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The Dinner Table That Changed My Perspective

People at Peace Don't Create Chaos


During a recent networking event, I  sat at a dinner table where everything looked perfect from the outside. Successful people. Good jobs. Polished conversations. But the energy? Strange. 

One kept interrupting others, correcting even the smallest details. Another laughed — but only when someone else was being subtly mocked. At first, it felt like confidence. But then it started feeling like something else. 

 Later, someone said something that stuck with me: “The happiest people don’t need to win every conversation.” That night, I couldn’t unsee it. 


People at Peace Don't Create Chaos

I am sure we all met these kinds of people somewhere in our lives, and there’s something you start noticing as you grow older. A sarcastic comment here. A cold tone there. A person who always seems to “cut” others down just a little too easily. It’s rarely the happiest people who do that. But the ones carrying something heavy inside. Some people move through life with calm confidence, kindness, and emotional balance. Others, even when they seem “successful” on the outside, can come across as harsh, critical, or unnecessarily mean.

Psychology suggests that this difference is less about wealth, intelligence, or status — and more about inner emotional stability. Sigmund Freud called it displacement — when emotional pressure inside the mind has nowhere to go, so it leaks out in safer directions. Not toward the real source of stress, but toward people who can’t fight back or prefer to not fight back. Neuroscience calls this negativity bias.

The mind starts scanning the world differently: neutral comments feel like criticism, harmless jokes feel like attacks, and other people’s success feels like personal failure. So the person reacts faster. Sharper. Colder. Not because they are evil. But because their mind is stuck in survival mode.

Everything feels like a threat — even when it isn’t.

There is another pattern psychologists talk about: fragile self-esteem. It doesn’t look like insecurity on the surface. In fact, it often looks like the opposite. Arrogance. Judgment. Superiority.

But underneath it is something very different. A constant need to prove. And so, without realizing it, the person builds their confidence by shrinking others. Because if others look smaller… they don’t feel so small. But then you meet the other kind of person. They don’t interrupt. They don’t compete for dominance in conversations.

They don’t turn everything into a subtle comparison. Not because they are naïve. But because they are not fighting a war inside themselves. Psychologists find that people with higher emotional well-being tend to have more empathy bandwidth — more mental space to actually notice others, rather than defend against them. They are not perfect. Just… not constantly under attack by their own thoughts. Over time, you start to see the pattern clearly. It was never really about success or intelligence or personality types.

So the bottom line is some people are at war with themselves. Others are not. And the world feels very different depending on which side you’re on. Because people who are at peace inside…rarely feel the need to make the world harder for others.


_____________________

 So, when you come across people whose words or actions are driven by their own unresolved struggles, wish them well and keep moving forward. You don't have to carry their pain or make it your own.

The world doesn't need more retaliation; it needs more emotionally grounded people. Hurt cannot heal hurt. Responding with the same bitterness only continues the cycle. Real strength lies in choosing compassion without compromising your boundaries, and in protecting your peace rather than proving a point.

Perhaps that's how we create a little more harmony in the world—not by winning every battle, but by refusing to pass our wounds on to someone else. 

Don't let people pull you into their chaos. Instead, invite them into your peace.

Explore more of my insightful articles here: ShikhaSrivastavaBlog

Comments

  1. I really appreciate your thoughts and the way you express them. At times, it feels like I can actually hear your voice through your writing. Keep sharing your light and positivity! ❤️❤️❤️😘😘

    ReplyDelete
  2. I have also observed throughout my career that the most successful people are often the kindest. In contrast, those who try to pull others down eventually end up falling into their own traps. Over time, negativity tends to consume the very people who create it. You composed it so well! 👍🏻☺️

    ReplyDelete
  3. Sometimes, people behave poorly simply because they are jealous of the life you're living. But I believe even that jealousy stems from an inner battle—a constant need to compare, compete, and measure themselves against others. When someone is at peace with their own journey, they don't feel threatened by someone else's happiness or success. They celebrate it instead.😊

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