The Disrespect You Almost Always Miss
Hear me out. Disrespect rarely walks in wearing a name tag. It shows up quietly, in ways you won’t pay attention to at first. It’s in the last-minute request that assumes your time isn’t valuable. The person who expects you to drop everything, cancel your plans, and honour what they couldn’t even plan ahead for. They never asked if you were available. They assumed you were. Because in their mind, your schedule bends for theirs.
It’s also in the invitation they were too proud to extend, but still expected you to attend. No call. No message. No “We’d love to have you there.” Yet they’re surprised, even offended, when you’re not in the room. That silence is a message too. It says: “We want your presence, but not enough to honour you with an ask.” And slowly, you start to notice the pattern; you’re wanted for what you bring, not for who you are.
Then there are the subtle remarks. The jokes that water down who you are, what you’ve achieved, and what you stand for. The “You sef” comments. The backhanded praise. “You’re lucky.” “It wasn’t that hard.” “Anybody could have done it.” Said with a smile, so if you react, you look sensitive. But over time, those little drops erode you. They’re not meant to celebrate you. They’re meant to shrink you back to a size that’s more comfortable for other people.
It also hides in platitudes dressed as politeness. “You’re learned.” “With the greatest of respect.” “With all due respect.” Phrases that sound respectful on the surface but are often used to dismiss, correct, or condescend. They’re a soft way of saying, “I don’t value your view, but I want to sound reasonable while I tear it down.” The respect is in the language, not in the intent. And if you’re not paying attention, you’ll mistake courtesy for honour.
Another form shows up in people who don’t listen. They don’t listen to understand. They listen to react, to rebut, and to argue — even when there’s no need for any of it. The moment you speak, they’re already forming their counter. Your story becomes their opening to talk over you. Your point becomes a problem to win against. That’s not conversation. That’s control. And it tells you they care more about being right than about knowing you.
It shows up in tasks too. The urgent favour dumped on you with zero regard for your schedule. “Can you just do this now?” As if your deadlines, your work, your rest don’t exist. No appreciation in advance. No apology after. Just the expectation that you will carry it, because you always do. And the moment you say no, suddenly you’re the problem.
Here’s the truth: what you tolerate, you teach people. Disrespect doesn’t always shout. Sometimes it whispers through poor timing, pride, jokes, polished language, bad listening, and last-minute demands. Pay attention. Protect your peace. Honour your work, your time, and your name; because if you don’t, people will keep treating them like they’re optional. And you are not optional.
By: Mustapha Bin Usman
The author is a writer, entrepreneurship expert, business and life coach, entrepreneur, farmer, trainer, and teacher. You may contact him via email: mustbusman@gmail.com or on Mobile/ WhatsApp: +233 246 134 798 or visit his Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/theusmanconsulting/ Read more from his Modernghana.com column:https://www.modernghana.com/author/MustaphaBinUsman
The author is an academic, a writer, an entrepreneurship expert, a business and life coach, an entrepreneur, a farmer, a trainer, and a teacher.
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