“Fifteen years from today, your income will be within 10% to 15% of the average of your 10 closest friends’ income,” financial advisor Dave Ramsey wrote. He was drawing on a massive 2022 social-media study by Raj Chetty, et al, that showed economic connectedness to be the single greatest predictor of economic mobility.
Like so much data analysis, this study is built on assumptions that may be faulty. Still, the idea lines up with common sense. Anyone who’s spent time in the art world knows that it’s easier to get a Manhattan solo show when your closest friends are on the Upper East Side. Humans tend to dress like, drive like, and talk like their tribe. We’re herd animals, and group-norming is a powerful impulse. If it makes you work harder as an artist or strive to be more successful, that’s great, but group norming can also be a force for mediocrity or worse.
Energy vampires
There are people who suck energy out of the room. Ramsey calls them “energy vampires,” and advises us to tell ourselves, “The people that I spend time with that are negative are going to be limited to the amount of energy that I have to help them not be negative.”
Some of these situations are unavoidable: the person in a health crisis, the elderly neighbor who’s alone during the holidays. We’d be inhumane to ignore them. But some of them are like an annoying dripping faucet; we’re so accustomed to their carping that we don’t ever assess whether the relationship is healthy.
We presume that if we give selflessly, the other party always benefits. It’s sometimes surprising when your best efforts backfire or are misconstrued, but you may be actually harming that other person more than you’re helping.
Energy vampires are often drama queens. It’s painfully easy to get sucked into their battles; the classic model for that being “let’s you and him fight.”
Situational depression vs. energy vampires
We will all go through times in our life where we’re dealing with crisis or tragedy. Situationally-depressed people can mimic energy vampires, with the same narrow focus and worldview. It’s sometimes hard to tell the difference, but humanity requires that we treat our situationally-depressed friends with kindness.
This is a special problem for artists
I’ve been self-employed since 1990. The one universal truth of working from home is that people think you’re free to lavish time and attention on them. It’s true that our schedules give us flexibility, but all those demands grow like weeds and before we know it, we don’t have time to paint.
Many painters have a similar personality style to my own: fundamentally we’re introverted but we play extroverts in public. Most of us are intuitive, because that’s how art works. These traits make us vulnerable to manipulation.
Dealing with energy vampires
It’s important to remember that we’re not responsible for others’ emotional states. We need to set boundaries, either of time and space, or emotional barriers.
If you always feel drained, anxious, foggy, or stressed after spending time with a particular person or social group, that person may be an energy vampire. You don’t need to tolerate constant negativity. It gets in the way of your real work.
Reserve your spot now for a workshop in 2025:
- Canyon Color for the Painter, Sedona, AZ, March 10-14, 2025
- Advanced Plein Air Painting, Rockport, ME, July 7-11, 2025.
- Sea and Sky at Acadia National Park, August 3-8, 2025.
- Find Your Authentic Voice in Plein Air, Berkshires, MA, August 11-15, 2025.
- Immersive In-Person Fall Workshop, Rockport, ME, October 6-10, 2025.
My favorite painting times are when NO ONE approaches me! And I don’t have to be on alert for someone approaching, but can just meld into my painting. That makes me happy. 😁
So true with energy vampires who may be stuck in their periods of personal quagmires. We need be careful not to fall into false burden bearing. It can be a challenge to learn how to break the vibe from people struggling with those spirits. Better to detach with love if it starts to affect your own life emotionally. We are told to guard our hearts (Prov. 4:23). A hard lesson learned: “You can lead a horse to water, but …” Sometimes people do not have the eyes to see, or ears to hear at the moment. Yet simply want to drone on in a negative mindset. And it often stems from a spirit of unforgiveness or self-pity. This is a hard journey we all deal with at points in our lives. Sometimes a simple prayer may be the best remedy. And perhaps I should ask for forgiveness for the times I have been an energy vampire. On a more positive note … I am definitely an extrovert in public, but perhaps more of a contemplative in private. As a creative, I definitely need the balance of both solitude and the company of others. P.S. interesting how the word unforgiveness just isn’t a word curiously (tis always flagged by the dreaded a.i. spelling bots) … why is that? Unforgiveness is a major obstacle to freeing one’s soul from oppression, imho.