Saturday, January 02, 2010
That inner negative voice
Everyone's got one. An inner critic. The downer. The inner negative voice. The bad friend in your head that you can't get rid of.I used to listen to the negative voice all the time. He's always there, even when I ignore him. He's always telling me what to do. Or, rather, what not to do. Which is whatever I'm doing, or planning on doing, at the moment. If I am planning on going for a run, for example, the negative voice kicks in with all the reasons I shouldn't run.
"It's too cold."
"It's too hot."
"It's raining."
"It's snowing."
"You'll injure yourself."
"You look stupid and fat in these clothes."
"You need new shoes."
…and on and on, an endless loop of negativity. Don't do this now. Sit down. Tune out.
Way back before I started exercising regularly, I didn't even notice the negative voice. I just gave in to his demands and assumed I couldn't, or shouldn't, do anything else. He wasn't negative; he was just the voice in my head. He was the people who would point and laugh at me for trying and not doing it perfectly. Of course, in my life, there have been few actual point-and-laughers, though the few I remember have had an effect far out of proportion to their actual importance.
When I finally started exercising, it was in response to the stress of dealing with my parents; mom's cancer, dad's drinking and affair, and both of their expectations for me. I found an apartment that I could afford, was working a temp job, and looking for permanent work. The apartment was in a great neighborhood, although the building itself wasn't very posh and the neighbors were sketchy. But there was a gym just two blocks away, and my friend at the time, Jake, was almost spectacularly active, so I figured I would try working out as a way to relieve stress.
And I began to notice, and began to identify, that voice in the back of my head as toxic.
He sounded like my father, sometimes. He sounded like my mom at other times. Or like Kelly, the bully in high school who actually made fun and laughed at the way I put on my underwear after gym class. Or like the group of older girls in the library when I was in 3rd grade who asked me if I was new and laughed amongst themselves.
Even as I stood there on the elliptical trainer, working away, sweating, feeling better by the moment, he was talking to me, telling me to slow down, that that was more than enough, that I should go now, that people were staring at me, that my fat belly was jiggling, that I was making too much noise, that my heart was going to explode.
Sometimes I gave in.
But more and more often, I just ignored him.
One day, I can remember this quite clearly, as I was walking the two blocks to the gym, I was listening to some music, and of course he was trying to shame me into not going. I responded to him. "Fuck you!"
I said it out loud, although not very loud. Loud enough for me to hear it over the music in my headphones. Loud enough that I immediately worried that if someone heard me they'd think I was crazy. Or maybe that worry was him?
I thought back at him, "Fuck you. I am doing this. Fuck off, you fucking fuck. You don't get a vote."
And, briefly, the voice quieted down to just a feeling. A nagging, I don't wanna feeling. While I still felt that, I mentally shouted "Fuck you!" over and over while I kept walking to the gym, while I said hi to Noel, the owner, and walked up to the machine I wanted to use by the window, and got on and started running.
It may not be the most positive way to deal, but that's how I manage the inner negative voice. I notice him, I tell him to fuck off, and I keep doing what I want to do. It doesn't matter how many times I've worked out and felt great afterward, it doesn't seem to matter how much positive feedback I get from friends and strangers, he's always there. Sometimes he's quieter, but he's always there.
If anyone knows a way, short of heavy medication, to make him go away for good, I'd be all ears. I just assume he's part of me, though, and try to reinforce the idea that I don't have to listen to him or do what he wants.
Sadly, I still have trouble noticing him when he's blocking me in other areas of my life; social situations, work, friendships and family. Oh, man, family brings him out like nothing else does. I need a lot of work in that area, for sure. What's that they say about why it's so easy for your parents to push their buttons? Oh, right, it's because they installed them.
I'm a work in progress, of course.
What tips do you have for dealing with the inner negative voice? Who does yours sound like? What's he/she preventing you from doing?
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Even medication doesn't make it go away. It's annoying and mean. But, I particularly like your method of dealing with it by being mean right back. Negative or positive, if it's effective, I'm for it!
Mine mostly is more of the 'I don't wanna' most the time, but my how convincing she is. ;-)
Thanks for sharing, and making me think! You kinda rock like that. :-)
Mine mostly is more of the 'I don't wanna' most the time, but my how convincing she is. ;-)
Thanks for sharing, and making me think! You kinda rock like that. :-)
I'm glad to make people think! Maybe I can stop overthinking by off-loading some of it to others…
Another suggestion I got from Twitter is to write down how good I feel after exercise. Reinforcing the good feelings by reading/thinking/writing. I might try that, too. But that assumes I have done the thing the negative voice has told me not to do.
Another suggestion I got from Twitter is to write down how good I feel after exercise. Reinforcing the good feelings by reading/thinking/writing. I might try that, too. But that assumes I have done the thing the negative voice has told me not to do.
Anne Lamott refers to that voice as Radio Station KFKD. much of "Bird by Bird" is about the negativity and how to deal with it. she's the best at helping writers (and others) face up to and deal with that voice.
i like your approach. i know i've taken that route: anger that has me say "fuck you" to the voice (or the circumstances that give the voice a chance to speak) and the subsequent commitment to doing whatever it is the voice was telling me i couldn't. great response. thanks for sharing.
i like your approach. i know i've taken that route: anger that has me say "fuck you" to the voice (or the circumstances that give the voice a chance to speak) and the subsequent commitment to doing whatever it is the voice was telling me i couldn't. great response. thanks for sharing.
I just worry that I'm encouraging anger, which is where I think the negativity stems from in the first place. But maybe it's constructive use of anger.
Thanks for the recommendation, t.a.
Thanks for the recommendation, t.a.
I believe by just doing something - anything constructive, and it should silence the negative voice.
Keep going! And a BIG thank you for speaking up. We're fighting it...
Keep going! And a BIG thank you for speaking up. We're fighting it...
Kevin: I wish it worked like that for me. His voice is never silenced entirely. I can ignore it for a while, but it's always there in some capacity. You're lucky.
Thanks for the comment, friend.
PS: I deleted your extra comment; you probably didn't notice I've been forced to moderate my comments thanks to the spam bots. I wish Blogger allowed me to white-list some folks. Maybe it does, and I just haven't found it.
Thanks for the comment, friend.
PS: I deleted your extra comment; you probably didn't notice I've been forced to moderate my comments thanks to the spam bots. I wish Blogger allowed me to white-list some folks. Maybe it does, and I just haven't found it.
Hi Brian,
I'm Shawn's wife...I have A LOT of experience in this area, unfortunately. I've been seeing a counselor for it for about 4 months now. Each person needs to create a tool box. The bottom line for me is I need an immediate distraction to get me out of the thought. I agree, that voice will always be with me, but I'm getting better at squashing it faster and easier. The concept is a tool box. My tool box has, as silly as they may seem, music, movies, utube videos, reading, talking to someone about something totally different than what I'm thinking, sometimes my favorite blanket at home, and a pen and paper. I'm not a journaler. I don't enjoy writing much, but, I found I like to write random words...so, I just write words on a piece of paper until I'm 'done'. then, I re-read what I wrote...sometimes it is just silly or sad or even sick, but, it is like my hand and the pen are the conduit to getting my negative feelings out.
Hope to meet you soon, and, maybe we can continue this discussion. I love to share what i've been learning regarding negative thought patterns.
Susie Turpin
I'm Shawn's wife...I have A LOT of experience in this area, unfortunately. I've been seeing a counselor for it for about 4 months now. Each person needs to create a tool box. The bottom line for me is I need an immediate distraction to get me out of the thought. I agree, that voice will always be with me, but I'm getting better at squashing it faster and easier. The concept is a tool box. My tool box has, as silly as they may seem, music, movies, utube videos, reading, talking to someone about something totally different than what I'm thinking, sometimes my favorite blanket at home, and a pen and paper. I'm not a journaler. I don't enjoy writing much, but, I found I like to write random words...so, I just write words on a piece of paper until I'm 'done'. then, I re-read what I wrote...sometimes it is just silly or sad or even sick, but, it is like my hand and the pen are the conduit to getting my negative feelings out.
Hope to meet you soon, and, maybe we can continue this discussion. I love to share what i've been learning regarding negative thought patterns.
Susie Turpin
Hi, Susie Q!
Thanks for your comments.
I have heard of the "distraction" method before; it's a component of cognitive therapy, I think. And I like your idea of a toolbox of ways to distract or silence the voice. I've got some similar tools but I use them when I'm just generally feeling down: exercise, happy music, and the like.
Food for thought. Hopefully, nutritious food.
Thanks for your comments.
I have heard of the "distraction" method before; it's a component of cognitive therapy, I think. And I like your idea of a toolbox of ways to distract or silence the voice. I've got some similar tools but I use them when I'm just generally feeling down: exercise, happy music, and the like.
Food for thought. Hopefully, nutritious food.
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