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Your inner critic isn't telling the truth about who you are — and understanding where it came from is the first step to stop letting it run your life.
What You'll Learn in This Episode
Most people assume the inner critic is just part of who they are. That harsh internal commentary — the voice that says "you're always like this" or "who do you think you're kidding?" — feels like their own honest assessment of reality. In this episode, Brett Ingram breaks down why that assumption is wrong, where the voice actually came from, and what you can do so it stops running your life.
What the inner critic actually is
The inner critic isn't honest feedback. It's a pattern of thought that evaluates you in absolute, personal, and disproportionately harsh terms. Where healthy self-reflection asks "what happened here and what can I learn?", the inner critic says "see, this is just who you are." One wants to help you grow. The other wants to condemn you. The costs of letting it run unchecked are real: you make yourself smaller than you are, you avoid risks that might have changed your life, and over time you quietly become the person the voice said you were — not because it was right, but because you never stopped to question it. That low-grade sense of not quite enough, humming in the background even when things are going fine, compounds quietly across years of small choices.
Where it comes from
Here's what most people miss: the inner critic didn't start as an enemy. It started as protection.
In early life, we're all trying to figure out how to belong, how to be loved, how to be accepted. And at some point, most of us get a message — sometimes direct, sometimes subtle — that one version of us is more acceptable than another. If achievement earned you warmth, perfectionism became a bid for love. If being "too much" made people uncomfortable, shrinking became a strategy for belonging. The voice that tells you to be perfect, to stay quiet, to not take up too much space — it started as a survival strategy, not a personal attack.
Critical or high-expectation parents, early experiences of failure or humiliation, chronic comparison by teachers or siblings, cultural and social media messages about what success looks like — all of these can harden into an internal narrator that speaks with the authority of fact. Social media in particular keeps that bar rising, surfacing only the highlight reels while hiding the struggles behind them.
"The critic wasn't born mean," Brett says in this episode. "But the coping strategy that made sense at nine years old might be doing real damage at thirty-five."
The six practical steps
There's no hack that makes the voice disappear. But you can change your relationship with it — and that shift changes everything.
The first step is to notice it. Most of us are so fused with the inner narrator that we don't realize we're listening to it. Watch for the emotional signature: a tightening, a sinking feeling, a sudden urge to quit or hide. That's often the body responding before the mind catches up.
Once you notice it, name it without fusing with it. "I'm such an idiot" and "there's that voice again" are not the same statement. The first makes you the thought. The second creates just enough distance to observe it and decide what to do with it. Some people find it helpful to give the critic a name or treat it as a character — not to mock it, but to stop treating it as the oracle.
From there, get curious about what the voice is protecting. Underneath most inner criticism is fear — fear of rejection, of failure, of being exposed. When the voice says "don't speak up in that meeting," the fear underneath might be "what if I say something dumb and they judge me?" That fear is worth understanding. The solution the voice proposes — silence — may not be serving you.
Then challenge the distorted thinking: the all-or-nothing conclusions ("I completely failed at this"), the overgeneralizations ("I always do this"), the certainty that "everyone could tell I was nervous." Ask whether you'd accept this verdict from a close friend about themselves. Usually the answer is no — and you deserve the same standard.
Replace self-attack with compassionate honesty. The goal isn't toxic positivity. It's being honest and kind at the same time, because those two things aren't opposites. "That didn't land the way I hoped — what can I learn?" is not lowering your standards. It's being a good coach to yourself instead of a bad one.
And finally, act from your values even while the critic is still talking. You don't have to wait for it to go quiet. When you move forward from what actually matters to you — not from fear, not from the voice's verdict — you build evidence, slowly, that the critic never had the final word. This is part of the deeper work of [the inner landscape that shapes every decision you make].
The inner critic is part of you that got scared and never quite found a better way to cope. It's not your enemy. And you are not just that voice. You never were.
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By Brett IngramYour inner critic isn't telling the truth about who you are — and understanding where it came from is the first step to stop letting it run your life.
What You'll Learn in This Episode
Most people assume the inner critic is just part of who they are. That harsh internal commentary — the voice that says "you're always like this" or "who do you think you're kidding?" — feels like their own honest assessment of reality. In this episode, Brett Ingram breaks down why that assumption is wrong, where the voice actually came from, and what you can do so it stops running your life.
What the inner critic actually is
The inner critic isn't honest feedback. It's a pattern of thought that evaluates you in absolute, personal, and disproportionately harsh terms. Where healthy self-reflection asks "what happened here and what can I learn?", the inner critic says "see, this is just who you are." One wants to help you grow. The other wants to condemn you. The costs of letting it run unchecked are real: you make yourself smaller than you are, you avoid risks that might have changed your life, and over time you quietly become the person the voice said you were — not because it was right, but because you never stopped to question it. That low-grade sense of not quite enough, humming in the background even when things are going fine, compounds quietly across years of small choices.
Where it comes from
Here's what most people miss: the inner critic didn't start as an enemy. It started as protection.
In early life, we're all trying to figure out how to belong, how to be loved, how to be accepted. And at some point, most of us get a message — sometimes direct, sometimes subtle — that one version of us is more acceptable than another. If achievement earned you warmth, perfectionism became a bid for love. If being "too much" made people uncomfortable, shrinking became a strategy for belonging. The voice that tells you to be perfect, to stay quiet, to not take up too much space — it started as a survival strategy, not a personal attack.
Critical or high-expectation parents, early experiences of failure or humiliation, chronic comparison by teachers or siblings, cultural and social media messages about what success looks like — all of these can harden into an internal narrator that speaks with the authority of fact. Social media in particular keeps that bar rising, surfacing only the highlight reels while hiding the struggles behind them.
"The critic wasn't born mean," Brett says in this episode. "But the coping strategy that made sense at nine years old might be doing real damage at thirty-five."
The six practical steps
There's no hack that makes the voice disappear. But you can change your relationship with it — and that shift changes everything.
The first step is to notice it. Most of us are so fused with the inner narrator that we don't realize we're listening to it. Watch for the emotional signature: a tightening, a sinking feeling, a sudden urge to quit or hide. That's often the body responding before the mind catches up.
Once you notice it, name it without fusing with it. "I'm such an idiot" and "there's that voice again" are not the same statement. The first makes you the thought. The second creates just enough distance to observe it and decide what to do with it. Some people find it helpful to give the critic a name or treat it as a character — not to mock it, but to stop treating it as the oracle.
From there, get curious about what the voice is protecting. Underneath most inner criticism is fear — fear of rejection, of failure, of being exposed. When the voice says "don't speak up in that meeting," the fear underneath might be "what if I say something dumb and they judge me?" That fear is worth understanding. The solution the voice proposes — silence — may not be serving you.
Then challenge the distorted thinking: the all-or-nothing conclusions ("I completely failed at this"), the overgeneralizations ("I always do this"), the certainty that "everyone could tell I was nervous." Ask whether you'd accept this verdict from a close friend about themselves. Usually the answer is no — and you deserve the same standard.
Replace self-attack with compassionate honesty. The goal isn't toxic positivity. It's being honest and kind at the same time, because those two things aren't opposites. "That didn't land the way I hoped — what can I learn?" is not lowering your standards. It's being a good coach to yourself instead of a bad one.
And finally, act from your values even while the critic is still talking. You don't have to wait for it to go quiet. When you move forward from what actually matters to you — not from fear, not from the voice's verdict — you build evidence, slowly, that the critic never had the final word. This is part of the deeper work of [the inner landscape that shapes every decision you make].
The inner critic is part of you that got scared and never quite found a better way to cope. It's not your enemy. And you are not just that voice. You never were.
Resources MentionedKeep Exploring
If this episode resonated, these are worth your time:
The best way to support optYOUmize is to subscribe and leave a review — it takes about two minutes and makes a real difference in helping more people find the show.
Apple Podcasts · Spotify · Amazon Music · YouTube
Leave a Review →