How to Not Care Too Much About What People May Think of You

“Criticism is something we can avoid easily by saying nothing, doing nothing, and being nothing.”
Aristotle

What other people think and say about you and what you do can hold you back in life. If you care too much about their opinions.

You may not take some action that you want to take because you fear being judged by someone or people in general.

You may not make improvements or changes in your life because you know, based on previous experiences, how some people could react if you did that.

Caring about what other people think about what you do in a healthy way can help you to gain valuable feedback and keep you grounded. But caring too much about what people may say or think if you do something can keep you in the same old rut, unable to move forward and to live the life you truly want to live.

So how can you overcome this common issue and find more inner freedom to do what you want? Well, people will always have thoughts and opinions about things. But you can learn how to care about what they say and think in a more helpful way.

In this article I’ll share 5 tips that have helped me to make that shift.

1. First, people don’t think about you and what you do that much really.

Holding yourself back in life because of what other people may think or say does, in my experience, to a large part come from a belief that people care a great deal about what you are about to say or do. Perhaps you are afraid that people will laugh or analyze what you said or did for the rest of the week or year.

But a much more realistic scenario is that they have their hands full with worrying about their own lives and what people may think of them instead. This might make you feel less important in your own head. But it also sets you free a bit more if you’d like that.

Yes, in your head you may be the most important person in the world. But don’t project that onto other people. Because in their world the most important person is probably themselves or their kids.

2. Take praise and criticism evenly.

My mindset for praise – that I try to stick to as much as I can – is that it’s cool and I appreciate it. It’s great to get praise, but I seldom get overly excited about it and jump and down shouting enthusiastically.

A great upside of this mindset is that when you receive the opposite – negative criticism – you can often observe it calmly without too much wild, negative emotions blocking the way. This allows you to appreciate that piece of criticism too (if there is something to learn from it).

Going about things this way can help you to not care too much about what other people think.

3. Care more about what you think about yourself.

If you care too much about what people think of you then that craving need can make you feel quite needy and you start to define yourself based on what they may think of you.

So replace that somewhat desperate need with something healthier, something you have more power over. Something that will give you more inner stability and lets your life not become a rollercoaster of thoughts and emotions controlled by other people’s opinions.

Start caring more about what you think about yourself and start raising your own self-esteem.

Two ways of doing that are:

The daily self-appreciation journal.

It is easy to get lost in basing your self-esteem on just what you accomplish, on what you get done in a day or week. Or on what other people may think about you and tell you about yourself. But basing your self-esteem on just that makes it pretty unstable.

One way to help yourself out with that and with appreciating what is good and awesome about you is to use a self-appreciation journal.

You can do that by taking out a pen and notepad (or use a word processor on your computer or cell phone) every evening for a week. There you write down 5 things you appreciate about yourself. But make sure that you do not only write down accomplishments.

Also write down good stuff related to your core-self esteem. By that I mean things that always there no matter how you perform at work or in school. It could be things/traits like your sense of humor, your kindness, your honesty, wisdom, creativity and so on.

Be kind and understanding towards others (and yourself).

By being kinder towards and more understanding of others if becomes easier to do the same to yourself. One simple way to focus on being more understanding and kind when you feel the need to judge someone is to use helpful questions. One I find to be really effective is:

What parts of this person can I see in myself? How is he or she like me?

This one helps me to shift my perspective from what is different and what I feel the need to judge to what we have in common instead. This tears down the mental barriers between us and I can feel closer to and more understanding of this person.

Try it out whenever you feel the need to judge someone, no matter if it is someone close to you or someone you don’t even know.

By doing so it becomes more natural to extend and use this more understanding and kind frame of mind when you view yourself too. And by behaving in this way towards others you will feel better about yourself and in that way raise your self-esteem too.

Plus, by being kinder towards others you are more likely to get that kindness back from them too.

4. Remember, not all things that they may say or think is really about you.

If someone is pretty much always negative about what other people do or he or she often makes personal attacks and let the destructive words flow then, when such things are aimed at you, remember that it isn’t always about you.

Such words or negative habits can be a way for that person to release pent up anger, frustration or jealousy about something in his or her own life. Or a way to reinforce that his or her viewpoint or belief is the right one. Or he or she may have habit of getting others involved emotionally – baiting them – to build a negative spiral, an argument or fight to get attention. It’s about him or her. Not about something you did or want to do.

It can have a calming effect to remember this. And to remember that the other person is still human and might be having a bad day, month, marriage or job.

5. Listen to the supportive and level-headed people.

I wouldn’t recommend to stop caring about what people may say altogether. Listening to what they have to say can provide you with valuable feedback and help you to keep yourself grounded so that your life and relationships do not spin out of control or break down.

But try to choose who you listen to. Listening to your relative that is always angry about everything or a friend that always sees the pessimistic side of things may not help you so much.

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About the Author

Henrik Edberg is the creator of the Positivity Blog and has written weekly articles here since 2006. He has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Gothenburg and has been featured on Lifehacker, HuffPost and Paulo Coelho’s blog. Click here to learn more…

Comments on this entry are closed.

  • Kat

    I know that people don’t talk too much about me, but every time someone laughs around me (someone that I do not know) I have the impression that they’re laughing about me. I’m sure it rarely happens for people to laugh about me, but I still can’t help myself making scenarios.

  • Henrik: Most of the time I do not care what others think about me, but I am working on changing that to all the time. Honestly, I don’t want to care what people think about me.
    I really liked number one and number three. People really are more focused on themselves. I might get a good laugh in at someone, but as soon as something else happens I forget and move on.

  • Hi Henrik, I read about you and your blog in Bohusläningen today, and after reading your recent posts I am sooo impressed and delighted. So much that I added your blog to my website as a favourite place. If you would like to use any of my photos on Flickr please feel free to do so, they are licensed under CreativeCommons. My Flickrname is KatinkaBille.
    Keep up the good work. Kind regards Katinka (almost a neighbour)

  • Self-care is indeed the key to happiness. What other people think about us is only an opinion. Their opinion. Based on their own life experience and beliefs. We need to acknowledge what they are saying and then think about where is the truth. It’s important to stay grounded and to develop a strong sense of self-love. Thanks for the post.

    (www.sylviagautier.com)

  • Läste om dig i Bohusläningen idag och hittade då hit, riktigt härlig blogg! =)

  • Henrik,

    Thank you for the wonderful suggestions.

    Your article reminds me of something a friend of mine once told me, “What other people think of you is none of your business.” He was absolutely right. However, putting that principle into practice was another story.

    One of the main reasons I cared so much about what others thought about me was because my self-esteem was very low, and I needed other people to validate my self-worth.

    The way I overcame this need for validation from others was through spiritual growth—in my case, through mindfulness meditation. After meditating consistently for some time, I began to find my inner strength. In addition, I started to see my spiritual connection with others, and therefore, my ego began to dissipate. That is, I no longer had an ego that needed validation.

    Another benefit from my meditation practice is that it allows me to be more open to other people. This helps improve all my relationships, which further nourishes my inner being.

  • Great way of seeing things, only caring about things worth caring for, an and ignoring all negativity, converting it into a character building experience, sounds cliche, but its exactly what we need. Thanks for the great article, I found my favorite blog.

  • Gwin

    This really good an article. I read it many times. I really believe in what you say. But in my case, there are some people who always talk negatively to me. Almost every time, everything i do is just like a wrong thing for them, i almost can’t get sleep at night when they started talking bad. When i react like do nothing, talk nothing, as if everything turns well, they act more provocatively than before. I am tired. What should i do? I need your advice
    Thanks a lot Henrik

  • I love your advice in every post, it’s useful and easy to follow.

    A topic I’d like to include in our Canadian/Italian lifestyle blog, there are many laughs when you life between cultures, but especially when I was all by myself in a new town, not understanding a word and only being the extra of my man, ideas like yours helped me. They kind of kicked me in the a** and made me “make myself happy”.

    It worked, so thank you!