Episode 36 Cruelty of The Inner Voice
Episode 36: Cruelty of The Inner Voice
What would you do if a stranger spoke to you the way your inner critic does?
Most of us would walk away. Some of us would speak up. Some of us would call someone for help. But when that same cruelty comes from inside our own heads, many of us accept it as truth.
In this episode of The Support and Kindness Podcast, Greg, Rich, Derek, Liam, and Sarah talk honestly about the cruel inner voice: where it comes from, why it can feel so convincing, how it connects with anxiety, depression, chronic pain, brain injury, shame, and self-doubt, and how we can begin answering it with something kinder.
This is not an episode about fake positivity. It is about real kindness: the kind that tells the truth without attacking you.
In this episode, we talk about:
* Why the inner critic can feel like âthe truthâ instead of just a thought
* The difference between healthy self-reflection and cruelty
* Why shame is not the same thing as discipline
* How anxiety and depression can make negative self-talk louder
* How chronic pain, brain injury, ADHD, PTSD, grief, and life changes can give the inner critic ânew materialâ
* Practical ways to quiet the voice in a hard moment
* Why self-compassion is not weakness, but part of healing
A few moments from the conversation:
âCruelty is not the same thing as motivation. Shame is not the same thing as discipline. And beating yourself up is not the same as holding yourself accountable.â
* âThat voice may be loud, but loud does not mean truth.â
* âThe same brain that learned to attack itself can learn to support itself.â
This weekâs challenge:
One time today, catch the cruel voice in the act. Donât fight it. Donât argue with it. Just notice it. Then ask yourself:
Would I say this to my best friend?
If the answer is no, try saying to yourself what you would say to them instead.
Resources mentioned in this episode:
* The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis, read by John Cleese [https://youtu.be/_4tpazCxTXw?si=_9gVnNWWU8mLHL4j]
* Beethoven Blues by Jon Batiste [https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mL0qq64NUbgIgo17VHqoJrqbvjkgHUyIE]
Learn more:
* Nature Communications: Brain meta-state transitions and thought dynamics [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-17255-9]
* CDC National Health Interview Survey [https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhis/index.htm]
* Brain Injury Association of America [https://biausa.org/]
* Cleveland Clinic: Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) [https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/treatments/22838-dialectical-behavior-therapy-dbt]
* 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline [https://988lifeline.org/]
Note: This podcast is peer support and personal conversation, not medical advice. If you are in crisis, thinking about harming yourself, or need immediate emotional support in the U.S., call or text 988 or visit 988lifeline.org. [https://988lifeline.org/]
Join our free support groups:
At KindnessRX [https://kindnessrx.org], we host free peer-led online support groups every week. These are safe, confidential video spaces for real people showing up for one another.
* Brain Injury Support Group: Mondays at 1:00 PM Eastern
* Chronic Pain Support Group: Tuesdays at 12:00 PM Eastern
* Mental Health Support Group: Wednesdays at 7:30 PM Eastern
Sign up here: KindnessRX Support Groups on Luma [https://chatgpt.com/c/6a08ad09-cd6c-83ea-82de-d213d12c5dae]Learn more about the community at:kindnessrx.org [https://kindnessrx.org/]
You do not have to hate yourself through hard things. You are allowed to meet yourself with kindness.