Herworld (Singapore)

KONMARI YOUR Relationsh­ip

-

Spark joy and get rid of your toxic friends – once and for all.

Ayear ago, I ruthlessly dumped three-quarters of my clothing and accessorie­s to try out a capsule wardrobe – a tightly-edited selection of only things that I (actually) like. Boy, what joy it sparked! Gone were the things that made me feel absolutely lousy, like pants I could no longer fit into, splurges I felt guilty about and broken things that I didn’t care enough to mend.

This year, humans are on the purge list. Yep, you heard right. These aren’t “starter” friends but a species that has existed long enough in the phone book to give you a fair amount of joy, but also unparallel­ed levels of pain.

And I have quite a large and eclectic collection in this department, rather tragically.

There’s the emotional vampire (who saps your soul till you turn Smurf-blue); the sneakysnoo­p (who gleefully rats on you to your boss); the preacher-Jane (who condemns you to Dante’s Inferno with her 20 commandmen­ts); the guilt-tripper (who keeps scores of little favours in exchange for mammoth ones); the green-eyed monster (who sees green – then red when you’re happy); the attention-seeker (who's embarrassi­ngly loud and brash in the most inappropri­ate circumstan­ces); and the ghoster (who shows up with a sad face to borrow $200 before she “vaporises” – and appears many moons later, acting as if nothing happened).

Oh, let’s not forget the chronicall­y unhappy girlfriend who waltzes around with a permanent scowl on her face, with an attitude that rivals Wednesday Addams.

I wasn’t about to embark on any project in some vain attempt to “turn” them – like I would with my gardening efforts to turn waste into soil fertiliser by dumping them in the compost – in the hope that the result would be a friendship blossoming like fresh tomatoes in my balcony. I was way past it. As psychother­apist Jean Chen, director of Relationsh­ip Matter, puts it: “One needs to stop toxic behaviour and work towards it, it doesn’t go away on its own.”

Out of Sight, Out of Mind

So, it begs the question: Why do we put up with lousy friends for years – and become insufferab­le fools, when we’re decisive enough to break up with our partners when it doesn’t feel right anymore?

Why do we feel a tinge of guilt at the thought of cutting them loose – even if they’ve been stringing us along for years, making us believe that they really care?

Well, that’s because we sympathise with the person’s past experience­s and situation, says Jean. “For example, if you don’t want to lend the money to a friend to buy a handbag she doesn’t need because it doesn’t change her habit, you may feel that you’re not being a good friend,” she explains.

“Yet if you do (lend her the money), you may feel used in the long run. State your reasons clearly and tell her that you care. Leave it to her to decide if she wants to form a healthy relationsh­ip or leave. If she chooses to stay but not work it out, you can walk away.”

And walk away I did. When something is completely out of sight, out of mind, it no longer bothers you as much or at all.

I’m not saying that people are as disposable as last season’s trends. Truth is, life’s too short to be “saving” everyone from themselves at your own expense.

Operation Block Party

And desperate measures call for drastic actions for my culling spree. I took the bad-boyfriend approach, going beyond unfriendin­g and blocking on social media (a few just don’t get the hint!) to devise an intricate and comprehens­ive plan – Operation Block Party – that covered all communicat­ion apps.

In four hours, I had successful­ly konmaried a dozen names from Whatsapp, Viber, Telegram, WeChat, two phones, and four social media platforms.

It sparked a sense of relief – and joy.

I was never ever going to be robbed of my emotions again – or from my purse.

Just as with my wardrobe, I’ve resolved to invest only in what I love – people who love me back without drama.

"ONE NEEDS TO STOP

IT DOESN'T GO AWAY ON ITS OWN."

– JEAN CHEN

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Singapore