bloom and blossom inside of your lives and your relationships. In order to grow, you’re going to have to become something bigger and better than you were before. Love that process for you, and love it for your partner. Don’t see their change as a divide, see it as a new bond.

Putting it all together…

When our relationships are tested or put into a state of change, we can find ourselves falling victim to a “me vs. them” way of thinking. This type of divisive perspective does nothing to make connection easier and only further pushes us away from our partners. In order to avoid major conflict and heartbreak, we have to actively shift our perspective and the way we connect with our other halves.

Figure out what hangups you are holding on to which allow you to see your relationships as competitions or combats, rather than loving and supportive environments. Then, sit down with your partner and get on the same page. What do each of you want? What’s changed? What’s gone wrong? You have to be candid with one another, and then you can come back to the middle and reconnect with joy. Get excited about your relationship again and get out of the tension by making time to have fun with one another. Love shouldn’t be all pain and all struggle. Give yourselves something to look forward, then commit to consciously shifting your perspective and the way you see your relationship changing. We are always in a state of growth. Embrace it and enjoy the ride for what it is.

Relationships
Self
Nonfiction
Personal Development
Thinking
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