“Don’t criticise what you can’t
understand.”
— Bob Dylan
Emotions are funny things.
Strangely, we control many of our days, resisting the overflow of the emotions,
keeping our hearts in check, yet other days cast us into tailspins of tumult
and we are quickly ready to throw in the towel. Many of our poorer days combine
untimely circumstances with unsavoury encounters of criticism and condemnation—3
and 4 at a time. A public roasting puts paid to several hour’s peace. There is
the interrupted night’s sleep and a reticence to go back into the fray. Our
emotions flag our fatigue just as much, if not more, than the lack of sleep.
Criticism is a barb of ignorance,
simply because to be attacked—or feel attacked—usually means there has been an
attack. And attacks generally characterise the loss of control in the attacker.
The feedback may be well intended, but when it becomes criticism the gloves are
off! Those doing the criticising have lost sight of their understanding. Those
being criticised, now with the evolvement of the emotions in full swing, can
neither be objective nor emotional. The criticised are in a no-man’s land.
Objectivity is beyond them and they feel guilty for being emotional.
Sometimes I find poems are a good
way to express rich sentiments:
Why the Sting of Criticism?
Why is it
that people criticise so?
They
wouldn’t hurt us if only they’d know,
The effect
that the cutting has on our hearts,
We carry the stress with us in
fits ‘n’ starts.
Before you
criticise, deride or condemn,
Do what
you can to consider them,
Because
they, like you, are easily hurt,
There’s no reason at all to treat
them like dirt.
***
People may still criticise and
condemn if they knew how it would hurt us, but if the shoe was on the other
foot they wouldn’t feel the same way. It’s amazing how sensitive critical
people are. I have found a neat correlation between those who blame others and
those who cannot accept responsibility. These are the ones that criticise.
***
If only we really knew the effect
of our words and behaviours on others within the quiet crevices of their minds
and hearts.
When we try others people’s
footwear for size, taking a stroll in their lives, we find it stark and cruel
what they are exposed to. We experience a flash of empathy. God has our
attention. Then we see no point to criticism and condemnation.
© 2012 S. J. Wickham.
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