More than 19 million people tuned in to watch the final episode
of “Game of Thrones,” making it the most viewed show to ever air on HBO.
Yet many were dissatisfied with what they saw, hurling gripe
after grouse online. The finale didn’t fit the ethos of the show, they
insisted. It was overly sentimental. It tarnished the show’s legacy. More than
1 million people signed an online petition to re-make the show’s final season.
Several “Game of Thrones” actors took umbrage, including Sophie
Turner, who called the criticism “disrespectful” and defended the show’s
writers and filmmakers.
Whether the many critiques are fair remains subject to debate,
but one fact gives me pause: the petition was drafted before the show’s finale
aired, meaning a million people lobbied to re-make the season finale seeing it.
We live in an unfortunate era for online criticism. Critics fling
insults they would never dare utter face to face. Defendants — typically
privileged public figures — bristle with self-righteousness, dubbing their
critics “haters,” earning praise for “clapping back” in their own defense.
I wonder if we’re growing too defensive. When we clap back so
fiercely, do we take the time to consider the criticism? Are we cooling down
enough to find the teaching moment in the hot exchange? Or are we digging our
heels in and sticking our fingers in our ears?
A media executive once offered a handy guide on when to take
criticism to heart. Ask yourself two questions about your critic, she said: Can
you trust that this person is acting in good faith and not on some ulterior
motive? Does this person have some knowledge of this particular situation that
I do not?
If the answers are yes, then heed their words. If the answers are
no, make like Taylor Swift and shake it off.
Lately, I’ve been struggling to determine when to be gentle with
myself and when to push myself to a higher standard. In my sleep-deprived days
with an infant, it’s easy to justify the former. But there are moments I look
at my choices and I know I can do better. More green smoothies, earlier
bedtimes. Less binge TV, fewer donuts. I know it’s all connected: sleep, sugar,
the limits of my patience, the frequency of my prayer.
I used to cling to St. Francis de Sales’ quote: “Have patience
with all things, but chiefly have patience with yourself.” It is so tender, so
loving.
But I’d been missing his subsequent statement, meant to be taken
as a whole, to moderate the first part: “Do not lose courage in considering
your own imperfections but instantly set about remedying them. Every day begin
the task anew.”
This is a high bar: address a shortcoming “instantly.”
St. Francis’ charge is two-fold, pointing us to a middle ground:
to both be patient with yourself and to consider your imperfections.
Catholic spirituality equips us with the tools for an examination
of conscience and asks us to do so bravely, honestly, daily. This may be harder
to do than ever before, in this time when social media makes our personal lives
feel public, and we sink in the quicksand of fearing others’ judgment while too
readily casting judgments of our own.
It may be harder to do than ever before but also more important.
We must learn to cast aside unfounded criticism while accepting difficult
feedback from trusted sources: a sibling or spouse, a spiritual director, a
confessor. And then, with courage and humility, we can “set about remedying”
and find a path toward progress. Again and again, sunrise, sunset — we can
begin anew.
Capecchi is a freelance writer from Inver Grove Heights,
Minn.