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Lesson 4
Does Criticism Do More Harm Than Good to People?
Text
A Yoang Woman Who Fears Compliments
Marya, a brilliant graduate student in her early twenties
who came for consultation, insisted that she could improve only with criticism.
Her reasoning was that she knew the good qualities but that she did not know the
bad ones. To have more knowledge of her negative qualities, she believed,would
add to her self-understanding and thus enable her to see herself more
completely. Marya, in effect, refused to acknowledge and to understand her
strengths. She had assembled detailed lists of her negative qualities which she
used daily to support an extremely negative view of herself . But they were
either exaggerated or unreal.
Despite her attractiveness to others, she convinced
herself that she was ugly. When her family bought her new and well-designed
articles of clothing (she seldom. bought any herself ), she left them hanging in
the closet for weeks before wearing them once. When someone complimented her on
what she wore and asked whether it was new, she could honestly answer no. She
did not "deserve" to wear new clothes. She could not bear the pain of
hearing compliments, of seeing herself as intelIigent, pretty, or worthwhile.
As a child, Marya had received little or no criticism from
her parents. She was prized by them. Their major disappointment in her
apparently was that she often rejected their overtures of kindness and
appreciation, not in anger but in embarrassment, as though she were undeserving.
This seemingly mild-mannered young woman, exceptionally courteous and
considerate to others, held onto her own negative selfjudgment with tenacity.
Finally, friends and interested faculty members quit acceding to her persuasive
requests for criticism that they could not honestly give. Instead, they gently
but firmly confronted her with her own blindness to what she truly was like.
II . Read
Read the following passages. Underline the important
viewpoints while reading.
l. Unfair Criticism
Stuart is a typical sixteen-year-old boy who experienced and
suffered from the criticism of an alcoholic parent. It seemed to 5tuart the only
thing his father ever had to say to him was, "You haven't got a brain in
your head. ?Stuart was a sophomore in high school. It was true he was a poor
student, or what his dean called an "underachiever".
Even though Stuart knew he was an underachiever, he would have liked to
hear his father say, just once, something else when he brought home his report
card other than his usual, "You haven't got a brain in your head."
Stuart was determined to prove to his father he did have a brain in his head.
Stuart studied very hard. Some nights it was difficult for him to concentrate on
his homework because he could hear his parents bickering in the next room.
"You forgot to pay the mortgage again. The bank is fed
up."
"How many times can a person smash up a car? I , m
sucprised they haven't taken your license away! "
"If you wouldn't drink so much . . . "
Stuart didn't like the bickering, and wondered if his parents
might separate. He wondered, too, because his father was so forgetful about
paying the bills, if they might lose their home.
He kept telling himself that if he studied hard, maybe, by
some miracle, things would get better at home.
Stuart's determination to concentrate on his school work, in
spite of the bickering and worries at home, paid off. His next report card
showed a marked improvement. There was even a personal note of
praise from his dean written on the report card.
Proudly Stuart put the report card on his father's desk.
Stuart felt happier than he had felt in a long time. He knew that his father
could only be pleased with such a report, but more important, maybe now his
father would realize that he was intelligent and would start paying some
attention to him.
Stuart could remember when his father used to go to ballgames and
movies with him. Who knew? Maybe things would go back to the way they used to
be. Stuart would offer to get a part-time job to help pay off some of the bills.
He thought that might lessen some of the arguing at home and keep the family
from breaking up. He would lat his father know that he was old enough to
understand things weren't always easy at the office.
When Stuart's father came home and saw the report, he said
without any hesitation, "Well, well, who did the work for you? I know you
don't have the brains to do it! "
Stuart was stunned. All that work for nothing! He wouldn't be
surprised if his father not only thought he was stupid but hated him, too.
Stuart would not have been as hurt if he had only known his
father was tied up in his own miserable feelings. This kept him from recognizing
what Stuart had accomplished in school.
2. Uses of Criticism
While some of us have a tendency to disbelieve or to minimize
the good things people say about us, others among us have a tendency to hold a
protective web around ourselves in defense against criticism. One workshop
participant said, "I confuse the issue by getting logical in the face of
threatening reactions. Sometimes I act helpless so others will stop the
criticism. ?Early in the workshop experience he had received more negative than
positive reactions. While he was fearful of criticism, he found that he had
courted it, hoping that he could learn how to handle it and overcome his fear.
We may court negative reactions for other reasons. A therapy
group member regarded criticism as more useful than compliments, and criticism
is what he often got-not because he asked for it directly, but because of his
detached manner, as though he were sitting in judgment of others. Moreover, his
tendency to qualify and hedge his opinions and feelings until they had no
meaning often brought down the ire of others upon him. He gave the impression of
accepting their displeasure stoically, as though it strengthened him. He never
openly criticized other members, however.
Still another member, who claimed that"criticism is the
stuff that we grow on? gave others criticism galore so they could improve and,
in his words, "not appear in a negative light in the future." This
member came across as using his ostensible concern for the growth of others as
an excuse to criticize and attack them.
3.
Is It Right to Withhold One's Reactions to Others?
It is not uncommon for us to withhold our reactions to
others. We may hold back compliments for fear of embarrassment to them and to
ourselves. We may hold back criticism for fear of being disliked or considered
unfair, or for fear of hurting another person. Reactions given inconsiderately
may indeed hurt others. On the other hand, some of us are inclined to withhold
our reactions from others while at the same time we honestly prefer that they
not hold back theirs from us.
We may have two different rules. The first one may be: If we ask others for
candid reactions to our behavior, to something we have done or plan to do, we
want them to tell us straight, including the negative with the positive. The
second rule may be: If someone else asks us for similar reactions, we are
inclined to hold back or gloss over the negative and embroider the positive.
4. Criticism Is a Kind of Demand on Those Criticized
As children, many of us got a great deal of criticism and, as
a result, learned a variety of patterns for coping with it. Marya had apparently
received little criticism, but, knowing that she was not perfect and deserved
what other children got, developed her own patterns of selfjudgment and censure.
Being judged, whether we are underestimated or overestimated, usually implies a
demand, subtle or direct, that we change. If others do not demand change, we may
feel the need to demand it of ourselves.
Reactions that are relatively free from attempts to
change or discredit us, given by someone who cares for us, and with the
intention of letting us know what impressions we are making, may be easier to
take. If, however, our usual reaction is to defend ourselves, even mild
criticism or impressions given gently without demands that we change may play
havoc with our defensive structure and beccnne difficult to handle.
5. How to Handle Criticism
The surgeon reached over and jerked the syringe out of the
nurse,s hand. "Jane, that's the sloppiest injection I've ever seen!"
he snapped. Quickly, his fingers found the vein she had been searching for.
Cheeks burning, Jane turned away. ~Ten years later, Jane's voice still trembles
when she relates the experience.
Some of our male co-workers have it easier. They grew up
encouraged
to play team sports, and they had to handle a coach's yells when they droppped
the ball. Now they can see that a goof on the job is like dropping the ball in
football; the fumble is embarrassing, but you take it in stride and go on.
But for most women, the path to success was different. As
girls, we grew up wanting to be popular; we were praised for what we were, not
for what we did. So our reaction to criticism is often, "Someone doesn't
like me. I failed to please. I'm a failure."
"I get defensive," says Rhonda, a teacher,
"When someone criticizes me, suddenly I'm a little girl again, being
scolded, and I want to make excuses. I want to explain that it's not my
fault-it's someone else's, or I want to hide and cry."
6. Take a Tactful Approach
How about giving criticism? The old
"I-want-to-be-liked" syndrome can make it as hard to give criticism as
to take it. Karen thinks she's found the answer.
"Two weeks after I was promoted to first-line
supervisor," she remembers, "I had to tell a friend that she was in
trouble for not turning in her weekly reports on time. My boss suggested that I
tell Judy I didn't want to fix the blame-I just wanted to fix the problem. That
was wonderful advice. It allowed me to state the problem objectively to Judy and
she olfered the solution."
Criticism in the workplace, whether you're giving it or
getting it, is always more effective when you focus on the task rather than on
the person. Fixing the problem, not thc?blame, means that nobody has to feel
chewed out or chewed up. We can still feel whole and learn something in the
process.