This response is important for our ability to learn from mistakes, but it alsogives self-criticism, because it is part of the threat-protection system. In other words, what keeps us safe can go too

One touch of a red-hot stove is usually all we need to avoid that kind of discomfort in future. The same is true as we experience the emotional sensation of stress from our first instances of social rejection ridicule. We quickly learn to fear and thus automatically avoid potentially stressful situations of all kinds, including the most common of all: making mistakes.

This response is important for our ability to learn from mistakes, but it alsogives self-criticism, because it is part of the threat-protection system. In other words, what keeps us safe can go too

One touch of a red-hot stove is usually all we need to avoid that kind of discomfort in future. The same is true as we experience the emotional sensation of stress from our first instances of social rejection ridicule. We quickly learn to fear and thus automatically avoid potentially stressful situations of all kinds, including the most common of all: making mistakes.

This response is important for our ability to learn from mistakes, but it alsogives self-criticism, because it is part of the threat-protection system. In other words, what keeps us safe can go too

One touch of a red-hot stove is usually all we need to avoid that kind of discomfort in future. The same is true as we experience the emotional sensation of stress from our first instances of social rejection ridicule. We quickly learn to fear and thus automatically avoid potentially stressful situations of all kinds, including the most common of all: making mistakes.

This response is important for our ability to learn from mistakes, but it alsogives self-criticism, because it is part of the threat-protection system. In other words, what keeps us safe can go too

One touch of a red-hot stove is usually all we need to avoid that kind of discomfort in future. The same is true as we experience the emotional sensation of stress from our first instances of social rejection ridicule. We quickly learn to fear and thus automatically avoid potentially stressful situations of all kinds, including the most common of all: making mistakes.

This response is important for our ability to learn from mistakes, but it alsogives self-criticism, because it is part of the threat-protection system. In other words, what keeps us safe can go too

One touch of a red-hot stove is usually all we need to avoid that kind of discomfort in future. The same is true as we experience the emotional sensation of stress from our first instances of social rejection ridicule. We quickly learn to fear and thus automatically avoid potentially stressful situations of all kinds, including the most common of all: making mistakes.