We All Get Criticized, So Remain Calm
Recognizing that criticism is inevitable makes it easier to bear.
KEY POINTS
We spend time worrying about past, present, and future criticism.
The pain of criticism is self-inflicted and continues inside your head.
When criticism comes your way, pause and try to sort it out in your mind so you are sure you understand it.
The title of this practice is a little tongue-in-cheek. What I mean is that most of us—me included—spend time worrying about criticism: past, present, and even future. Yes, try hard, keep agreements, "Don't be evil," etc. But, sooner or later—usually sooner— someone will point out the error in your ways. Often in subtle versions that still have an implicit criticism, such as giving advice, helping or teaching when you don't really need it, making corrections, comparing you negatively to others, or focusing on the one tile in the mosaic of your actions that's problematic while staying mum about the 99 other good tiles.
Criticism Is Unavoidable
In other words, criticism is unavoidable. Sometimes we take it in with good grace, other times it stings, and sometimes both are true. As we are profoundly social human animals, it is natural for criticism to sting sometimes. But whatever sting is inherent, we add to this pain with the jabs we give ourselves.
This "bonus pain"—a self-inflicted wound—includes continuing the criticism inside your head long after the other person has moved on. Or you pound on yourself way out of proportion to what happened: On the highly technical 0–10 Messing Up Silly Scale (MUSS), what you did was a two, but on the related 0–10 Fiercely Undoing Self-worth Scale (FUSS), you are lambasting yourself at a five or even 10—not fair at all. Or you ignore all your other good qualities—the other 99 tiles—while ruminating about the criticism.
We also jab ourselves with needless pain when we brace ourselves against possible future criticism or play needlessly small to avoid it. In many cases, the criticism is never going to happen, or it's very unlikely, or even if it did happen, it would not be a big deal. We tend to transfer into adulthood expectations we acquired as children or as younger adults. Maybe there was a lot of criticism from someone back then, but you're probably in a different place today. I've spent way too much of my life hunkering down or overpreparing to preempt an anticipated shaming attack...that would not occur anyway.
And even if the criticism does come, will it actually be the terrible experience you dread? Usually not. You can roll with it, take what's useful, form your conclusions about the person making the criticism, learn, and move on. Accepting criticism as inevitable and refusing to live under its shadow will free you up and make you happier.
The Practice
When criticism, even subtle, comes your way, pause and try to sort it out in your mind, so you're sure you understand it. Sometimes criticism is narrow and specific, but often it's vague, general, and has multiple things mixed up in it (e.g., some statements are accurate, but others are exaggerated). Slow down the interaction, so it doesn't go off the rails. The ancient emotion centers in the brain get about a two-second head start over the more recent logical centers, so buy yourself some time for all the resources inside your head to come online. Meanwhile, shore yourself up by thinking about people who like or love you and by remembering some of the many ways you do good and are good.
Once you understand the criticism in its parts and aspects, make your own unilateral decision about it. A fair amount of the criticism that comes your way is flat-out mistaken. The other person is wrong on the facts or doesn't understand the larger context. Think of the many scientific theories that were initially scorned but have proven correct over time.
Of the criticism that remains, some are preferences or values disguised as thoughtful suggestions. For example, when you're driving, suppose the passenger says you should slow down or speed up when actually you are perfectly safe, and the other person just likes it slower or faster. Some people value closeness more than others; just because you like more cave time than your partner doesn't make you cold or rejecting; nor is your partner smothering or controlling; it's just a difference in values: grounds for inquiry, compassion, and negotiation, but not criticism.
Another chunk of criticism coming at you is thoughtful suggestions disguised as moral fault-finding; now your passenger says you should be ashamed of yourself for endangering others when, in fact, all you need to do is back off another couple of car lengths from the car in front of you on the freeway; you're not reckless, but you could be more skillful.
Then there is that which is worthy of healthy remorse. It's up to you to decide what this part is. Feel what's appropriate, learn the lesson, make amends if they're called for, know that you've done what you could, ask yourself how much remorse or shame you'd want a friend to bear who did whatever you did, and then see if you can ask no more or less from yourself.
Knowing that you can handle criticism in these ways, let yourself be more open to it. Don't stonewall or intimidate others who have a criticism for you; then it just festers or bursts out in other ways.
But, also, don't walk on eggshells to avoid trouble (unless you're in a dangerous situation, which is a different sort of problem) or obsess or over plan to make sure you make no mistakes. A close friend is an extremely successful professor at a top-of-the-food-chain elite university, and I asked him once what led to his success. He said that while his colleagues/competitors were perfecting their one paper, he was finishing three of his own; one of these would be rejected for publication, one would come back with corrections he could make, and one would be accepted immediately; then, when the inevitable criticisms did come down the road, he'd already moved on to his next three papers.
Mostly, just recognize that criticism in its various forms and flavors (and smells) is a fact of life. So be it. Our lives and this world have bigger problems and much bigger opportunities. Time to live more bravely and freely.
This article was originally written by Rick Hanson, Ph.D., a senior fellow of the Greater Good Center at UC Berkeley. It was reviewed by Michelle Quirk for Psychology Today Magazine.