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Crafty Caring Critic

The critic is a quality that has tormented me, motivated me, and polished me.  It brings great suffering to my learning, loving and interpreting.  This facade is the most interesting because it is the part of me that helps me improve.  My critic is necessary. It is not a part of me that can be excluded.  I'm seeing a change, a softening of my critic.  I think this means approaching my critic not with criticism but with feedback wrapped in compassion.
Shadow & Ego Lense
Early on in my childhood the shame and worry of failure conceived the critic.  I think I began to judge myself, push myself, and fear mistakes out of trying to succeed and behave.  The irony is that the fear created shame and the shame caused hesitation.  In learning hesitation only delays the absorption and experiences needed to build confidence and trust.  Punishment also plays a significant role in the development of my critic.  Because aptitude was measured with achievement I began to protect myself from the harsh effects of criticism by creating an internal judge who could be more critical than societal judges.  Societal judges being parents, teachers, peers, and coaches.  The critic grew to be more and more severe as I encountered more and more insecurities.

What inspired my critic to be so harsh and severe?  I grew up in a culture with shame and embarrassment.  Being latino, was at times, seen as a disadvantage or unfortunate burden, especially identifying as lower middle class.  This bread insecurity and comparison into my personality.  I had disciplined and punishing parenting, although loving I would consider it conservative.  My family often focused on improving mistakes and not breaking the rules.  I felt pushed, punished, and expected to fit systems.  This environment motivated me to criticize myself, discourage myself from experimenting, and hate losing.

I learned to only do the the things I excelled at.  As I got older the critic grew darker and more committed to helping me be the best.  It helped me to adapt to systems, feed off of scarcity, and take advantage without appearing to do so.  I know being little, underdeveloped, and poor didn't help.  I think my critic never had the chance to fail gracefully and in contrast tortured myself into competency.

I learned to lie to myself as a strategy for motivation.  When I say lie to myself, I like to think of the worst possible friend, and that was my subconscious.  In adolescents, sports were my go to activities.  I started working out in my 6th to 7th grade summer.  I put to bed the child and introduced the professional.  My dad and I created a workout schedule that I followed loosely.  Regardless I was training.  The most difficult realization I have made this round of introspection is body image.  I can now remember beginning to compare and observe my progress around this time.  I was always little and the younger athlete on my teams because of my August birthdate.  I always felt like I had to work harder and convince myself I wasn't ready, good enough, and there was more to practice.

Remember the worst possible friend I mentioned earlier.  Well he stuck around despite my aging.  That little voice in the back of my head that feeds me shitty thoughts, believing he is just trying to prepare me for the worst so I'm not surprised and let down, is alive and thriving in my psyche.  This is the part of me I am working to change.  When I would practice this voice would invoke the worst possible names it could to motivate me with anger.  When in love he would convince me that I wasn't good enough or remind me of the little I had to offer.  In learning he would start me off with how lazy I was with reading, continue with how forgetful I was, and finish it off with a few shortcuts and pity parties.

My ego has been a functional and effective motivator, but not very graceful.  I have created self suffering in the form of pity, shame, guilt and regret.  I have punished myself continually for my failures. I work diligently on being better and improving.  As a result I can say I made it a long way with dysfunctional sidekick.  My ego along with my shadow have left a legacy of torment, and surprisingly currently not disrupting my direction change towards a more graceful perspective.

True Self
What does it look like to fail gracefully?  I think it would include more encouragement than dissapointment.  I think had my family put an emphasis on what I was doing well could have helped me feel more confident with approaching the challenges causing me to fail.  Failing gracefully looks more like the measurement of progress versus collection of errors.  

I am softening my critic.  I have grace and appreciation for the progress it has made.  With the use of trust my critic is softening.  I am resisting the urge to judge myself in favor of understanding myself.  When I fail I first recognize that I made an attempt and that is something to reward.  This has allowed myself to forgive my shortcomings and recognize the opportunity to learn from them.  This has allowed me to finally see progress after so long being forced to focus on failure.  I think for this process it is important to note that writing this paragraph brought me to tears, big crocodile ones, and with them peace.  This is a young transition I'm in but so much more efficient.  Donald and I talked about not being fast, be fluid, and fluid is fast.  Well being graceful is being fluid and the changes in me may not be fast but they will be fluid.

The difficult with my critic is that it is the framework for how how I treat those I love.  It has been the default response mechanism for me.  It has been the part of me that people grow to despise avoid and even divorce.  I won't quit on my critic.  If my critic has taught anything it has been that quitting is the trophy for failure.  It might be an internal enemy but it is my greatest asset.  It is what has always woke me up in the morning and it is the part of me that tells my hands to wipe the tears.  It is the part of me that convinces me the pain is just weakness leaving the body.  I love you critic, I just can't continue to function without giving you an overhaul. 

If my true self had a love song to my critic's ego and shadow it would sound like this.

Falling up


I am discovering me.  I am learning to soften myself.  Softening can be described as humbling, refining, purifying or maybe humanizing.  I have been trying to encounter my shadow for a few years.  This is easier said than done.  I have studied what the shadow can be, how it might reveal itself, and where I can look for it.  But as I approach the final stages of my counseling curriculum I am doing the work.  

I am asking the questions about myself that I asked after my divorce.  I am monitoring and collecting feedback from people who might love me, who I've failed, and who I trust.  I am going back to the basics. I am working on how I can identify with my shadow by identifying actions, behaviors,and emotions that have tarnished my relationships, perspectives, and beliefs.  I want to inspire change, because what I have learned from my love relationships is that a few core struggles linger and damage, leading me to consider that I may not have evolved like I thought.  I am cycling through another introspective phase.

I've collected a few qualities that are in need of immediate softening, I'll call these facades.  There are several areas of my self concept that need softening but I'll process these for now.  I am not a Jungian but I admire his use of shadow, ego, and true self.  I would like to hold these three qualities I am trying to soften in the light of the shadow, the ego , and the true self.  The first quality I find easy to identify is the critic.    Another is the romantic.  And lastly, to get me started down the path of softening, is the victim.  Each of these identified facades have played a significant role in my personality development over the last several years.

I am an expert learner as we all are.  I am disappointed when I make the same mistake twice.  This disappointment is teaching me to invoke my intrapersonal atonement.  This is building patience, sympathy, tolerance, and humility.  I want to be a person who breaks down stigmas, challenges the semantics of society to be more trusting, and I hope to have longer periods of love where I sigh no more.

Peter Estrada

My youngest brother has a birthday today. There is something to be said for brotherhood. Its an unconditional unlike any other. There is a competition, a loyalty, a comfort, and maybe even a unique intimacy, regardless different from that of a close fiend or sister. Despite sharing families we have uniqueness that reminds me of humanities desire for variety. Peter is an amazing and talented man. Over the years I have seen him succeed at community leadership.

I have shared many fun nights filled with jokes, silliness, and depth.  I have seen his passion for improving communities, Latino communities.  He challenges me to voice my opinions and he reminds me how hard he has worked to establish his.  He can be a sad man too.  He has subtle ways of introversion.  He can deceive you with his smile making you believe all is right in the world.  But when I look into his eyes deep enough I can still see that gentle boy who has always been polite, kind hearted, and eager.  From the get go he has shined, but i see him still wondering with anxiousness and possibly fear what lies ahead.  I love this man.

I have guilt for not being the stellar brother that I think I could have been.  I wasn't a good example for how to treat women.  I wasn't a good example for restraining my drinking.  I didn't demonstrate how to be humble until late in the game.  I have regrets for being a role model that was shady and self serving.  There are times where I was too critical and demanding.  At times I might have been more of a delinquent friend than an older brother.  His love for me helps me forgive myself.  His love for me reveals how I can come to embracing my shadow.  

Staying in my reflective and healing attitude, I realize that being a brother is a relationship.  
I have work to do here too.   He has taught me about my gifts, the ones I couldn't recognize on my own.  His gift to me has been his constant reminder to believe in my gifts.  I have guilt and worry around the influence I have made on him, along with the influence he has thanked me for.  I trust the harm I have contributed might be small.  But I worry that sometimes I don't let him speak enough.  There are times where I think I teach too much.  There are times when I judge too much.  My gift to Peter this year will be to trust that he has the abilities and gifts to begin to speak more to me , teach more more to me, and have more influence on me.

I am judgmental of myself and as I grow in being a better brother for Petter I grow in compassion for me.  I have grown to have such a compassionate heart for him, and it leaves me believing I am capable of having the same compassion for myself.  Your gift Peter is a frugal yet profound one.  I promise to work and be critical of my role as a brother, my contribution as a family member, and my ethic as a friend.

I love you Peter Jonathan Estrada, It don't matter who is carrying who...He is my Brother!

Doctor give me the news

I find myself having to perform self triage.  I am healing a wound and realizing that there are times where I am the deliverer of injustice.  In many of my roles as a partner, father, or family member I am unfair and maybe brutally insensitive.  I see that this Dr. King day is a reminder to non-violently seek the metaphorical streets of Birmingham in my psyche, shadow, and ego.  I have been a racist and might still have lingering hate.  I for sure have prejudice.  I for sure am a biased man.  Let the love that inspired a king to endure the darkness that creates corruption fill my protest banners so I can be reminded to remain free at last.

To the victims of my brutality, I offer this attempt at progress to you.  Not so much for the forgivessness but the correction.  That others may not have to suffer the same consequences like you.  To the communities I have looked on with hate, I hope to continue to understand and grow my compassion for you.  May this act of accountability be enough to create an epidemic of improvement that shines bright like a diamond in the sky.


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