
You’re not going to get through life without difficult people. That’s not a warning—it’s just math.
Human interaction involves friction. Sometimes it’s sandpaper that smooths your edges. Sometimes it’s a wrecking ball.
How you respond depends on who’s holding the hammer.
Let’s talk about the three types of stress-inducing relationships that most often drain capable adults: temporary stress caused by strangers, tricky dynamics with people you know, and toxic patterns that leave no option but separation.
1. Temporary Stress: The Stranger Who Ruins Your Day (But Probably Shouldn’t)
Someone cuts you off in traffic. The woman at the coffee shop loudly takes a business call on speaker. Your seatmate on the plane decides deodorant is optional. They might make your blood pressure spike, but here’s the deal: they are not your problem.
Strangers and casual acquaintances rarely earn space in your mental ecosystem. But your nervous system doesn’t always know that. It reacts as if the stakes are personal. Learning to override that reflex matters.
A 2021 study from the University of California showed that people who ruminate on daily annoyances report significantly higher stress levels at the end of the day. Not because the events were big—but because they let them linger.
When a random person triggers frustration, the best tool is reframing. Will this matter in a week? Do you want to invite this person’s energy into your evening? Probably not. Take the hit, shake it off, and move on. Your peace is too expensive to rent out.
2. Tricky Stress: The Person You Know (and Can’t Avoid)
This is where things get real. The family member who criticizes under the guise of “concern.” The co-worker who turns every team meeting into a one-act play. The friend who drains your energy but has known you for years.
You can’t ghost them. But you also can’t let them eat away at your well-being.
Research from the American Psychological Association links chronic exposure to relational stress with increased risk of anxiety, depression, and even cardiovascular issues. The body keeps score. And the scoreboard lights up when you’re constantly bracing yourself.
What works? Clarity. Not confrontation. Not avoidance. Clarity.
Stop accommodating to the point of resentment. You don’t have to broadcast your limits, but you do have to enforce them.
- If a co-worker corners you with gossip, change the subject or end the conversation.
- If a family member criticizes your choices, say: “I’m not looking for input on that.”
- If a long-time friend brings more stress than support, spend less time.
This isn’t cold. It’s calibrated. Emotional maturity includes choosing your own peace without performing guilt.
Anecdotally, I learned this the hard way. I once tolerated weekly coffee dates with someone who never asked a single question about my life. When I finally skipped a few, nothing imploded. The space felt like relief. That’s when I knew I wasn’t being cruel—just honest.
3. Toxic Stress: The Person You Need to Walk Away From
Some relationships don’t just stress you out. They gut your mental health, wreck your self-esteem, and chip away at your ability to trust your own instincts. These are the truly toxic ones—the manipulators, narcissists, and chronic emotional saboteurs.
Going non-contact is not trendy. It’s not petty. And it’s not easy.
The decision to cut off contact—especially with a parent, sibling, or spouse—comes with grief, backlash, and second-guessing. But if you’ve exhausted all reasonable efforts, and staying in the relationship means sacrificing your safety or sanity, then it’s the only responsible choice.
Make the decision with care, not in reaction. When possible, explain it to the person—not to change them, but to be fair. Be ready: they will argue, deny, or attempt to charm their way back in. You owe them clarity, not access.
According to a 2022 report by Psychology Today, going no-contact is on the rise—particularly among adults who grew up with high-control environments or emotionally abusive households. It’s not a trend. It’s a reckoning.
One woman I worked with went no-contact with her father after years of trying to keep the peace. He dismissed her boundaries, bad-mouthed her to relatives, and manipulated her kids. When she finally drew the line, people said she was overreacting. But she finally slept through the night. That told her everything she needed to know.
What This Means for You
Here’s what most people don’t realize: you will outgrow some relationships, navigate friction in others, and need to cut ties with a few. That doesn’t make you difficult. It makes you discerning.
But none of this is easy to do alone.
We need people around us who remind us what safety feels like. Who help us recalibrate when someone else knocks us off balance. Who walk with us as we unlearn the reflex to over-function in relationships that don’t serve us.
That’s the work we do inside The LAYLO Collective.
Because dealing with difficult people is hard. But building the support system to face them? That’s possible—and worth it.

LAYLO wellness centers social wellness—supported by mental clarity and movement—to help you live and work with more steadiness, connection, and longevity.
The LAYLO Editis where I share thoughtful, practical insight for real life.
Join for updates on upcoming experiences, including The LAYLO Collective, a small-group social wellness experience designed for real life, and Wellness Retreats.
Follow along on Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn, and Pinterest.









