It’s hard for me to explain “the voice” to anyone, but it’s constantly there.
I’m driving into a parking lot to go to a bookstore. There are half a dozen different routes through the parking lot and I randomly choose one. The harsh voice screams at me.
“You should have turned at the other entrance. You’re wasting time. What’s wrong with you?”
I’m sitting alone in my own home and I have my legs propped up on my own coffee table.
“What are you doing with your feet on the furniture?” the voice snaps in anger, as though to a child.
I’m exhausted and don’t feel like doing anything this particular morning, so I sleep late. But I have trouble sleeping, because the voice is yelling at me.
“Why are you so lazy?” the voice shouts. “I’m disgusted with you. Get up. You are lazy.”
In big ways and small ways, the voice is with me much of the time. When I eat poorly and I’m “self-medicating” with sugar, the voice attacks me. It viciously points out the weight I’m gaining. It reminds me that no one likes a fat man. It reminds me that a woman isn’t going to love me like this, because fat people are disgusting and embarrassing.
The harsh and critical superego inside my head is always there. It’s always telling me that I’m a failure. It’s always telling me that I could do so much more with my life if I would just fix everything about myself. There’s always “one correct way” to the voice. Unless I do things in that one way, I am a failure.
That harsh voice constantly reminds me that I’m not OK — that I’m not good enough.

‘Just do exactly what we say to do; it’s for your own good, you know’
You’re wrong! And if you don’t agree with me, you’re an evil, lying moron
Real love is spiritual experience that connects me to the cosmos
Kids obeyed me on radio project, only because I knew what to do
Race discrimination: Sometimes evil, but sometimes praiseworthy?
Loving heart, willing spirit can turn burdens of parenting into happiness
As we enjoyed the sunset together, language and borders didn’t matter
500 years after Luther’s 95 theses, there’s still not much to celebrate