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Fear being critical & fear of speaking up

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  • #126901
    Artful Apricot
    Participant

    My mother focuses all of her criticism (and there is plenty) on me and always has. Nothing is ever good enough. It’s caused low self esteem since I was small and after years of therapy, I now understand where many of my issues started. I’ve also noticed that I, too can be overly critical, especially with myself. I’m very fearful of criticism seeping into my relationship. Since I can see it in myself and I know how damaging it is, I am trying very hard to be mindful of it.

    That’s all well and good, but it makes another problem I have much worse. I find it very difficult to speak up and express my feelings, especially if I’m not happy in my relationship. I’m often not sure if the thing bothering me is that inner critic who wants perfection or a legitimate problem. I don’t want to be demanding. My mother is demanding. I don’t want to be that person. I don’t want to be always complaining or making others feel they aren’t good enough. On the other hand, I do want my needs to be met.

    I’ve never been good at romantic relationships. I have a lot of fear about driving him away. This makes me even more hesitant to voice my feelings. On top of this, my bf has his own baggage leading him to feel attacked and not good enough from the slightest comment or suggestion. He’s gotten better with this over the years, but it still lurks under the surface and compounds things. We don’t fight often, because we both avoid confrontation like the plague. So, things tend to build up on both sides. I think he is even worse about telling me when things are bothering him, which makes me feel even more like “the one who is always complaining.”

    Sometimes I am able to bring up issues and discuss them and it goes ok. He may have a poor reaction, but it’s usually short lived and we move on. If the issue is closely related to my own self esteem, however, I find it almost impossible to bring up. I feel the issue must be due to some deep personal failing on my side (it usually isn’t, but my mind will still torture me that I’m not good enough).

    Usually when I have an issue like this, I avoid talking about it for too long, convincing myself I’m being silly and whatever the issue is doesn’t really matter, that’s it’s just a bout of low self esteem. Eventually it catches up with me. I end up incredibly frustrated. When I’m frustrated, I usually end up crying. By that point I know I need to bring it up, but by then it will come out in a torrent of magnified emotions. His reaction will be to be overly sensitive and defensive to my revelation, whatever it is, 1) because he is apt to be that way by personality and 2) even though I’m trying hard to speak up rationally, the bottled emotions make the whole conversation much more dramatic than it needs to be. He’ll end up lashing out (he’s told me before that it’s because I’m unhappy, which makes him angry at himself, but it hurts all the same). In the end, I regret ever bringing it up…which makes me reluctant to bring up anything the next time.

    I don’t expect my boyfriend to read my mind. I know I need to speak up. How do I break out of this cycle?

    #126908
    Jennifer Boyatt
    Participant

    Dear artful,

    It sounds like you are incredibly self aware and that is a great foundation!

    As I’m sure you understand, things like this don’t necessarily have quick fixes. It is a matter of changing one tiny thing and practicing to get good at it. Then trying the next thing. Until, over time, the relationship becomes healthy.

    Is your boyfriend willing to go on a self and relationship healing journey with you? Or are you on your own for this? Because, again as I’m sure you know, you can’t make choices for him–of who he is, what he will do, how he will react. But perhaps if you can take classes together, read books together, attend therapy together, watch videos together (YouTube!) about relationships, maybe that will be good if he is willing. Just be sure to take the advice for yourself, not be supervising if he is taking the advice for himself/for you, ha ha. Right? 🙂

    All cycle-breaking begins with deciding to value yourself. When you value you yourself deeply (sound like bf also may have issues here), then you make much different choices than when you don’t; just by that one thing.

    Maybe you guys can agree to have one sit down a week to hear and listen to each other about the problems, and try to react calmly? Then the rest of the time, keep the peace, but you know that you will both be listened to each other once a week at least.

    And when HE speaks–whatever it is, even in reaction to what you said–acknowledge him and his pain. “I hear you, I see where you are coming from, I don’t blame you” like that. Hopefully he’ll soon follow your example.

    Bless you, relationships take guts,
    Respect~Jennifer

    #126910
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear artfulapricot:

    I see the Inner Critic as a mental representative of the real life critical parent. A child is not separated, mentally, from her mother. When the mother is critical, as the child’s brain matures, the mother becomes a mental entity in the brain, a collection of neuropathways. (A kind, gentle mother would have resulted in a kind, gentle Inner Critic- how fortunate that would have been!)

    You wrote: “I’m often not sure if the thing bothering me is that inner critic who wants perfection or a legitimate problem”- I am very familiar with this problem. You also wrote that your boyfriend “feel(s) attacked and not good enough from the slightest comment or suggestion” that you make.” You then keep things to yourself, things build up, you get frustrated, cry, bring it up, “but by then it will come out in a torrent of magnified emotions. His reaction will be to be overly sensitive..”

    What can you do…- best in the context of competent couple therapy, the therapist will teach the two of you how to communicate with each other right there in his office, give you exercises, practices to be done in the office and in between sessions. That would be best.

    If you’d like to try to do without therapy, you can look for a good workbook on couple communication, and do the exercises in it with your boyfriend. Better pick up a good workbook though….

    Here is an example of exercise: the two of you answer separately the following: what do you need from your partner- and then share your answers, learn from that.

    Rule for communication between the two of you- EAR, standing for Empathy, Assertiveness, Respect.

    There is much more. The idea is to communicate with your boyfriend about communicating; setting rules-of-communicating and then proceed to communicate following those rules. Each must feel safe with the other. There is so much more that I learned starting with couple therapy I had and would be glad to share more, but it is more than one post can carry and I have to have your responses in between my inputs.

    When you have a concern and you don’t know if it is legitimate and should be voiced, or not- well, you can give me an example or two and we can go over them here.

    anita

    #127031
    Artful Apricot
    Participant

    So, after I writing the above, I started reading through some of the other posts and responses too them. I had a bit of an epiphany about my approach when I do sit down to talk to him about serious things. I realized a big part of why I’m already on the brink of emotional meltdown when I finally do broach a subject is all the nervous energy and anxiety built up around bringing up “the thing” and his reaction to it. I made a mental decision on my way home from work that night to take an entirely different approach. Instead of launching into the topic we needed to talk about (which I always try to do very gently), I started with just a chat, focused on how HE is doing. I know one of the things he tends to say when I bring up issues is that it’s always all about me. How can it be otherwise if he never tells me what’s wrong and I’m the only one to bring up issues?

    So, I asked him not to turn on the tv – which alarmed him. He immediately says, what did I do? I told him no, no, you didn’t do anything. I said I felt like we never talk about anything except superficial things and day to day things, nothing real in a long time (I think the alarm at not having the tv on at all times shows how true that is!). I said I want to know how you are, how you really are doing in general. It led to a good discussion and at the end I told him that I had felt that something was off for a while and that was what made me ask. We briefly discussed the issue which was a the main red flag for me, that had me so worried. We were both very calm about it and he apologized.

    During our discussion, he actually opened up a lot (well, for him). He told me that’s he actually been depressed. He is a victim of child abuse and he’s never dealt with it. I’ve tried over the years to get him to talk about it and I’ve recommended therapy. He’s perfectly comfortable telling stories to me or friends and my family about the horrors of his childhood, but he doesn’t discuss his feelings about it. He is afraid to unlock that vault. He knows how painful it will be at he’d rather be numb about it. I’ve told him before how I think that one of these days, it will catch up to him (it did for me). I periodically suggest when he is ready, that I’ll be hear to listen, or if he wants to talk to a professional he has my full support.

    He’s become more receptive over the years to the idea of therapy from outright “absolutely not” to “yeah, maybe.” I think the feelings don’t want to be repressed anymore and it’s manifesting with the depression. He had a death in his family a few months ago, one of the only members of his family he had any relationship with, one of the only people in his family who showed him any love. This seems to have been a trigger. He has yet to let himself feel the emotions this has brought forward, he’s admitted as much.

    I’m planning to continue these chats with him to check on how he’s doing and see if he’ll open up anymore. Since he still isn’t ready for a therapist or even telling me what he is feeling, I suggested keeping a journal. I know I’ve done that in the past and it was the first step I was able to take. I had repressed things for years myself, so I’ve been through this process. I discovered so much inside me that I didn’t realize I’d buried.

    I think my approach of starting with him before focusing on me will help with his defensiveness and make it feel more balanced and less like he is always doing something wrong.

    Regarding some of the comments, thank you for your input. I have actually done a lot of reading into anxiety, social attachment and relationships over the past couple of years. Some of these books and sites have included exercises which have been insightful. It’s helped me to understand a lot about how we interact and where some of his reactions come from. He hasn’t really been ready to explore like I have, but I do occasionally share with him some things I’ve learned about us through my own exploration, so to speak.

    I’ve read a lot about communication and safe spaces and have greatly improved in my “delivery,” although I think this past approach has been by far the most successful. Over the years, we’ve had a lot of improvement, his defensiveness decreasing and my emotional outbursts being fewer and farther in between, but I think this was the most balanced and calm conversation we’ve had in a long time. I didn’t feel on edge once we’d started and I don’t think he did either. Usually, whether or not things escalated, I still felt a tension and like each of us was holding back and ready to defend our positions. This felt much more open.

    I feel good about the new approach and hope we continue to make progress, both with “us,” but also just for him. I’ve come a long way over the years both before and after we met and I know it will be a long and painful journey for him. I told him I was glad we talked and that I now know how what’s he’s been going through. He said he did’t like to burden me with his problems. He’s not used to having anyone to lean on. Even though I’ve been by his side for over 4 years, it’s still foreign to him in some ways. I’m hoping once he realizes that I really want to be there for him in EVERY way, that he’ll open up some more, we’ll communicate better (and more often and more deeply), and he will start to heal.

    #127032
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear artfulapricot:

    Clearly, you did read a lot, learned a lot in therapy and experienced a lot of healing. Part of my therapy was psycho-education. Your psycho-education is extensive.

    I like your initiative to talk about him, as you did- what a brilliant idea and it worked out, congratulations!

    Regarding outbursts, your outbursts that have been far in between, it is my experience with my husband (following many of my outbursts in the beginning of the marriage), that I cannot afford one additional outburst on my part, not one! One such will destroy a few years of hard work on my part, hard work that finally allowed him to feel as safe as he does with me currently. It is this feeling of safety that is necessary (not optional) for continuing individual healing for me and for him.

    Hope you post again, would like to read how the relationship progresses, if you would like to share.

    anita

    #127038
    Artful Apricot
    Participant

    I have experienced the same thing…even if I have a yearlong streak of drama-free, one bad day and he says “you always….”
    It’s frustrating that he doesn’t seem to notice our significant progress. I know I’m more perceptive than average, so it’s not fair to compare me to him, but it does seem unfair that I tolerate his very slow changing and my comparitively much more rapid changing goes unnoticed. C’est la vie…at least for now.

    #127048
    Jennifer Boyatt
    Participant

    Dear artful,

    I loved hearing about what you chose to do for him. That’s just beautiful. I wish you both many blessings.

    Jennifer

    #127140
    Inky
    Participant

    Hi Artful Apricot,

    The one thing that stuck out to me was that (and this is true of me): If your parent was critical, it can be devastating if she is “proved right” by people criticizing you in other facets of your life. We like to compartmentalize, and it’s great if, say, the horrible math teacher in fifth grade is sequestered in the distant past. But it’s horrible if she is “proved right” when you are yelled at by the boss in the present day.

    The other thing I’d like to add is be careful not to become your BF’s lay therapist. You are too close and you are not trained! Neither are we on the forums! (A paradox, I know! Take our advice, or… LOL!)

    Best,

    Inky

    #127197
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear artful apricot:

    You wrote: “if I have a yearlong streak of drama-free, one bad day and he says ‘you always….”- I think this is so because as the animals that we are, biologically, products of evolution, when we perceive danger, we focus on it at the exclusion of anything else. I live in an area where you can see elks frequently enough. When I walk in a hearing distance from them, almost all of them stop doing whatever they were doing and they just stand there looking at me, not moving. They don’t eat, mate, mark their territory or do anything they normally do- they just watch (eerie experience). Same with humans- we are genetically and instinctively designed to be alert to danger first and foremost.

    anita

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