Studying My Reactions

When I stopped reacting to negative criticism, I studied what my reactions had been.

Paths to Recovery, p. 126

Before recovery, I lived in a state of constant reaction. Someone criticized me, and I crumbled or lashed out. Someone praised me, and I felt temporarily worthy. Someone was angry, and I felt responsible. Someone was happy, and I felt relieved. I was like a pinball, bouncing off everyone else's emotions and opinions with no center of my own.

When I noticed myself reacting to negative criticism, I shifted my focus from the criticism itself to my reaction. Doing this changed everything. Instead of just feeling terrible when criticized, I started examining why. What belief was activated? What old wound was touched? What fear was triggered? The criticism itself became less important than understanding my response to it.

I discovered that my reactions revealed more about me than about the criticism itself. When someone said I was too sensitive, I reacted strongly because I believed they were right and felt ashamed. When someone said I was selfish, I felt devastated because I'd built my identity on being selfless. My reactions were maps to my beliefs and wounds.

Now, criticism is information about what still needs healing in me. I can receive it without being destroyed by it. I can examine my reaction with curiosity rather than just feeling awful. The criticism has lost its power because I understand what it activates in me.

When I feel a strong reaction to criticism, I will get curious about my response instead of just feeling awful, examining what belief or wound might have been touched.

Today’s Reminder

My reactions reveal what needs healing in me.

Carry this peace in your pocket.

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