OU blog

Personal Blogs

Jim McCrory

Happiness is Not a Toy for the Careless.

Visible to anyone in the world
Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 12 June 2026 at 08:26

Life is like walking the West Highland Way:

sometimes you have to stop and remove

 the stone from your boot.

 

sketch.png

Happiness is Not a Toy for the Careless.

So here I am, 6:30 am and  pondering on the more insightful principles in Scripture whilst having my morning coffee,

 “Where there is no vision, the people cast off restraint.”

Proverbs 29:18

 It is one of those sayings that seems simple at first, but grows larger the longer you live with it. A people without vision or purpose or moral grounding lose their boundaries. They lose their sense of direction. They forget what life is for. They begin to live by appetite, anger, pride, envy, and impulse. And when restraint is cast off, it is not only society that suffers. Relationships suffer. Families suffer. Friendships suffer. The human heart suffers.

One of the clearest places we see this is in the way we treat one another.

A person without vision does not always become openly wicked. Sometimes they simply become careless. Careless with words. Careless with another person’s confidence. Careless with the fragile hopes someone is trying to carry. And among the most exhausting of these people is the constant critic.

We all know them.

They are the people who rarely encourage, but often correct. They see the fault before they see the effort. They notice the weakness before they notice the courage. They can examine a life as if it were an essay marked in red ink. A mistake is never just a mistake; it becomes evidence. A bad day is never just a bad day; it becomes a character flaw. A dream is not allowed to breathe before they are telling you why it cannot work.

The constant critic may speak in the language of concern. They may say they are “only being honest”. They may present themselves as realistic, wise, experienced, or practical. But there is a kind of honesty that heals, and there is a kind of honesty that wounds for the pleasure of wounding. Truth without love is not wisdom. It is often just cruelty wearing a clean shirt.

Life has taught me to keep such people at a distance.

Not to hate them. That is important. Hatred would only make me like them in another form. I do not want bitterness to become my companion. I do not want to live with a clenched soul. The Christian life does not give us permission to despise people because they are difficult. We are called to love, to forgive, to pray, and to remember that we too have our shadows.

But love does not require me to sit with those who constantly diminish me.

There is a difference between forgiveness and access. There is a difference between kindness and closeness. There is a difference between wishing someone well and allowing them a permanent seat at the table of your inner life. Some people may be loved better from a distance. Some people may be prayed for more safely than entertained. Some people may be greeted with courtesy, but not given the keys to your peace.

The constant critic affects happiness because criticism does not remain outside us forever. If we hear it often enough, we begin to internalise it. Their voice becomes our voice. Their contempt becomes our self-doubt. Their coldness becomes the weather inside our own mind.

A child who is constantly criticised becomes afraid to try. An adult who is constantly criticised becomes tired of trying. The soul begins to shrink. You stop sharing your ideas. You stop celebrating small victories. You edit yourself before you speak. You apologise for your own existence. The critic does not merely comment on your life; they begin to colonise it.

And happiness cannot flourish under occupation.

Happiness needs room. It needs light. It needs the company of people who can tell the truth with tenderness. It needs friends who can correct without crushing, advise without humiliating, and disagree without sneering. A good friend may challenge you, but you will not feel smaller after speaking with them. You may feel sobered, but not shamed. You may feel corrected, but not condemned.

The constant critic is different. Their words do not prune the tree so that it may grow; they hack at the roots and wonder why nothing blossoms.

This is where vision matters. A person with a God-given vision of human life understands that people are not objects to be inspected, used, mocked, or reduced. They are souls. They are image-bearers. They are carrying burdens we may never fully see. Vision gives us restraint. It teaches us to pause before speaking. It reminds us that a word can become a wound, and a wound can last for years.

Without that vision, people cast off restraint. They say whatever comes to mind. They mistake sharpness for intelligence. They confuse dominance with strength. They use humour as a blade and then accuse the bleeding person of being too sensitive. They forget that every human being is more than their worst moment, their weakest trait, or their most visible flaw.

The constant critic often lacks this holy vision. They do not see the person before them as someone being formed, someone struggling, someone beloved by God. They see a target, a project, a disappointment, or a mirror for their own frustrations.

Of course, many critics are themselves wounded. Some grew up under criticism and learned to speak the only language they were given. Some are perfectionists because they are terrified of failure. Some attack others because they cannot bear to face themselves. There may be a story behind their harshness.

But a wound may explain behaviour without excusing it.

If someone throws stones because stones were once thrown at them, I can have compassion for their pain. But I do not have to stand in the firing line. Mercy is not the same as self-abandonment. Patience is not the same as permission. Christianity does not ask us to become doormats for another person’s unresolved bitterness.

Even Jesus, who loved perfectly, did not entrust Himself to everyone. He withdrew from crowds. He answered some people directly and others not at all. He knew when a question was sincere and when it was a trap. There is wisdom in that. Love must be joined to discernment, or it becomes foolishness.

So I have learned, slowly and sometimes painfully, to guard the places where my peace lives.

I can listen to correction from those who love me. I can receive truth from those who have earned trust. I can be humbled by a faithful friend. But I do not need to submit my heart to the constant critic — the person who rarely waters anything but is always ready to complain that the garden is dry.

Our happiness is at stake in such choices. Not a shallow happiness. Not the kind that depends on perfect circumstances or constant praise. I mean the deeper happiness of a soul that is not always bracing for attack. The happiness of being able to breathe. The happiness of waking without rehearsing someone else’s disapproval. The happiness of knowing that your life is not on trial before every harsh tongue.

We live in a world where restraint is often treated as weakness. People say what they like, post what they like, mock what they like, and call it freedom. But Scripture tells the truth: when there is no vision, restraint disappears. And when restraint disappears, people get hurt.

The constant critic is one example of that loss. They may not break bones, but they can bruise the spirit. They may not shout, but they can poison a room. They may not intend destruction, but their presence can make joy feel unsafe.

So I choose distance.

Not hatred.
Not revenge.
Not bitterness.
Distance.

A quiet, prayerful, necessary distance.

Because life is difficult enough without handing my peace to those who mishandle it. Because my happiness is not a toy for the careless. Because the soul needs companions who help it look upward, not voices that keep dragging it into the dust.

And because where there is vision, there is restraint. There is gentleness. There is wisdom. There is the understanding that every word we speak either helps another human being carry life, or adds to the weight they already bear.

Permalink Add your comment
Share post