Talking To Your Critical Voices
Negative or critical voices interfere with people feeling
good about themselves, or feeling good at all. Sometimes those critical
voices are so loud that’s all you can hear — and you miss
out on your beauty, your growth, on the wonderful things you’re
doing. This is especially true for anyone who heard constant critical
or negative things about themselves growing up, or who’s experienced
abuse. Then there are the criticisms that women, especially, absorb from
advertisements, televison & magazines. We may have heard horrible
things said about ourselves so often that we came to believe them —
or we may still have those messages running through our heads like a tape
player — so softly we hardly hear them, but constant & always
there, or so loudly they blot everything else out.
But there is a way to lessen the intensity of those critical voices &
let them give you a break. Read on for some suggestions. (Note: You don’t
have to do all or even most of these things. Just find what works for
you.)
Notice the Critical
Messages
The first thing to do to help quiet self-criticism is to notice that it’s
happening. Many people put themselves down or criticize themselves without
even noticing they’re doing it. They might think that they’re
being reasonable or objective or helpful. But criticizing yourself doesn’t
help you at all — it just feeds more negative & self-harming
thinking.
So how do you pay attention?
If you really can’t hear
it in yourself, ask a friend or lover to point out when you’re criticizing
yourself. Probably you do it a lot less out loud than you do in your own
head, though, so this is just a starting point.
Try sitting with yourself quietly
for a long time & listen to what’s going on in the background.
If it helps to write it out, do that. What do you hear?
Listen to the critical
voices.
Next, try listening to those critical voices. Find out exactly what they’re
saying. The more we ignore something, the stronger it gets. It helps to
acknowledge those critical voices & to let them know you’ve
heard them. And it can help to hear exactly what they’re saying.
Try repeating their phrases aloud, or write them down.
Look at the Patterns
When you start to hear the negative messages, try to trace back when they
started. Did you make a “mistake” and verbally slap yourself,
or laugh at yourself before anyone else could? Did someone else say something
that made you think they were putting you down? Did someone laugh at you
when you were feeling vulnerable?
Try to notice every time a new onslaught of self-critical messages happens.
Write it down. Become familiar with your triggers — what sets off
that onslaught of criticism. Then try to recognize that trigger as soon
as it happens, or as soon after it has happened as you can. When you see
that pattern happening where critical messages are set off, try to step
back a little & give yourself some compassion & distance. Remind
yourself that you’re feeling particularly vulnerable, or hurt, or
scared & that you don’t need to be so harsh on yourself.
Trace the Messages Back
to Their Root
Look at the messages you hear in your head. Really analyze them. You had
to get them from somewhere. Are any of them familiar? Did anyone tell
you any of those messages when you were a child? Do they sound like your
mother — or your father? Try to figure out when you first started
“thinking” those phrases. Sometimes knowing where those messages
come from can decrease their intensity. (Ah ha — that’s something
my mother used to say to me. But she’s not right! I don’t
need to carry her voice in my head any more.)
Have a Conversation With the Critical Voices
It might help to do this on paper or at your computer so you can see it
more clearly. Ask those critical voices what they need & why they’re
telling you such negative things about yourself. Ask them what they’re
afraid of & why they need to do what they do so strongly. Just let
the answers come up & be there. Now is the time to listen.
Try not to be judgmental of those critical voices. It may help to realize
that critical voices often come out of desperation & duress —
such as a little child blaming herself instead of the adults who were
hurting her, because it was safer to think that way. Often, behind all
those negative messages & criticism is a lot of vulnerability, insecurity
& fear. If you can get in touch with that vulnerability & understand
where it’s coming from, you may find that the need to criticize
yourself greatly diminishes.
Reassure the Critical
Voices
If you’ve discovered that those critical voices feel insecure, vulnerable,
or afraid of something, try to reassure those parts inside you. If you
can meet the needs of those parts, the need to criticize you will decrease
.
Recognize the Strength
Critical voices are often created as a means of self-protection —
as a way of coping or surviving. For survivors of abuse & trauma,
those critical voices may be the parts who absorbed all the negative messages
& allowed other parts of yourself to keep playfulness, happiness,
or love intact. Other people may have felt safer taking on critical messages
& turning those messages on themselves instead of blaming the adults
around them or the people they loved, or they may use that negativity
to suppress their inner beauty & uniqueness so they fit in better.
But you don’t have to be smaller than you are. And hurting yourself
doesn’t stop others from hurting you. Acknowledge the strength &
aid that those critical voices may initially have given you & realize
that you no longer need to use them the same way.
Give the Critical Messages
a New Job
Those critical messages may have helped you survive — but now it’s
time for something new. Something that helps you now.
Give those critical voices a new job they can do, instead of the one they
originally took on. Try to talk to them. Thank them for the job that they
did, protecting or helping you when you needed them to & gently let
them know that that job is no longer helpful — but that you have
a new job that you desperately need filled. A new job that only they can
do: protecting you from others’ criticism & negativity. Or giving
you loving messages that build up your self-confidence. Or whatever job
you can think of that is meaningful & will truly help.
This job has to be important.
It can’t just be some willy nilly thing, or those parts won’t
take you seriously. And it has to be something that is positive, something
that is vital to feeling good. Something that you couldn’t do alone.
Those critical voices might
not take you up on your offer the first time you talk to them. But if
you let them know that they’re the only ones you think are strong
enough to do it, or smart enough, or that they’re the ones who can
do it best — and if you thank them in a real way for trying to protect
you in the past & let them know that this is the best way to protect
you now, then those parts will, almost assuredly, come around. And you’ll
have a strong team on your side. Because critical messages are very strong
— but loving messages are even stronger.
Replace Those Messages
With New, Loving Ones
Criticizing yourself probably served a purpose when you were a child,
maybe even helped you cope or survive. You may have thought that if you
criticized yourself first, it wouldn’t hurt so much when other people
criticized you. Or you may have thought it would make others criticize
you less, if you were the one to do it. Or perhaps you had no choice but
to absorb some of the things that were constantly being said about you.
Whatever the reason, criticizing yourself doesn’t help you now;
it hurts you. And you don’t deserve to be hurt. So try to give yourself
new, loving messages. Make up some new messages for yourself — and
remind yourself of them all the time.
This is a great job for those critical voices. Ask them to do this for
you. You need their help — and they can be powerful allies. Here’s
how you (or they) can do it:
Every time you hear yourself
start to criticize yourself, take a moment to notice that & then give
yourself a new, loving message. It often helps to write out those messages
& put them everywhere that you’ll find them. You can also ask
a friend or lover to help feed back to you those loving messages. You
may need to hear those loving messages from others for a while before
you’re able to start giving them to yourself. But sometimes the
most powerful messages come from your self.
Try to give as many
loving messages to yourself as you can.
Release the Critical
Messages
Try to release those critical & negative messages. You don’t
deserve to be emotionally hammered. You deserve kindness, respect &
love — especially from yourself. Realize that playing critical messages
in your head is a form of hurting yourself — and try to find the
compassion for yourself to let go of those negative thoughts.
Some people like to make a ritual out of it — a tangible act that
helps them to let it go, such as writing out the messages & burning
or tearing them up. Others might visualize something that helps them to
let it go, such as seeing the negative messages as red shapes (or whatever
colour you choose) & pushing that out of their body. Use whatever
method works best for you.
Be Compassionate With
Yourself
More than anyone else in the world, you deserve your own compassion. You
are the one who is with you always. And you are the one who, ultimately,
can hurt yourself or heal yourself the most.
Withholding compassion from yourself doesn’t help you — and
it doesn’t help the people you love, either. The more compassion
& love you’re able to give yourself, the more you’re able
to give others — both from your heart & by example.
You deserve your compassion
& love. You truly do. You won’t make yourself into
a “better” person by criticizing yourself or being harsh with
yourself. You won’t make people love you more by emotionally beating
yourself up. But when you give yourself compassion, you open up your heart
to yourself. You allow yourself to be all of who you are. And in blossoming
into your own self, you encourage others to do the same. Love is given
& received more easily — and you’ll feel better, happier
& more alive. Know that you are beautiful & just right for how
you need to be, the way you are.
Forgive Yourself
Whatever you think you’ve done wrong, whatever you judge yourself
for, you probably judge yourself far more harshly than anyone else ever
would. Let go of that judgement. Forgive yourself for everything that
you hold criticism for. We all make mistakes, every one of us. We all
have times that we can’t live up to our ideals. Ideals are good
things — when we remember that it’s what we’re trying
to reach, through practice & growth — and that we may not always
be able to reach those goals.
Let yourself be. Let yourself know that you are doing your best. And in
forgiving yourself, truly & wholeheartedly forgiving yourself, those
critical voices will lose some of their power & you will find you
are more beautiful than you thought.
Letting go of critical messages
can be hard to do. But criticizing yourself just continues the negativity
that others tried to give you. It’s not the route to feeling good.
Giving yourself loving messages is. You can do it. You can find a way
to lessen those critical voices, increase the loving messages & eventually
replace the old messages with new ones so that what becomes second nature
is to praise yourself, to love yourself, to have compassion for yourself.
And every little step you take along the way helps you & shows your
strength.
So next time you hear a critical message about yourself, take a moment
to breathe & then let that message go. Recognize the beauty in your
soul — and give yourself the loving messages you need.
© Cheryl Rainfield, 2002
|