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We explore why we’re harder on ourselves than anyone else—from highlight‑reel comparisons and moving standards to a “safety system” that mistakes self‑criticism for discipline. We shift to a cleaner pattern: separate standards from self‑worth, speak with the respect we’d offer a capable friend, and let ordinary progress compound without cruelty. The inner critic can be risk radar—not a judge—so feedback stays information, not a verdict.
By Eric BurnsWe explore why we’re harder on ourselves than anyone else—from highlight‑reel comparisons and moving standards to a “safety system” that mistakes self‑criticism for discipline. We shift to a cleaner pattern: separate standards from self‑worth, speak with the respect we’d offer a capable friend, and let ordinary progress compound without cruelty. The inner critic can be risk radar—not a judge—so feedback stays information, not a verdict.