11 Signs of a Bitter Person That Leave A Bad Taste In Your Mouth
When life gives you lemons, make lemonades. However, some choose to be bitter about it. In this post, you'll know the characteristics of a bitter person.

What turns people bitter? You’ve tried everything to help someone in your life see the brighter side, but the more you try, the more bitter they seem. Every word, every action is soaked in negativity.

And it’s exhausting. Why are they like this? Where does all this bitterness come from?

More importantly, what can you do about it?

They won’t forget. They won’t leave themselves vulnerable to the same pain. Better to keep everyone at a safe distance than to risk being exposed or attacked. They see the same warning signs in everyone they meet. Because they’re always looking for them.

To them, it’s a survival thing. They can’t afford to risk further trauma. They haven’t even processed (let alone healed from) the one they’ve already suffered.

Grudges are the best way to ensure they’ll never forget—and never give you a chance to hurt them again.

They focus only on the negative and always find something or someone to complain about. It’s not their fault life is a total suckfest and people are horrible.

Life and other people are the problem. And what can they do but call it as they see it?

Ask them to stop complaining or to think of something good in their life, and they’re likely to accuse you of “toxic positivity”—as if, by asking them to be more positive, you’re invalidating their pain. And now you’ve become someone they complain about.

Most times, they don’t even see it. They’re too busy focusing on what’s wrong to notice what’s good. And they don’t want you or anyone pressuring them to be grateful.

As with positive thinking, they interpret any suggestion that they practice gratitude as a self-righteous dismissal of what they’ve suffered in the past—and what they continue to suffer because they refuse to let go of that pain. Or, in their view, it won’t let go of them.

If their main takeaway from life is negative, expressing gratitude feels disingenuous.

Once someone has hurt or offended the bitter person, there’s nothing they can do to earn that person’s forgiveness. Cross them once, and you’re an enemy forever.

And enemies should be glad the bitter person doesn’t hunt them down. Things to do, etc.

So, the bitter person honestly does not care if bad things happen to people who’ve hurt or offended them in some way. In fact, they prefer to hear bad news where those offenders are concerned. They might even be gleeful about it.

The only downside is if they’re not able to see just how much the other person is suffering.

They’re especially jealous and resentful if something good happens to someone who hurt or offended them. If only karma would pass the torch once in a while, they’d make sure nothing good happened for those bottom-feeders.

Anything good that happens to someone they’re angry with feels like a slap in the face.

If they could turn blessings into curses, they would. And for that reason, their entire existence is more a curse than a blessing to them.

So, they keep wishing the same on others.

Bitter people find it difficult to celebrate even with people they care about. Someone else’s joy feels as though life has, once again, not only passed them by but smacked them upside the head (just for fun) — especially if the one celebrating is an enemy.

Even if they aren’t, though — even if they’re someone the bitter person loves — something in them is blocking their capacity to empathize and feel the same joy.

They see other people happy, and it only reminds them of how comparatively joyless their life is. They’re more likely to feel offended or excluded than to join in the celebration.

If someone else is getting all the attention, the bitter person will do what they can to upstage the interloper and remind everyone that they should have the spotlight.

They’ve already forgotten whatever that poser said, because it’s not as important as what they have to share. And just to spice things up, they’ll embellish the news with a bit of exaggeration (just a bit) and an extra helping of melodrama.

If the reaction is not what they hoped, they’ll up their game and invent a juicy scandal. Or, if possible, they’ll make a scene that humiliates the object of their jealousy.

They expect the worst from people. Because people are, well, the worst—some more than others. They also expect the worst from life, even when good things happen.

They’re more likely to either focus on negative details or to explain away any blessing.

They often use sarcasm or scornful language to express their thoughts. Negative thoughts are the only ones they entertain with any regularity, so most, if not all, of what comes out of their mouth is negative, too.

And if other people “knew” what they did, they’d think the same way.

Bitter people are more likely to blame others for their problems than to take responsibility for them. The very idea that they might be prolonging their own suffering is anathema to them—proof that you just don’t understand.

Much as they might bristle at the idea of being a victim, they’re quick to turn any complaint into an opportunity to blame someone else.

Ask them what they could do to make their situation better, and they’re more likely to point at the obstacles (real or imaginary) and blame someone else for putting them there.

How could the bad things in their life be their fault when they’re the one suffering?

The bitter person often has harsh words for those described as positive people. Anyone who describes their life in glowing terms, expressing gratitude and dwelling on what they love must be a phony, a Pollyanna, or a moron.

They must not have experienced what the bitter person has suffered. They can’t possibly have suffered as badly (let alone worse) if they’re going around being positive all the time.

Bitter people prefer bitter company—people who “get” them. They don’t want their viewpoint challenged by someone whose ready smile is a direct affront to their chosen mindset. Positivity has no place in their world. So, neither do positive people.

The bitter person can’t look too hard at what they say, think, or do. Quick as they are to criticize others, they can’t bring themselves to ask, “Is this really true?” about something they put forth as true or factual. It must be true, and how dare you suggest otherwise?

Ask them about their sources, and chances are good they won’t have more than assertions and insults to back them up.

Confronted with something that doesn’t fit their idea of how people should be, the bitter person will make assumptions about them (none of which are likely to be flattering).

And they’re happy to share what they “know.”

https://liveboldandbloom.com/10/self-improvement/bitter-person
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