Cyprus: Always watching, always correcting
Your yiayia always said it. So did your mum. And you’re going to say it to your children…
Your yiayia always said it. ‘Don’t do that.’ ‘Not that way.’ ‘Πρόσεχε!’
In the kitchen, over the table; while you were shaping flaounes or tying your shoes, there was always a small correction hovering in the air. Practical. Watchful.
But then, years later, your mum said the same things. She didn’t know she was following the pattern. A generational pattern: words of caution and protection that, nevertheless, felt like criticism. ‘Μην κάνεις έτσι!’
Today, you’re all grown up. You’re out of the family home, and living your own life to the full. But even when no one’s there, the voice still turns up. A quiet running commentary on how you stand, how you speak, how you get things wrong.
It shows up everywhere. When you’re sitting in traffic, replaying the thing you wish you hadn’t said. In the queue at the bank, altering how you stand. At work, mid-sentence, mid-email, mid-thought.
A voice that’s always watching, always correcting…
Psychologists call it your inner critic. But despite the name, it isn’t a motivational tool or a helpful conscience. It’s associated with higher stress, lower confidence, and a nervous system that stays on alert long after the original danger has passed. People with a strong inner critic tend to work harder, worry more, and rest less – not because they’re weak, but because their brains have learned that vigilance equals safety.
Research shows this voice is closely linked to the brain’s threat system – the same system designed to keep us alive. When we grow up surrounded by frequent (even loving) correction, the brain learns to monitor constantly for mistakes.
Over time, that external watchfulness becomes internal. Your inner critic takes over. Stress and emotional distress soar.
In Cyprus, this matters more than we admit. Studies of mental health on the island consistently show elevated levels of stress, anxiety and psychological distress, particularly among women. And the results point not to individual weakness but to learned patterns of vigilance, responsibility and emotional restraint.
In other words, many people here are living with nervous systems that never quite stand down – shaped by family dynamics, cultural expectation and the quiet pressure to be proper, careful, good.
What helps, the evidence suggests, isn’t trying to silence that voice or replace it with something more positive. It’s learning to recognise it for what it is.
When people notice self-critical thoughts as learned habits rather than facts, stress levels begin to ease and the body comes out of constant alert. That shift often happens with the help of a therapist, physiotherapist or other context-aware professional – someone who understands how the nervous system holds on to old patterns, and how it can slowly learn to let them go.
But that’s probably easier to understand if you picture where the voice came from in the first place. A yiayia watching closely. A mother repeating what she was taught. Care, passed down as caution.
Once, it kept you safe. But you’re not at the kitchen table anymore. You’re not crossing the road alone. And when the old voice says πρόσεχε, you can hear it for what it is – love, echoing down the years – and let it drift past.