There's currently no way to disassociate yourself from a contribution that was never technically accepted. We can do things around specific revisions, but not so much things that never actually become revisions.
The way the system surfaces some of the information around edits is far from optimal. In some cases we don't flout it for you enough (well, beyond badges) and in other places the language is a little harsh. Because an edit wasn't accepted doesn't necessarily mean it was a bad edit, sometimes things just go sideways in review.
We don't want people to feel like they have a black mark on their profile. Yet, at the same time, we need to surface patterns of people using the system completely incorrectly (often with not-so-great intentions) and reviewers who see the history are the ones that frequently spot the bad patterns and alert moderators. Automating detection there is ... sketchy, at best.
I'd love a feature request for how we could make the experience better (given the constraints that we can't simply take it away) - could be as simple as just how we show the history so someone without a lot of inside knowledge would know to look at the proposed revision directly for context? Anyone with inside knowledge about how the system works wouldn't think twice about seeing a sprinkling of suggestions that didn't get accepted, so it's the outside world checking out your profile that's the primary use case.
Or, would simply changing it to "not accepted" sufficiently solve for that, even though it means the same thing? I can see how REJECTED feels like a big red stamp, even when it's not all in caps.
Either way, we're open to changing it as it does come up kind of regularly since one's participation on the site has come under a little more scrutiny by the outside world in recent years. We don't want language in your profile that makes you feel bad, but we have to maintain the goal of keeping as much transparency into activity as possible.