Psychology, asked by s4544, 2 months ago

Q1: Why do we feel hurt when someone criticises us?
Q2: What happens when we criticize a person very often?
Q3: Who are the people from whom we receive criticism more frequently?

Answers

Answered by rashi4717
1

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Q1: Why do we feel hurt when someone criticises us?

Researchers believed some individuals were more sensitive to criticism than others due to a cognitive bias that led them to interpret ambiguous information negatively, rather than in a neutral or positive manner.

Q2: What happens when we criticize a person very often?

A person being constantly criticised is likely to find it hurtful and demoralising and may grow to resent the person doing the criticising. If you find criticism has become an issue in your relationship, it's important to nip it in the bud before the problem becomes any worse.

Q3: Who are the people from whom we receive criticism more frequently?

People who are at peace with themselves are kind. As described by shame expert Brené Brown, criticism is a coping mechanism used by people who feel unworthy. It's purpose is to shift the spotlight off of oneself and onto someone or something else in an effort to feel safe.

Explanation:

Hope it's helpful to you :)

Answered by msseemarai1981
1

Answer:

Hi hope this helps

Explanation:

Q1: Why do we feel hurt when someone criticises us?

Ans. Researchers believed some individuals were more sensitive to criticism than others due to a cognitive bias that led them to interpret ambiguous information negatively, rather than in a neutral or positive manner.

Q2: What happens when we criticize a person very often?

Ans. A person being constantly criticised is likely to find it hurtful and demoralising and may grow to resent the person doing the criticising. If you find criticism has become an issue in your relationship, it's important to nip it in the bud before the problem becomes any worse.

Q3: Who are the people from whom we receive criticism more frequently?

Ans. People who are at peace with themselves are kind. As described by shame expert Brené Brown, criticism is a coping mechanism used by people who feel unworthy. It's purpose is to shift the spotlight off of oneself and onto someone or something else in an effort to feel safe.

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