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Tuesday
Nov272012

The "Inner-Critic-ectomy"

In her comic strip "Rhymes With Orange," Hilary B. Price wields her singular wit like a scalpel. It's no surprise that she's one of my top 5 favorite satirists.

In 2005, she created a rather poignant strip: "The Surgery"

Congratulations, Mr Meglin! We've successfully removed your inner critic.

"Congratulations, Mr Meglin! We've successfully
removed your inner critic."

 

Wow! Wouldn't it be great if it were that easy ... a simple procedure to make that diseased voice go away. A pill. A tonic. A cure. Not so much.

There is no "Inner-Critic-ectomy."

The 'treatment' is actually equal measures of NoticingRecovery and Compassion.

  1. Notice when the inner critic is starting the rant, playing the old scripts, wearing you down.
  2. Recover control: leap to your own defense, shift your attention to where you are living your values, refocus your energy on your goals.
  3. Have Compassion for yourself. We all have our own versions of the inner critic. Its because we're human. Give yourself a break.

Homework

Notice the 'voice':
 » What does your inner critic say?
 » When does s/he show up?
 » What silences your inner critic?

Here's the hard, beautiful truth: at every moment, you are at choice.

Take a moment to think of someone you love - a spouse or partner, son or daughter, a parent, a best friend, etc. If someone spoke to your loved one the way you allow your inner critic to speak to you, you'd spring to his/her side is support! Yet you allow that inner voice to deride you, to bully you, to cut you down.

We all do. I still do ... just not nearly as often - or for as long - as I used to.

There is now an orange on my desk to remind me of Hilary's incisive comic strip, to keep it fresh in my mind. The truth is that silencing the voice of the inner critic doesn't require surgery, just attention and intention.

I used an orange ... what will help you remember?

 


 

David Taylor-Klaus is a Entrepreneurship, Leadership and Life Coach and a Partner in Touchstone Coaching. His passion is working with busy "40-somethings" to build profitable businesses, raise thriving families and create fulfilling lives.


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