I messed up yesterday. Pretty badly, actually.
We were working on a big project with a deadline looming, and I noticed someone on our team had completely misunderstood the instructions. My first reaction? I let out this dramatic sigh, rolled my eyes, and blurted out, “That’s not even close to what we discussed.”
The room went silent. I saw their face fall.
In that moment, I became the very thing we’ve been talking about all week – the opposite of a positive mental attitude. My criticism didn’t fix anything. It just made everything worse.
This whole week, we’ve been exploring the power of maintaining optimism in all circumstances. And here’s where the rubber meets the road – how we respond when things go wrong.
The Criticism Trap (And Why We’re All Stuck In It)
Let’s be real. Criticism is easy. So easy.
Our brains are literally wired to spot problems. It’s an ancient survival mechanism that helped our ancestors notice the one dangerous berry among the safe ones, or the slight movement in the grass that might be a predator.
This tendency served us well for thousands of years. But in modern life? Not so much.
When we criticize others (or ourselves), we think we’re being helpful. We believe we’re pointing out what needs fixing. We imagine we’re being smart, insightful, even caring.
But criticism rarely works the way we hope.
Research shows that relationships – whether personal or professional – need at least five positive interactions to balance out just one negative one. Our brains give extra weight to criticism. It sticks with us longer and cuts deeper than praise.
And here’s the most important part: criticism almost never creates the change we want.
Instead, it builds walls. Creates resistance. Makes people defensive. And destroys trust.

Napoleon Hill’s Wisdom on Why We Should Stop Criticism
Napoleon Hill, in his years studying the most successful people of his time, noticed something interesting. The most successful people rarely criticized others.
In fact, Hill listed criticism as one of his “30 Major Causes of Failure” in Think and Grow Rich. He believed it was a major factor that kept people from achieving their potential.
Hill wrote: “The habit of criticizing others has robbed many people of the right of friendship and has destroyed harmony in innumerable homes and brought failure in business. It makes enemies in both business and social relations.”
When we criticize, we’re not just hurting others – we’re hurting ourselves. Our minds become trained to look for faults rather than opportunities. We build a habit of negative thinking that spills over into every area of our lives.
Even worse, we often project our own insecurities onto others. Most criticism says more about the critic than the criticized.
So if we need to stop criticism – what’s the alternative?
The Magic Practice: Finding the Good
The magic practice is simple but powerful: Find something good in every situation and every person.
Simple? Yes. Easy? Not always.
This isn’t about ignoring problems or being unrealistic. It’s about training our minds to see more completely – to notice what’s working alongside what isn’t.
I tried this after my criticism blunder yesterday. Instead of dwelling on what went wrong, I found something to appreciate about the person I criticized – their creativity in trying a different approach. I mentioned this specifically when I apologized.
The tension melted away almost instantly.
Finding the good is like having a superpower. When you can genuinely see something positive in a difficult situation, you immediately:
• Reduce your stress levels • Open up creative problem-solving pathways in your brain • Make others feel valued • Create an environment where real improvement can happen
Remember, this isn’t about fake positivity. It’s about expanding your vision to see the whole picture.
How to Actually Practice This (When You Really Want to Criticize)
So you’re mad. Or disappointed. Or frustrated. And criticism is right there on the tip of your tongue.
What now?
First, pause. Take a breath. This creates space between stimulus and response.
Second, ask yourself: “What’s one good thing here?” It might be: • Someone’s intention, even if execution was flawed • A small part that did work among the parts that didn’t • A quality of the person you value • A lesson you can learn from this situation
Third, lead with that good thing when you speak. Start there.
Fourth, if you need to address a problem, frame it as a question or opportunity: “I wonder if we might try…” or “What if we approached it this way?”
Here’s what this looks like in practice:
Instead of: “This report is a mess. You completely missed the point.”
Try: “I appreciate how much work you put into gathering all this data. That clearly took time. I’m curious about how we might reorganize some sections to highlight the key findings we discussed.”
The difference feels like night and day to the recipient.
What Happens When You Can’t Find Anything Good?
Sometimes we’re just too upset or the situation seems too dire to find anything positive.
In these cases, be honest with yourself: “I’m struggling to see anything good here right now.”
Then, instead of forcing it, change your question: “What might someone else see as positive in this situation?”
Or even: “What might I eventually learn from this?”
Sometimes the good is simply not obvious yet. It might be hidden in a lesson, a relationship strengthened through difficulty, or an opportunity that hasn’t revealed itself.
And sometimes, you just need time before you can find it.
The practice isn’t about immediate perfection. It’s about developing a new habit – training your mind to search for the positive alongside acknowledging challenges.

The Two-Week Challenge
I’m going to suggest something crazy. For the next two weeks, try completely eliminating criticism – of others AND yourself.
Instead, practice finding something good in every situation, person, and experience.
Keep a small notebook handy to jot down one good thing you notice each time you feel the urge to criticize. This physical act helps cement the new habit.
Will you slip up? Probably. I still do. But each time you catch yourself, you’re rewiring your brain.
The results might surprise you. When we ran this challenge with a small group last year, participants reported:
• Less conflict in relationships • Reduced stress and anxiety • More creative solutions to problems • Increased influence with others • Greater overall happiness
One participant said, “I thought I’d be letting people get away with things if I didn’t criticize. Instead, I found I could actually help more effectively when I started with appreciation.”
And here’s the most interesting part – problems often fix themselves when we stop focusing on them. When people feel appreciated rather than criticized, they naturally want to improve.
So, what good will you find today instead of criticism? The magic is waiting.