Start here
There’s nothing wrong with wanting to get things right.
We all learn that how we perform affects how we’re seen.
Being capable, being respected, not getting it wrong, it matters.
So we check ourselves.
We think things through.
We try to do better.
That makes sense.
But when this goes too far, it stops being helpful.
And instead of guiding you, it starts to work against you.
What’s going on
There’s a part of you that questions what you do.
It looks for what could be better.
It notices what didn’t go right.
On the surface, that can look like awareness.
But underneath, it can feel like you don’t quite trust yourself.
How it tends to feel
- You second-guess yourself after making decisions
- You focus more on what went wrong than what went well
- You struggle to take in praise or believe it
- You feel like others are more capable than you
The cost
Nothing ever quite settles.
Even when things go well, it doesn’t feel enough.
You move on quickly or pick apart what wasn’t right.
Over time, this can make decisions feel heavier, because you’re not just choosing — you’re questioning yourself at the same time.
Your starting point
You don’t need to get rid of that voice.
You just need to start noticing:
👉 when it’s helping
👉 when it’s undermining you
👉 when you stop trusting your own judgement
Your worksheet
This will help you slow it down and see it more clearly.
→ Download the Internal Critic Worksheet
If this also felt familiar…
You might also recognise parts of:
- The Mirror Worrier
- The Frozen Analyst
Closing
You don’t need more confidence.
Just start noticing how often you question yourself.