We’ve all dealt with emotionally immature people: They get defensive at the slightest criticism, they constantly deflect blame, and then they try to guilt you into feeling sorry for them.

Emotional immaturity is a growing problem, and whether you interact with these people in your professional or personal life, it can be a struggle to engage with them.

As communication and psychology experts, we know that if you’re not careful, you can also easily run the risk of seeming emotionally immature to others. Why? A lot of us automatically use certain emotionally immature phrases without even thinking about it.

Here’s a list of the most common ones to avoid:

1. ‘It’s not my fault.’

2. ‘If you hadn’t done that, it wouldn’t have happened.’

3. ‘I don’t need to explain myself to you.’

4. ‘You’re overreacting.’

This is a combo of gaslighting — trying to make others believe a false reality — and shifting the blame again. The message they’re sending: You’re the problem, not me. Another toxic phrase in this vein is “you’re being too sensitive.”

5. ‘Yeah, whatever.’

6. ‘What are you talking about? I never said that!’

7. ‘It’s your problem, not mine.’

8. ‘You’re making such a big deal out of nothing!’

9. ‘You’re talking about the past.’

10. ‘I was just joking!’

11. ‘You always’/’You never…’

12. ‘But everyone does it!’

If there’s one phrase that really sounds like a kid said it, it’s this one. How many of us used “but all the kids are doing it” argument trying — usually in vain — to get our parents to allow us to do something? But emotionally immature adults use it, too.

They’ll pull out the time-honored “everyone’s doing it” argument as a justification for something they want to do or already have done. Of course, they’re blameless if they’ve done something wrong, they were just going along with the crowd, after all.

Kathy and Ross Petras are the brother-and-sister co-authors of “Awkword Moments: A Lively Guide to the 100 Terms Smart People Should Know,” “You’re Saying It Wrong” and “That Doesn’t Mean What You Think It Means.” They co-host the award-winning NPR podcast “You’re Saying It Wrong,” and have been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post and Harvard Business Review. Follow them on Bluesky.

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