49: Expecting the No: The Pre-Rejection Pattern Keeping You in Situationships (Ep. 4)
Have you ever told yourself “I’m not getting my hopes up,” “I’m just going with the flow,” or “If it’s meant to be, it will be”? In this episode of Rooted & Rising, Tara Mychelle names the quiet sabotage pattern that keeps so many people stuck in situationships: pre-rejection—rejecting yourself before anyone else can.
You’ll learn what “expecting the no” sounds like, how it shows up (softening your needs, reading silence as rejection, staying guarded when things are good, choosing emotionally unavailable partners), and why it can feel safer to stay in uncertainty than to risk real clarity. Tara also shares a science-backed lens on rejection sensitivity and how the brain can become hyper-alert to social threat—then gives you a simple weekly practice: The Pre-Rejection Audit, to start choosing from clarity instead of fear.
If you’re ready to stop settling for “almost,” this is your next step.
Get the e-guide: From Almost There to All the Way (linked here).
Educational content only. Not therapy or medical advice.
Science Corner (sources): Brain imaging research using social exclusion paradigms (e.g., Cyberball) finds that rejection and exclusion reliably engage regions involved in distress and threat monitoring, including the anterior/dorsal cingulate and anterior insula. Find link here
Individual differences matter: higher rejection sensitivity and attachment anxiety have been linked to stronger neural responses to social disapproval and exclusion. Find link here
Studies also show that simply anticipating social feedback can activate the brain’s monitoring/alarm systems—meaning we can start “bracing” before anything happens. Find link here
(Note: overlap between social rejection and physical pain networks is supported in parts of the literature, but the specificity of that overlap is debated.) Find link here
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