self-kindness nurturing your inner adult

The Self-Kindness Your Inner Adult Deserves

Most of us have said things to ourselves we’d never say to a friend. “Get it together.” “Stop being so weak.” “Everyone else can handle this, why can’t you?” We call it discipline. It’s actually just cruelty, aimed inward.

We talk a lot about nurturing our inner child, and that work matters. But there’s a part of healing that often gets skipped: the inner adult, the steady, capable part of you that can hold difficulty without falling apart. There’s a kinder way to motivate this part of yourself. It starts with self-kindness.

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What Self-Kindness Actually Means

Self-kindness means treating yourself with the same care and patience you’d offer someone you genuinely care about, especially when things are hard.

Researcher Kristin Neff, who has studied self-compassion extensively, describes self-kindness as the opposite of self-judgment: instead of attacking yourself when you fall short, you respond with warmth. It’s not lowering your standards. It’s refusing to make cruelty the price of accountability.

Do You Have a Cruel Inner Voice?

If an inner voice of cruelty feels familiar, you’re not alone. Research suggests roughly one in ten people has a distinct, ongoing critical voice in their head. Dr. David Schnarch writes about this in his book Brain Talk, describing it as “a hostile voice inside your head that encourages you to feel bad about yourself,” one that often shows up disguised as helpful or honest, even while it’s tearing you down.

Sometimes that voice sounds suspiciously like a parent or authority figure from your past. It’s quite helpful to study how the cruelty shows itself and how it is familiar. Most of the time, this way of relating got wired in to your brain before you had choice.

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The Surprising Way to Respond

In Living at the Bottom of the Ocean, Dr. Schnarch adds an important piece to this picture: people with this voice are “often blind to the Voice’s cruelty until it is pointed out.” That blind spot is exactly why it can run unchecked for years, mistaken for honesty or tough love.

The way out isn’t to silence the voice through sheer willpower. It’s to actually look at it closely, to map what it says, when it shows up, and whose voice it’s borrowing. When you can see it clearly you’re less likely to let the critic in you run the show.

If you can identify when the inner critic shows up, you’ve already started nurturing an inner adult who knows the difference between being pushed and being put down, and who chooses encouragement on purpose.

What the Inner Adult Actually Is

Think of your inner adult as the central part of your “self.” Here’s what it looks like:

  • It is the you that can be clear and flexible at the same time.
  • You that can breathe even when things are tough.
  • The inner adult can respond instead of react, and know you’re okay without needing someone else to tell you so.
  • It’s the part of you that can handle challenging conversations and see things that are hard to see, instead of looking away or shutting down.
  • It’s the difference between avoiding a hard conversation and walking into it with your feet planted.

This part of you isn’t loud, and it definitely isn’t cruel. It doesn’t need to tear you down to get you moving. It’s the quiet competence behind a difficult decision well made, the calm behind a boundary held without guilt, the courage behind facing something you’d rather avoid. Where the critical voice demands and humiliates, the inner adult holds you to something higher with respect intact. That’s the real difference between being pushed and being put down: one leaves you steadier, the other leaves you smaller.

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Why Your Inner Adult Needs Nurturing Too

Most of us spend a lot of energy soothing our wounds and managing our fears, and if we only ever tend to the tender, anxious parts of ourselves, then we forget to feed the part that’s already capable. The part that’s been quietly getting you through things all along goes unacknowledged.

Kindness toward your inner adult isn’t a free pass. It doesn’t mean letting yourself off the hook or going easy on growth. It means holding yourself to the same high standard, with the same honesty, and speaking to yourself the way you’d speak to someone you respect instead of someone you’re trying to break down. You can expect more of yourself and still be kind about it.

Part of this is remembering you actually have choices. The cruel voice doesn’t just criticize, it narrows the room you’re standing in until it feels like there’s only one way through: push harder, say yes, get it perfect, or fail completely. Your inner adult knows that’s not true. It’s okay to say no, it’s okay to try something and not be perfect at it, and it’s okay to choose a different path than the one the voice insists is the only option. Having choices, and knowing you have them, is part of what makes this part of you steady instead of trapped.

Your inner adult grows the same way any capacity grows: through use, recognition, and practice. Every time you self-soothe instead of spiral, every time you hold your ground instead of collapsing into someone else’s version of you, every time you tell yourself the truth instead of the comfortable story, you’re feeding this part of yourself. And the more you recognize it, the more available it becomes when you need it. Here are some simple steps:

Track yourself. 

Notice when the cruel voice shows up: what does it say, what triggers it, and whose tone it borrows. Hold curiosity around what you notice. Study the voice itself, without judgment, the way you’d study a pattern rather than a verdict. The goal is to understand it well enough that the voice loses some of its authority over you.

Soften toward yourself. 

Once you notice what the voice says, try this: what would you say to a friend who told you the same thing about themselves? Probably something kinder than what you just told yourself. Say that to yourself instead, and let that be the new standard.

Practice self-validation. 

Self-validation isn’t the same as confidence or self-esteem. It’s knowing what matters to you and standing behind it, whether or not anyone else agrees, approves, or even notices. Dr. David Schnarch draws a sharp line between this and what he calls other-validation, where your sense of being okay depends on someone else’s reaction.

Your inner adult doesn’t need a verdict from anyone else to know if something mattered or if you handled it with integrity. Kindness toward yourself makes this easier, because it’s hard to validate yourself in a tone you’d use with someone you loathe.

Hold steady in discomfort. 

Growth almost always comes with some anxiety attached. Your inner adult isn’t the part that avoids that feeling, it’s the part that can stay present through it without needing to escape, numb out, or demand instant relief.

Build a case for yourself. 

The cruel voice keeps its own running record of your failures. Start keeping one for the moments where you showed up as the person you’re trying to be. Write down real moments: “I held that conversation.” “I stayed calm.” “I showed up anyway.” Specific proof is harder to argue with than a feeling.

Give yourself permission to rest. 

The cruel voice never says you’ve done enough. When you refuse to rest, you’re often listening to the voice that believes you don’t deserve rest. The inner adult doesn’t run on empty and call it virtue. It knows that coming back steadier tomorrow is worth more than grinding through today. Sleep, laugh, relax and breathe — this is the inner adult taking care of the whole person.

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Does Self-Kindness Actually Work?

The science on self-kindness is worth knowing, especially if part of you still suspects that going easier on yourself means going soft.

Researcher Kristin Neff has spent decades studying self-compassion, and one of her most consistent findings is that people who practice self-kindness are actually more motivated to reach their goals, not less. The number one reason people resist being kinder to themselves is the fear that it will make them lazy, but the research tells a different story. (Link: Neff, K.D. Annual Review of Psychology, 2023)

In a series of four experiments, researchers Breines and Chen found that people practicing self-compassion after a failure spent more time studying for a difficult test and reported greater motivation to change their weaknesses — compared to those who used self-criticism. Being kind to yourself after a setback makes you more likely to try again, not less. (Link: Breines & Chen, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 2012)

People who are kinder to themselves consistently show lower rates of anxiety, depression, and stress, and self-kindness has been shown to play a protective role in trauma recovery. (Link: Neff, K.D. Annual Review of Psychology, 2023)


Where the critical voice demands and humiliates, the inner adult holds you to something higher with respect intact.

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A Gentler Kind of Strength

Nurturing your inner adult requires self-respect, choosing to trust yourself, to back yourself, to be someone you can rely on. It’s knowing in your core that even when life brings you challenges, you can turn toward the difficulty with a friend (you) on your side.

The strongest, most mature part of you has probably been there longer than you think. It’s shown up in the moments you didn’t fall apart, the boundaries you held even when it was uncomfortable, the truths you told even when silence would’ve been easier. It doesn’t need fixing. It just needs to be seen, trusted, and given room to keep growing.

So today, notice it. Thank it. And let it lead, just a little more.

Clinical Director

Amy Fuller, PhD

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Amy Fuller PhD Clinical Director
Dr. Amy Fuller is a licensed Marriage and Family Therapist and professional counselor with over two decades of experience specializing in sex therapy, couples therapy, and trauma. She earned her master’s degree in Marriage and Family Therapy from Abilene Christian University and her PhD from St. Mary’s University. Dr. Fuller is the founder and Clinical Director of Fuller Life Family Therapy Institute, a nonprofit in Houston committed to providing affordable mental health care and advanced therapist training. She is an AASECT-certified sex therapist and supervisor, known for her compassionate and evidence-based approach. Dr. Fuller serves as the Specialization Director for Sex Therapy and Trauma in the Doctor of Professional Counseling program at Kairos University, where she mentors emerging clinicians. With a passion for making therapy accessible and equipping therapists for meaningful, lasting work, Dr. Fuller integrates clinical excellence, spirituality, and cultural responsiveness into every aspect of her practice.

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