You know, as a kid, my dad always told me "Ignore it. Just ignore it." any & every time anyone bothered me...from bullies at school to my siblings to the scary dog down the road. And I did. I became really good at ignoring people (and barking dogs). And so I grew up thinking that was something anyone could do. I had one sibling who would never ignore anyone, and I couldn't figure out why they kept ignoring this great advice from Dad, because it worked so well most of the time.
It wasn't until I hit my late high-school/early college years, and was working, both with other adults, and sometimes with other kids that I finally realized that some people just aren't hard wired to ignore people. They just can't do it. It was a shock to me at the time because as a kid and younger teen, I really always believed that my sibling just was refusing to take the advice.
So long story short, I think we're seeing in Jenn, especially, a true difficulty in being able to ignore negativity in her life, and I think that if you find the negativity is getting to you and you cannot push it aside, then it really is healthiest and happiest to walk away from it if possible. They can keep succeeding with
Youtube without their Twitter feeds, I'm sure. I love the idea mentioned earlier of them devoting more time to
Instagram instead. I'm sure Disney/Universal/Orlando/Theme Park fans and Tracker fans would be happy to have more photos from their park visits and travels for sure.
