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How to deal with an overly critical person?

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  • #237123
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    How to deal with an overly critical person who appears to be good and normal but keeps putting me down and never appreciate or validate me?These people have been in my life as so called ‘friends and family’. Their criticism is shown in a very subtle and assertive way and makes me enter into a cycle of self-doubt. I have low self esteem as it is and their criticism makes me feel more pathetic.

    #237981
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Clover:

    Welcome back.

    I gave you general advice on the matter in your previous thread. For more specific input, will you elaborate on “Their criticism is shown in a very subtle and assertive way”, with a few examples?

    anita

    #238219
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Hi Anita,

    Sorry to trouble you again. There was this guy, whom I recently cut contact with because he made me feel worthless and exhausted. In the starting of our friendship, he always used to say good things to me like ,’Don’t listen to others do what you like’ etc. So I thought he was an emotionally matured person and started believing that everything he said would be correct because there is no way he would go wrong. But as time passed I observed that he always puts me down and makes me feel worthless. He used to take me for granted and whenever I shared any of my problems with him, he used to coldly brush it off and say that I was complaining. I had few surgeries in the past and the pain which I experienced during those times was intense. There were times when I wished to die because the pain was so unbearable. But whenever I shared these thoughts with him, he used to say that I was exaggerating and that many others also have surgeries, nothing special about me. This broke me from inside and the worst thing is that I myself started believing that I was exaggerating and complaining. I started disregarding my own feelings due to self-doubt. I started realising that I put people on a pedastal and always think others are correct and I am wrong. What do I do in such situations?

    #238255
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Clover:

    No trouble at all, I wish you post anytime and  will be glad to respond to you.

    1. Better  not do the following: “put people on a pedestal and always think others are correct and I am wrong”. Better not because it is a wrong thinking, others are  often wrong. See  others as your equal, sometimes right, at other times wrong. Seeing  more and  more what is right or true to reality is a process, we get better  at it with time  and practice.

    2. Even a broken clock is right twice every 24 hours. So when this man told you something that was right, it was.. wrong to assume everything else he will say in the future will be right.

    3. If you told him about your surgeries a whole lot, going on and   on and on, I would  understand  him getting impatient. It would have been  nice if he told  you that instead of lashing out in a way by telling you that your experience is nothing special.  When we share  our painful experiences with others, better do that in moderation, a little at a time and then give the other person a chance to share their own.

    If you did share in moderation and he reacted the way he did, that was quite cruel  on his part, to be that unempathetic.

    anita

     

    #238273
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Thankyou for your reply Anita. I did do it in moderation. I am an introvert and I don’t express my feelings to others often. Ofcourse this has been creating a problem for me as I try to deal with everything on my own and end up lost. Also, I have fear that if I open up and explain my problems to other people, they would not understand and just brush it off just as he and few others did to me. This makes me feel more lonely. He himself would ask me about my daily happenings and when I shared them as it is, he would start lashing out on me saying I am complaining. How can he expect people to be happy 24*7 when he doesn’t even know what exactly that person is battling with in their life? On the contrast, he would go on and on about how he caught a cold and how he was feeling uneasy because of it.There were many other occasions where he often put me down and made me feel worthless.

    Also, I figured out that I have this weird habbit of trying to feel other’s emotions. Like, when someone is jealous of me, I get a negative vibe and feel their jealousy. To be more specific, I guess I try to put myself in their shoes completely and think from their perspective and not mine. Their negative stares and the tone of their voice makes me anxious, and though I haven’t done anything wrong, I feel like its my fault. It’s like I am focusing completely on their emotions rather than mine. I don’t know whether you understood this feeling, but if you do, can you please throw some light on it? How do I stop doing this and focus more on my emotions? How to differentiate that their emotions are not mine?

    #238389
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Clover:

    I will quote from you and then give you my input: “I have this weird habit of trying to feel others’ emotions… I try to put myself in their shoes completely and think from their perspective and not mine… It’s like I am focusing completely on their emotions rather than mine. I don’t know whether you understood this feeling, but if you do, can you please throw some light on it?”

    I believe I do understand this focus, I experienced it myself most of my life and to the extreme:

    It started when I was a young child: I was afraid of my  mother being upset because when she was she exploded with verbal attacks so powerful, so humiliating, that I really, really wanted to avoid those, so I focused  on her, paying attention to any sound she made, a sigh, the exhalation of air, the sound  of her footsteps (how fast she walked, faster means  angry), how her face looked, stern, angry or relaxed. I knew that if she was distressed, I better  appear distressed  myself, otherwise she will be angrier to be distressed all by herself. So I focused on  her moods, and when she was upset I tried  to say the things that will calm her.

    It was an ongoing focus on her. When in her presence, there was  no time to focus  on myself, it was  too important to focus on her,  otherwise, bad things were going to happen and I wouldn’t  be prepared, or better I prevent those bad  things from happening!

    If we watched a movie together I focused  on her face, I will look at the TV and at her face, then the TV, then her face- is she upset? If she seemed  relaxed, it was okay for me to enjoy the movie for the time being, but I had  to check periodically… if she disliked a scene, I better dislike it  too. If she felt X, I better feel X, otherwise she’ll be angry at me.

    Before I attend to other things you wrote as well as your other questions, can you relate  to some of what I just expressed?

    anita

    #238411
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Exactly Anita! I can relate to it. Although I don’t feel it to the extreme like you once did, but its similar to mine. I don’t know whether my parents are the cause to such feelings, but its true that they are narcissistic. My father has severe anger management issues and no empathy towards my suffering. I was physically abused many times by both my parents. My Dad used to beat me with a leather belt in order to ‘discipline’ me according to him. He used to even slap me and pull my hair and throw me around. He still does that sometimes. My mother has this extreme jealousy and hatred towards me and it’s highly impossible to have a rational conversation with her. Recently I came to know that her bahaviour matches with Narcissistic Personality Disorder. There are so many incidents which happened in my life since my childhood that scarred me, but I have managed to get out of the impact which they had on me mentally. But I guess the residual effects are still remaining. I don’t have any emotional bond with my parents and have wished many times for them to  disappear from my life. I get extremely anxious when someone gets angry at me or raises their voice on me. I start hating that person and want to run away from them.

    When I’m with other people, I do observe their non-verbal gestures, not to the extreme, but to some extent. The society in which I live in, has people with jealousy issues and low self esteem. It’s kind of like a personality trait in my country. People are rude and express their jealousy in a very unhealthy manner and also attack others verbally and sometimes physically. Maybe because of this I am very sensitive to someone’s unreasonable hatred towards me. Also, its a feeling like my emotions are being controlled by the other person. Like I’m trying to tune into other person’s feelings without valuing my feelings. Something like ‘The Me’ is not at all there. I feel obligated to give a reaction to their feelings towards me.

     

    #238435
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Clover:

    When a child grows in danger of being attacked by a parent at any time, not knowing when, the child focuses on the dangerous parent (or parents) so to be able to predict the next attack, or better to prevent the next attack. The child is not safe enough to experience life otherwise.

    Every living thing’s first priority is to survive. I live in a wooded area where there are deer and elk. When they hear a person approaching, they stop what they were doing  before, eating, usually. They stop and turn toward the noise they heard, the approaching person. Fully alert, they focus on the source of danger.

    This is the same as I did as a child, focusing on the source of danger, my mother. And then, as an adult, like you, this focus on others, “‘The Me’ is not at all there”, was how I experienced life. It was all about what do other people think, what do they feel, as  if that was all that mattered.

    “How do I stop doing this and focus more on my emotions? How to differentiate that their emotions are not mine?”

    First step is to get away from the people who are still a danger in your life, physically and otherwise.

    You wrote about your father: “, used  to even slap me  and pull my hair and throw me around. He still does that sometimes”- how is it that your father has  access to you; do you live with him/ with your parents, and if so, is there a possibility for you to move out and live away from them?

    anita

    #238645
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Hi Anita,

    Thanks for making few things clear. ‘focusing on the source of danger’, this statement was spot on. This is the exact emotion I feel. When someone deliberately says something negative about me, I immediately sense that person is dangerous to me and find ways to stay away from that person. This sometime leads to irrational fear of getting hurt, if that person is too intimidating.

    Unfortunately, I am still livng with my parents. My professional story goes like this- I recently quit my IT job as it was extremely stressful. The working evironment was toxic and the actual work also did not give me enjoyment. Most of all my health was deteriorating. So, its kind of hard to move out now without any income. I was actually all prepared for going abroad for doing MS, but then I questioned myself whether I really want to work in a corporate environment anymore, and the answer was No. I didn’t even have any passion or liking towards the field which I had chosen to study. I later realized that I had an inclination to music and plants. I searched for universities offering courses in these two fields and the type of job which I had to do once I finished studies. I am still searching for something which will be suitable to me both financially and personally. The reason I am trying to move abroad is to stay away from my family and the society. I am in desparate need of freedom and peace of mind. I have been burnt out both professionally and personally.

    So, it is possible for me to move away from them, but not in the next 6 months. Also, I am really grateful to you for listening to my story patiently all the while. This is my first time I am sharing all my personal feelings bottling inside me to someone and I feel very safe emotionally. Thankyou so much! 🙂

    #238653
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear  Clover:

    You are very welcome. I feel good about you trusting me with your personal feelings,  feeling “very safe emotionally”. I will continue to be this safe  place for you best I can.

    Interesting, you expressed living in a society/ country where there are lots of rude and aggressive people. I was  born into one myself. It was such a nice change to move to a new country where  people in public were nice, polite, considerate, welcoming, what  a  change!

    I learned though that aggression is everywhere, maybe less in public, more in private,  but it is  common in homes everywhere. Yet, it  is nice to get a break in public.

    Another thing, even when people are nice, a person already sensitive to criticism will be greatly affected by what appears  to be slight or unintended offense or disregard. For a person already harmed by aggression, any little thing triggers the hurt, such as someone  forgetting your name, or not answering your question and talking  to someone else instead.

    What  about your father hitting you.. still?

    anita

    #238657
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Yes Anita. The society I live in is very conservative and dangerous for women. I have all sorts of people- neighbours, so called ‘relatives’, etc trying to poke nose into my personal life. It’s a society where people are forced into arranged marriages. I am tired of living here. I want a change of place to somewhere better, if not best.

    The last time my father hit me was I guess less than a year ago. He slapped me across my face because I did not agree to do something which was ordered by my parents. Around two months ago he tried to hit me but I warned him not to do it, or the consequences would be severe. I mostly stay in my room and avoid conversing with them especially my mother.

    #238667
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Clover:

    Why especially your mother?

    I was slapped across the face too, by my mother, she kicked me with her foot/ legs, hit me with her hands, never hard enough to  break a bone, but I remember the hot face, my  hot face after she hit it with her open hand, that heat, could be the blood rushing, could be the shame. “Look down when  I hit you” she told me, so I looked down to the ground, so to be a good girl.

    I wanted to be a good girl, a good daughter. So I looked down, my face hot, hurt, and angry. I was definitely angry. No matter how much we love our parents, how much  we want too please them, I suppose we can’t help but get angry when hit. When hit with hands or feet or words.

    anita

    #238691
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    I’m so sorry for what your mother did to you as a child. And I’m happy for you to have overcome that.

    As for my mother, she is the worst human being I’ve ever seen in my whole life. Though my father abused me physically, he has a level of maturity and it is possible to have a conversation with him. My mother considers herself as a queen and demands others to serve her. Basically, she considers all the people around her as objects and not real human beings. She puts up a ‘I’m the wisest person on this Earth’ kind of behavior when in the presence of outsiders, but her true colours come out at home. She always accuses me verbally and to the extreme. The curse words which she uses are not used by most of the people. I can’t even count the number of times I heard the words ‘You are worthless, not fit for anything’, from her mouth. She cursed me many times to fall under a bus and die. Can you imagine a mother wanting her child to die a ruthless death? But, well they do exist like my mother. She always balmes others for all the things happening in her life. Always compares her children with others and no matter how much someone serves her it’s not enough. She badmouths and critisizes about everyone in my family to outsiders. She has abnormal jealousy and attention seeking issues and cannot digest to see me happy. She is the type of person who says,’ Because I suffered, even you should suffer’ even if it is her own daughter. Generally, normal mother would want that their children not to go through any suffering and wish for them to be happy. But my mother has no human empathy even for her own daughter. People in my family know very well about her sickening behaviour, so we avoid her as much as we can.

    When I was a kid she used to abuse me physically, but now she doesn’t, because she knows I am more stronger than her and I will never tolerate her laying her dirty hands on me. There were times when she kicked me in my stomach during my periods. There are many more worse stories about her, but in short she is someone who has a mental disorder and is a severe pain to others around her. I personally feel that such people should not be allowed to have children, as they make their life a living hell. The only feeling I have towards her is disgust. She was never a priority in my life and I hope after few months, she becomes a passing cloud.

    #238709
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Clover:

    We survive  mothers like that, at  best. Live to  tell about it. Thank you for the empathy.

    Six months and then move to another country, is that the plan?

    I did just that, worked,  saved some money and left my mother and  the country. Problem was I kept  going back to her, visiting her and then letting her visit me, come  to stay with me or close to me. That was a big mistake, it kept me sick. If I could go back into the past, I would cut all  contact with her at 25 when I first left the country to live elsewhere.

    My life would have  been so much better for that.

    anita

    #240001
    Anonymous
    Inactive

    Yes Anita, that is my plan. But I am stuck right now because I am not able to find universities ready to accept my application as I am trying for a career change. I dont know what to do. I am stuck with the dilemma-Do I take up a course continuing my bachelors because it’s possible to get admits ( this will help me move away faster) or do I keep trying to make a career change(I am not sure how to go about this)? What are your thoughts on this?

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