I keep encountering this same issue - I'm outspoken, opinionated, and I tend to think my way is the best way of doing something until proven otherwise - and I'll tell you about it. If I've never done something I'm eager to learn, and I certainly differ to experts, but there is a lot of mundane life that I feel like I've mastered (even if I clearly haven't) that I focus on, and I shouldn't.
I think some of this is because I always thought of myself as a loser. I was an awkward, only child, weird kid, who got bullied and ridiculed a lot. I never expected much from myself. I think I became hyper-aware of my surroundings and what I was doing in relation to other people because I was worried about looking like a fool. I tend to notice stuff that other people don't.
Now, as an adult, I tend to think of myself as being successful. Like "hey, I got here, so I must've done something right!" As if my perceived success as a loser now warrants my opinion on any challenge I've had.
It translates to me sounding incredibly critical about all kinds of pointless crap. Not because I truely care about something and its flaws, but because I voice my opinion about insignificant stuff. That hyper-awareness combined with critical constant blabbering impacts interpersonal relationships. My wife feels like I'm constantly criticizing her every move. My friends (and many of you on this very forum) think I'm never happy. At work I get told that I tend to speak over people and "shoot from the hip" a bit too much.
Worse is that as I age, and my energy levels decrease, talking (and criticizing) becomes easy, actually DOING something is hard. I spend more time talking, thinking, critiquing, all of that cerebral stuff, more than I do just doing things myself.
Anyone else have this problem or something similar? How did you resolve it?
I think my next step is get with a therapist or something, but getting it out here and now is always a good thing (or maybe it isnt.) What kind of therapist or counselor should I meet with?