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Conversational Negative Self-
Most people do not even know they are doing it. Throughout the course of normal
conversation, they bombard themselves with negative self-
How many times have you heard someone in a conversation admit that they were misinformed in the past by saying, “Oops, I lied.” Lying by definition is a deliberate and sometimes malicious intent to deceive another. If you were wrong, misinformed, or made a bad assumption, but honestly believed you were giving factual information at the time, then it was NOT a lie. You are not a liar. You did not deliberately deceive the other person. Do not use a negative term like “lied” to describe yourself. Say, “Oops, I misunderstood,” “oops, I made a bad assumption,” or, “oops, I was wrong.” Unless you actually did it on purpose, it is not a lie and you should not call yourself a liar. It amazes me how many people say “I lied!” repeatedly during normal conversation as if they are habitual liars or something. It is a derogatory word. Do not use it unless you really meaning it.
The other night, my daughter was telling me about a friend of hers that she had been
talking with on the telephone. They were going over a tough homework assignment
together. Every time my daughter’s friend realized that she had written down the
wrong answer, on autopilot she would say, “Oh, I’m stupid.” Over and over without
even realizing it, she kept calling herself stupid. She said it ten or fifteen times
within an hour-
Sometimes the negative comments are disguised as humor. “I’m just a stupid guy,”
“Oh well, what do you expect from a dumb blonde,” or “I think my mom dropped me one
too many times as a baby!” The fact that they feel a need to make excuses for themselves
means that they have low self-
It is a subtle and difficult pattern to break. A lot of people do it without noticing
that they are even doing it. It is said with the same automatic presentation as
the “Fine, thanks” that always follows “How are you?” I recommend that you ask someone
to help you with it. For example, in speech classes they will harp on you for saying
things like um, soooooo, or ya’ know. These are fillers that we put into speeches
to fill the gaps when we are nervous. We do not know we are doing it until we have
someone point it out to us consistently. After awhile, the speech students begin
to hear themselves and stop themselves from saying these filler phrases. I would
recommend doing the same thing to help each other out of conversational negative
self-
My daughter came home from school a couple of months ago and every other word was
‘like.’ Like there was this kid at school and like they were like so out of control!
The teacher like had to like send them to the office because like they wouldn’t
sit down and like respect the class. I giggled to myself as I stood there fixing
dinner and listening to her 13-
It can really be that simple. Offer to help a friend to overcome their automated
negative comments by playing the same game with them. If they are guilty of saying
a particular derogatory statement repeatedly, then offer to help them to break the
pattern. If you can admit to yourself that you are one of those people who say negative
things about yourself without even really thinking about it, then ask someone to
help you to stop. You would be amazed at how quickly you can stop the behavior if
someone will just make you take notice. Self-
If you are too embarrassed to ask for help, or you do not have anyone that you would
trust enough to help you, then you are going to have to make a huge effort to become
more aware of the words you speak during casual conversation. It is much more difficult,
but still do-
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