The human brain processes social rejection similarly to physical pain because, in our evolutionary past, being excluded from social groups posed serious survival threats; brain scans confirm that rejection activates the same neural regions involved in physical injury, explaining why feelings of being ignored, left out, or abandoned can feel physically painful even when we intellectually understand they shouldn't.
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The Psychology of RejectionAdded:
Your brain processes rejection almost like physical pain.
Studies using brain scans found that being excluded activates some of the same regions involved in physical injury. Thousands of years ago, humans depended on social groups to survive.
Being rejected by your tribe could mean danger or death.
So, your brain evolved to treat rejection as a serious threat. That's why being ignored, left out, or abandoned can feel physically painful.
Even when you know it shouldn't.
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