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Receive Feedback Without Collapsing

 

 

یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

I used to believe I was good at accepting feedback. I wasn’t. I realized this one afternoon during a project review meeting when my manager looked at my presentation slides and said:

“They’re fine… but something feels off.”

That was it. No explanation, no details—just a vague cloud of disapproval. Yet those few words struck me like a punch in the stomach. My confidence shattered. My hands grew cold. And inside my head, a loud voice started shouting.

“You messed up. You’re not good enough. You should have done better.”

For the rest of the meeting, I didn’t hear anything. I was too busy sinking into myself. Later, I found myself sitting alone in the cafeteria, replaying that one sentence over and over. That’s when my colleague Sara walked in, holding a cup of coffee, and immediately sensed something was wrong.

“You look like your project just got set on fire,” she said, sitting down across from me.

I gave a weak smile. “It feels like it did. I got feedback—well, more like half-feedback—and I think it’s destroyed me.”

“What did they say?” she asked.

“That my slides were fine… but something felt off.”

“And what about that destroyed you?” she asked inquisitively.

I paused. I had no answer.

The Real Problem Isn’t the Feedback — It’s Our Reaction

Sara leaned forward and lowered her voice. “Let me guess. Your mind filled in all the missing details with the worst possible story?”

I nodded silently.

“That’s what happens when feedback is vague,” she said. “The mind writes its own horror script.” She took a sip of her coffee. “You’re not collapsing because of what he said. You’re collapsing because of what you told yourself after he spoke.”

Her words hit me harder than the feedback itself.

Vague Feedback Is an Emotional Trap

She continued, “Most feedback falls into three categories:

  1. Empty praise
  2. Vague criticism
  3. Specific, actionable insight.

Only the third is useful,” she said. “Yet people react the strongest to the first two.”

I let her words sink in. “So what do I do when someone gives vague criticism?” I asked.

She smiled. “You do the one thing that emotionally strong people do: Ask for specifics.”

The Day She Learned the Same Lesson

She shared an old story from her past. “I once worked under a senior who would constantly say, ‘Your work isn’t strong enough.’ For months, I felt I wasn’t good at anything. I almost quit.”

“What changed?” I asked.

“One day, I asked him, ‘Which part of my work? What exactly is weak?’ He stared at me blankly and said, ‘I don’t know. It just feels that way.’”

She laughed. “That day I learned that not all feedback is true. Some of it is just noise wearing the costume of authority.”

The Moment That Turned My Day Around

“So if my manager says something feels off…?” I asked.

“Ask what specifically feels off,” she said. “If he can tell you, great—you can improve. If he can’t, then why let it ruin your peace?”

It suddenly seemed so simple. I had let a vague comment control my mood just because I didn’t ask for clarity.

An Unexpected Twist

“You know what the real shock is?” she asked mischievously.

“What?”

“Vague criticism often reveals more about the speaker than about the work.”

I looked at her, confused.

She explained, “Maybe he was tired. Maybe he didn’t fully understand the content. Maybe he was distracted. Maybe he felt pressure from somewhere else. Or,” she added with a grin, “maybe he just didn’t like the color blue on your slides.”

I laughed for the first time that day.

Emotional Stability Comes From Delaying Reaction

Sara became serious again. “You lose emotional stability when you react too quickly. You regain it when you pause, ask questions, clarify, and respond from understanding—not insecurity.”

She leaned back and said, “Never react to feedback until you know exactly what it means.”

Something about the clarity of that sentence grounded me.

A Simple Rule That Changed Everything

“Remember this,” she said: “If the feedback is vague, your reaction should be zero. No specifics, no emotional reaction,” she added. “That’s the pact.”

I repeated it slowly in my head. If the feedback is vague, the reaction is zero. Something inside me clicked.

Returning to the Meeting Room

After our conversation, I went back to my desk and reopened the slides. This time, instead of panic, I felt curiosity.

I sent a short message to my manager: “Could you tell me what specifically felt off? I’d like to improve the slides with more clarity.”

Within a minute, he responded: “Oh! The slides are excellent. I just meant the transition between sections two and three felt sudden. The rest is perfect.”

Just that. A tiny, actionable tweak.

I stared at the message, feeling both relief and disbelief. All that sinking, collapsing, and spiraling… over a transition slide?

What I Learned That Day

As I closed my laptop, Sara’s words echoed in my mind:

“Demand specifics. Don’t surrender your emotional stability to vague sentences.”

Praise can deceive, and criticism can mislead, but specifics reveal the truth.

That day, I silently promised myself: No more collapsing, no more assuming, and no more surrendering my peace to incomplete sentences. If feedback is precise, I will learn from it. If it’s not, I will ignore it.

For the first time, I walked out of the office not wounded but empowered—carrying a calmness I didn’t know I was capable of.

 

 یہ مضمون اردو میں پڑھیں

 

The way we see the world is never entirely neutral. Our minds act like lenses, shaping how we interpret events, relationships, and even our self-esteem. For some, this lens becomes darker over time—formed by repeated disappointments, painful experiences, or internalized labels. Life might feel dull not necessarily because it is, but because of the “glasses” we are wearing.

This metaphor of “depression glasses” captures a truth many can relate to: depression is not only about how things are but also about how we have learned to see them. The first step toward healing often begins with realizing that we are wearing these glasses in the first place.

The Weight of Labels

When someone says, “I am a depressed person,” the label does more than describe—it defines. Over time, these labels become heavy and part of one’s identity. Every event is influenced by the belief: “Of course I feel this way, because I am depressed.”

But a label isn’t destiny. It captures a moment of struggle, not a permanent identity. The risk of labels is that they subtly train us to see ourselves through a single story, until those views become so fixed that we forget what the world looks like without them.

The Metaphor of the Glasses

Think of wearing tinted glasses: everything—sunlight, a flower, or a smile—looks different through that tint. Depression works in a similar way.

  • Joy feels muted. Achievements seem smaller, happiness seems fleeting.
  • Problems seem exaggerated. Small inconveniences appear much larger, as if seen through a magnifying glass.
  • Hope seems unrealistic. The future appears bleak regardless of the actual possibilities.

The tragedy isn’t that the world has changed, but that our view of it has.

Awareness: The First Step

The pivotal moment happens when we realize: “I am wearing depression glasses.”

This awareness doesn’t instantly cure the heaviness, but it creates a vital gap between “me” and “my thoughts.” It allows a person to say:

  • This isn’t the only perspective.
  • I am not my depression; I am a person going through depressive thoughts.
  • I can try taking the glasses off, even if just for a few minutes.

Once that realization occurs, a different form of agency becomes possible.

Taking the Glasses Off: Practical Steps

  1. Practice brief moments of awareness. Notice when thoughts sound absolute—“nothing ever works,” “everything is hopeless.” Remind yourself: this is the lens speaking.
  2. Challenge the label. Instead of “I am depressed,” try: “I am experiencing depressive feelings.” This minor change helps avoid the identity trap.
  3. Practice micro-actions. Spending three minutes on focused attention or quick gratitude reflections can ease negativity.
  4. Seek outside perspectives. Trusted friends, mentors, or professionals can serve as mirrors, helping you recognize what your biased view hides.
  5. Acknowledge your persistence. Even when negative thoughts come back, remind yourself: their persistence doesn’t make them true. They are intrusive but not controlling.

Spiritual Reframing: Suffering with Purpose

Every suffering that causes depressive thoughts can be reframed through faith. If the situation you face is not random but given by an Almighty, Wise, and Merciful Creator, then it cannot be without meaning.

Even when the exact purpose of a hardship is hidden from us, we can rest assured that it was not created in vain. Recognizing that God does not send us through pointless situations becomes a grounding truth.

This viewpoint enables us to transform our internal conversation.

  • This trial is not pointless. It has been allowed by a Merciful God.
  • Just because I don’t see its wisdom yet, doesn’t mean it doesn’t have wisdom.
  • The same God who permitted this pain is also the One who sustains me through it.

Persistently reminding ourselves of this truth makes faith an inner ally. It may not eliminate the heaviness of depression immediately, but it can ease it, providing strength, perspective, and hope. Over time, this spiritual reframing can become a powerful support—if not a full cure.

The Role of Gratitude and Balance

One of the most effective cures for depression glasses is gratitude. When life feels extremely negative, deliberately noticing small positives—like a safe shelter, a caring friend, or the ability to breathe freely—reminds us that the tint is not the whole picture.

This isn’t about ignoring pain or pretending everything is okay. It’s about refusing to let the dark lens erase the light that still exists. Gratitude, practiced regularly, slowly peels away the tint, allowing in more clarity.

The Journey of Persistence

Taking off depression glasses is not a one-time act. Often, we briefly remove them only to find ourselves putting them back on unconsciously. But with persistence—repeatedly practicing awareness, gratitude, and spiritual reframing—life begins to look different.

Initially, the change might be subtle: colors appear slightly brighter, conversations feel less exhausting, and hope seems a bit more realistic. Over time, those moments add up, and the glasses no longer feel stuck to the face.

Conclusion

Depression glasses distort how we see ourselves and the world, but they are not permanent. They can be recognized, challenged, reinterpreted, and slowly eliminated.

The journey is neither quick nor straight. But each moment of awareness, every refusal to see negative thoughts as the final truth, each act of gratitude, and every reminder that suffering serves a divine purpose are steps toward clearer understanding.

Seen from the perspective of a Merciful and Wise Creator, life—even with its hardships—gains purpose. And within that purpose, hope and healing are born.