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Difficult people in your life could be aging you faster: New research reveals the toll— 3 psychology-backed tips to fight back

etimes.in | Last updated on - Apr 1, 2026, 10:40 IST
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Difficult people in your life could be aging you faster: New research

Have you ever noticed how sometimes talking to certain people-- be it a negative coworker or a nosy neighbour-- ends up making you feeling drained, older, and snappier? You're not imagining it. New research warns: "hasslers"—those people who stir drama, belittle, or complicate life—might literally speed up your biological clock. Funded by the National Institute on Aging and published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the study links regular hassler run-ins to chronic stress, spiking epigenetic biomarkers tied to faster aging. And so, while positive ties extend life; these energy vampires shorten it. Women, poorer-health people, and childhood trauma survivors report more hasslers. Co-workers and roommates top the list over friends. Here's the science—and how to protect your health and years.


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The aging math: Every Hassler adds 1.5% faster wrinkles

Picture aging normally: one biological year per calendar year. Add one hassler? You're ticking 1.015 years instead—1.5% acceleration, as per the research. Two or more? Effects snowball, increasing chronic illnesses like heart disease or diabetes. Why? Stress hormones like cortisol erode telomeres (cell "caps" signaling age), as per epigenetic scans. Positive bonds buffer this; hasslers amplify it. Women face more (maybe, societal "caregiving" load?), as do unhealthy or people who had difficult childhoods— as vulnerability attracts more drama. Meanwhile, obligatory ties like office mates or neighbours, where escape's tough, also add to one's stress. And so, as per the study one should cull toxic orbits to reclaim their time and life. Your peace is a priceless longevity hack.

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Why you're a hassler magnet: Women, health, and history

Not "shocking," says UT Austin's Debra Umberson, as per The Washington Post: Women report more hasslers, mirroring gendered relational strains. Poorer health draws them too—misery loves company. Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) prime sensitivity; trauma wires hypervigilance. And non-family hasslers like co-workers (daily grind grudges), roommates (space wars), neighbours (petty feuds)— add to your stress. The ideal way to deal with it is to recognize patterns early on in any connection. You're not doomed; awareness arms you. Umberson notes it "adds to what we know"—hasslers exploit imbalances. The good news: Psychology can help us deal with such difficult people easily. Here's how:

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3 smart psychology tips to deal with such difficult people (Without losing years): 1. Set strong boundaries—And try the Gray rock method

Psychology's gray rock method: become boring as pebbles. Hasslers crave reactions—drama fuel. Respond minimally: "Noted," "Okay," exit stage left. No justifying, engaging, or JADE (justify-argue-defend-explain). Boundaries signal "your chaos stops here." CBT (cognitive behavioral therapy) backs it: disengage emotionally, helps protect cortisol spikes. Practice: scripted replies ("Busy now"), time limits (15-min coffee max). For women, who often socialized to soothe-- reclaim your power by saying "no" guilt-free. The result: They seek thrills elsewhere; you age gracefully. Long-term: Journal helps you deal with your feelings, therapy helps too. Boundaries aren't rude; they're biological armor.

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2. Detach: Reframe their hassle as their problem

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)'s gem: accept hasslers' flaws as data, not destiny. "They're wired chaotic; I'm not." Detach: view as flawed humans, not personal attacks. Mindfulness apps (Headspace) train observation—"Interesting tantrum, not my circus." Reframing slashes rumination, per studies—less stress, slower telomere wear. Empathy lite: "Tough break for them," sans fixing. Exit loops: "Agree to disagree." For ACE-prone folks? Trauma therapy (EMDR) heals hooks. Bonus: compassion without absorption conserves energy. Radical acceptance frees you—hasslers age themselves; you thrive timelessly.

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3. Invest in "Builders," remove people who drain your energy

Positive psych's rule: surround with builders (lifters, laughers), limit wreckers. Audit networks: who energizes vs. exhausts? Nurture top 5; distance bottom 5. Grey rock buys time; pruning preserves years. Social baseline theory: quality ties buffer stress—hassler-heavy nets accelerate aging 1.5% per extra. Action: schedule joy (weekly calls with cheerleaders), soft-fade hasslers ("Swamped lately"). Women: swap obligatory chats for chosen ones. Track mood post-interaction—data guides cuts. Therapy nudge: assert "I choose peace." Result? Vibrant orbits extend telomeres, spark joy. Curate wisely; live longer, lighter.

This research is a wake-up that difficult people drain your decades. So, spot hasslers fast and learn to deal with them. Your future self will be grateful to you.



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Copyright © Jun 4, 2026, 05.02AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service