Local Woman Discovers She Can Simply Not Associate With People She Doesn't Like, Experts Call It 'Revolutionary'

TONTITOWN, AR — In a groundbreaking development that has left behavioral scientists scrambling to update their textbooks, local woman Kendra Duggar has apparently discovered that it is physically, legally, and emotionally possible to simply not spend time with people she no longer wishes to be around.
'We've never seen anything quite like it,' said Dr. Patricia Hensley of the Arkansas Institute for Human Decision Making. 'She assessed the situation, considered her options, and then just... didn't go over there. We're applying for a $4 million federal grant to study how she did it.'
The technique, which Duggar has reportedly been refining over several weeks, involves a complex series of steps that experts have broken down as follows: Step 1, identify the people you no longer wish to see. Step 2, do not see them.
'It's two steps,' Dr. Hensley confirmed, visibly emotional. 'She did it in two steps.'
Neighbors report that Duggar has been seen successfully 'going places that are not her parents' house' on multiple occasions, a feat previously thought to require years of therapy, several life coaches, and at least one vision board seminar hosted at a Marriott conference room.
'I watched her drive right past their street,' said neighbor Dale Hoffmeister, 53, who witnessed the maneuver from his porch. 'She signaled, and then she just... continued forward. I wept.'
A spokesperson for the American Psychological Association released a statement praising Duggar's technique, adding that they hope her story 'inspires millions of Americans to learn about the mysterious and largely untapped power of not being somewhere.'
At press time, Duggar had also reportedly mastered the advanced technique of 'not answering phone calls,' a skill researchers say could take the rest of the scientific community decades to fully understand.