
If self-criticism was going to fix us, we would be all healed by now.
Hell, if self-criticism was going to fix us, we would have been healed a long time ago.
Turns out, self-criticism, at last the way we trauma survivors tend to use it, only makes us feel worse.
Which is ironic, because many of us believe that we “need” self-criticism to function well.
I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been told by trauma survivors some variant of “if I lighten up on myself, then I won’t be motivated to achieve!”
We don’t “choose” to believe this, understand— we’ve been CONDITIONED to believe it.
We’ve been conditioned to believe that criticism and pressure are the keys to motivation and performance— largely because criticism and pressure were the primary tools that were used to motivate us to perform.
It was what we saw. What we internalized. What we assumed was appropriate.
Over time, self-criticism as a “motivational” “strategy” became so familiar, it never occurred to us there might be alternatives.
Here’s the thing: self-criticism, as we were conditioned to use it against ourselves, doesn’t just make us feel like garbage— it also decimates our self-esteem.
It’s doesn’t just put us in a bad mood. It chips away at our entire concept of who we are, what we can do, and what we deserve.
Many of us paradoxically only feel “safe” when we’re beating the sh*t out of ourselves.
Better we do it ourselves, we reason, than wait for someone to do it TO us.
In that way, self-criticism gives us a feeling of control.
It’s a bullsh*t feeling of “control,” of course— but we really like that feeling.
Getting out of the self-criticism habit isn’t easy. We’re talking about heavily conditioned neural pathways here.
If getting out of the self-criticism habit was “easy,” we’d have all done it by now. But it’s not.
The tool of self-talk is powerful, in trauma recovery and in life. Self-talk has the power to create and the power to destroy. It is a primary way we direct our mental focus, the “lens” through which we see and interpret the world.
If vicious self-criticism truly was “motivational,” we wouldn’t struggle the way we do.
Don’t buy into the myth that self-criticism helps, or that we “need” it in order to perform well.
Being hard on ourselves does not motivate or enhance our performance.
Over time, it only gets us to dislike, distrust, and avoid ourselves.
(That “avoiding ourselves” thing is what we call “dissociation.”)









