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Your Brain is the Biggest Dick - Photographers Can Be Dicks – Part 2

Author
Patrick Fore
Published
Wed 23 Apr 2025
Episode Link
https://share.transistor.fm/s/246247fa

In this raw and unflinching episode, Patrick explores the psychology behind creative self-doubt and why your inner critic might be the biggest obstacle to your growth. Drawing from neuroscience research and brutally honest personal stories, this episode tackles the uncomfortable truths about self-criticism that most creative podcasts won't touch.

Warning: This episode contains frank discussions about mental health, financial anxiety, and the psychological realities of creative work. It's designed for mature audiences who want real talk, not feel-good platitudes.


Key Topics Covered

The Neuroscience of Self-Sabotage

  • Why your brain is wired to focus on negativity (5:1 ratio)
  • How rumination hijacks your mental bandwidth
  • The evolution from dramatic self-torture to quiet resignation

The Economics of Self-Doubt

  • How class background affects creative confidence
  • Why self-doubt gets worse when money is tight
  • The hidden costs of financial insecurity on artistic judgment

Uncomfortable Truths About Creative Culture

  • Client enablement of perfectionism
  • The "natural talent" myth exposed
  • People-pleasing as disguised fear
  • Why suffering doesn't equal depth

Practical Damage Control

  • The 10-minute suffering limit technique
  • Evidence-based reality testing
  • How to separate creative concerns from financial anxiety
  • The 10-10-10 rule for perspective


Personal Stories Featured

  • The automotive campaign that Patrick assumed was a failure (spoiler: it wasn't)
  • Why he had to hire an editor to select his own portfolio images
  • The year-long assumption of client disappointment based on radio silence
  • The self-fulfilling prophecy of boundary issues and burnout


Research Referenced

  • Dr. Peter Grinspoon (Harvard Health): Rumination as "counterproductive brooding"
  • Dr. Manju Antil: The psychology of "mental masturbation"
  • Neuroscience findings: Amygdala processing speeds and negativity bias
  • Default mode network: How your brain rehearses failures during downtime


Quotes from This Episode

"Your inner critic isn't sharpening you. It's using you. It doesn't want better art. It wants blood."

"Sometimes we choose misery because it's familiar. Because if we fail while already hating ourselves, at least we saw it coming."

"The critic doesn't need to scream anymore. It just quietly assumes the worst, and you've stopped arguing with it."

"You're not short on skill. You're short on the courage to suck long enough to get good."


Episode Challenge

Pick a project you've been avoiding because it scares you. Set a timer for one hour and work on it without judgment. When the inner critic starts up, acknowledge it and keep moving. When the timer goes off, stop—no evaluation, no spiraling.

Bonus challenge: Reach out to a client who went radio silent after you delivered work. Ask how they liked it. You might be surprised by the answer.


Content Warnings

  • Frank discussions of mental health struggles
  • References to financial anxiety and class issues
  • Honest examination of self-destructive thought patterns
  • Brief mention of suicide (Kurt Cobain reference)

Resources Mentioned

  • Lessons From a Terrible Photographer (Patrick's book)
  • Harvard Health Publishing articles on rumination
  • Research on repetitive negative thinking and creativity


Who This Episode Is For

  • Photographers struggling with perfectionism and self-doubt
  • Creative professionals dealing with imposter syndrome
  • Anyone who's ever spent hours "fixing" work that was already good
  • People who want honest conversations about the psychological side of creative work


Who This Episode Is NOT For

  • Anyone looking for surface-level motivation or feel-good content
  • Listeners uncomfortable with discussions of mental health
  • People seeking traditional business or technical photography advice

Connect

If this episode resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Mental health in creative industries matters, and these conversations save careers—and sometimes lives.

Website: http://terriblephotographer.com
Instagram: @terriblephotographer
Book: Lessons From a Terrible Photographerhttps://www.terriblephotographer.com/the-book
Newsletter: Sign up for Field Notes and get access to "The Darkroom" — exclusive resources and extra content — https://www.terriblephotographer.com/darkroom-download


Credits

Music provided by and licensed through Artist.io
Episode Photo by David Matos | Unsplash

Note: This podcast is obviously not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you're struggling with persistent negative thoughts or depression, please consult a qualified mental health professional.

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