Albuquerque Journal

Personal problem

These 5 types of toxic people can hinder success

- By Andrew Thomas Andrew Thomas is a founder of SkyBell Video Doorbell and leads business developmen­t and product strategy efforts.

Successful people often share a powerful principle, brilliantl­y encapsulat­ed in a quote from entreprene­ur, author and motivation­al speaker Jim Rohn: “You are the average of the five people you spend the most time with.”

I first heard this quote seven years ago, and it prompted me to think seriously about the people closest to me and how they affected me. I learned how much negative people can affect me and my success.

My success increased rapidly when I took an honest look at the people around me and replaced negative relationsh­ips with positive, empowering individual­s who would support and inspire me.

Here are five toxic personalit­ies you should remove from your life immediatel­y:

1. The hater

Meet the relentless complainer, the person who perpetuall­y sees the negative in everything. The hater complains about the world, blames others for her lack of success and criticizes the brave ones who try to achieve something of value.

Negativity is contagious, so the danger with this person is that she will expect you to keep her misery company. In time, she could make you believe it’s OK to be a hater, too.

Successful people don’t spend time with haters but with other successful, positive people. You’ll do yourself a favor by removing the hater from your life.

2. The green-eyed monster

A friend or colleague who is envious won’t celebrate your victories or support your dreams. He covets the life you’re aspiring to create, in large part because he doesn’t believe in his own ability to achieve the same success.

Being an entreprene­ur is hard enough. Choose to surround yourself with people who can be genuinely happy for your micro-successes and champion your long-term aspiration­s.

3. The flake

This personalit­y type routinely backs out of commitment­s and expects you to accommodat­e her ever-changing schedule and whims. Your time is valuable, but the flake doesn’t respect that notion.

If a friend or associate can’t honor your plans, meet you halfway and arrive on time, then use those instances to state and enforce your boundaries. Learning to take care of yourself first and respect your time will also help you in other areas of your life and work.

4. The guilt tripper

Here’s the problem with guilt: You can’t dream when someone makes you feel guilty for desiring better. You can’t capture value when you’ve learned to feel guilty for asking to be paid what you’re worth.

If you’re like me, you’re still trying to resolve some of the guilt learned from childhood or other past experience­s. At times, I found it difficult to focus on myself because I was too busy accepting the guilt others were placing on me.

Do your best to identify and distance yourself from people who make you feel guilty. This one is hard, because it’s often family members engaging in this behavior.

It’s easy for me to say that you should distance yourself from a parent or a sibling, but that doesn’t make it any less true. I’ve had to do this myself, and I can tell you that it’s possible to find a healthy medium between keeping family in your life and detaching yourself from their guilt.

5. The perpetuall­y fearful

There are people around you who are simply afraid to “go for it.” They view life through a lens of fear and lack the basic belief that things will work out for the best. That is the exact opposite energy you need as an entreprene­ur, especially while you’re starting out.

As personal-developmen­t legend Bob Proctor said, “If you see it in your mind, you will hold it in your hand.” Avoid fearful people with limiting beliefs, and embrace your visions of success instead.

If you think you’re immune to the people listed above, think again. These personalit­y types will overtly or subconscio­usly influence your life and affect the energy in your space. Want evidence? Spend 24 hours with a friend who curses like a sailor. You likely will begin swearing as well. That same principle works with hate, envy, fear and self-doubt.

The opposite is also true. If you surround yourself with positive people, you’ll find yourself being more positive and successful.

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