Author Topic: Article: Shame is The Shaper of Symptoms of The Disowned Part of Self  (Read 4382 times)

Gabben

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Just found this article about shame. The reason this article it is so helpful for me is that it validated how much healing I have already come through as well as it inspired me to keep working through my dysfunctional thinking and ways.

This was inspiring for me I hope it helps others.

(((((Ami))))) -- I could not help but think of you (in a positive way) when I read this article because of your transparent insights you share with us here on the board about your healing process with shame. It almost felt at times like I was reading one of your threads on shame.) Always so grateful for your presence here.


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SHAME IS THE SHAPER OF SYMPTOMS THE DISOWNED PART OF THE SELF

Lynne Namka, Ed. D., © 2001



Shame is a fear-based internal state that is accompanied by beliefs of being unworthy and basically unlovable. Shame is a primary emotion that conjures up brief, intense painful feelings and a fundamental sense of inadequacy. Shame experiences bring forth beliefs of "I am a failure" and " I am bad" which are a threat to the integrity of the self. This perceived deficit of being bad is so humiliating and disgraceful that there is a need to protect and hide the flawed self from others. Fears of being vulnerable, found out, exposed and further humiliated are paramount. Feelings of shame shut people down so that they can distance from the internal painful state of hopelessness.

Shame is a result of early developmental loss either real or perceived. It may begin in parent-infant conflict where there is possible significant loss or threat of loss of the child's basic security. The child longs for closeness with the mother and father. If there is rejection or love withdrawal from the parent, the child is left with intense, painful emotions. On some level, the beliefs of "I am unlovable." develops and a core of shame starts to build. Anna Freud described these experiences as happening before the child develops language and therefore are not remembered. These feelings of not being loved cause the child to rage and/or go into silent withdrawal. Experiences that cause shame alter the child's basic trust of others and are at the heart of dysfunctional behavior.

Shame and Guilt

Children often feel guilty as well as ashamed. Guilt is an emotion that rises after a transgression of one's own or cultural values. Guilt is about actions; shame is about the self. The purpose of guilt is to stop behavior that violates a self, family or societal standard. Guilt keeps score on excesses or deficits of behavior deemed undesirable and is expressed in regret and remorse. Engaging in behavior that causes one to feel guilty behavior can lead to deep shame. Guilt is a side effect of perfectionism and setting goals either too high which are then impossible to meet.

The typical shame response brings about a heightened degree of arousal and self-consciousness. The person in emotional pain averts his eyes and his head goes down. New information is blocked. There is intense discomfort and muscular tension. The body collapses inward to protect the self and there is a shrinking of body energy. The skin may become flushed with embarrassment. There are feelings of inadequacy and the fear of self-exposure. The person wants to shrink, hide or even die to get away from the painful feelings of mortification. These feelings are so excruciating that the child wants to avoid them at all costs.

Causes of Shame

Adult-induced causes of shame involve betrayal by others and a broken trust through disapproval or humiliation. Parental withdrawal and rejection demonstrated by looks of contempt can cause instantaneous shame reactions in children. A child who believes that his parents favor a sibling often believe that there is something basically wrong with him or he would be the chosen child. Shame also occurs when the parent's have high standards of behavior and react with anger or embarrassment when the child does not live up to expectations.

Punishment for failure and humiliation over the child's expression of vulnerability, distress, crying or pain typically create shame. Criticism, cruel teasing and ridicule further reinforce the child's beliefs of unworthiness. Harsh parental discipline of a coercive nature creates fears of abandonment in the child. The trauma of physical abuse imprints feelings of being devalued in the child. Empathetic shame happens when the child internalizes humiliation and shame reactions of other people. Sexual abuse typically causes the child to feel dirty and bad and he often absorbs the shame of the adult who committed the offense.

Peer-induced causes of shame are especially painful for the child who is so dependent upon other children for validation of his self-esteem and identity. When a child is teased, taunted, harassed and verbally abused, he often internalizes the labels or shrugs them off. Most children do not have the maturity or understanding to deflect the negative energy of hateful labels heaped on them by their classmates. The child feels disrespected or "dissed" and takes on a lower opinion of himself that holds the deep shame. Children respond to the tormenting by fighting back and being labeled a troublemaker or becoming helpless and depressed. They can carry the deep shame experiences and a lowered sense of self into adulthood.

We are Driven by Our Unresolved Shame Experiences

"Shame is the shaper of symptoms," said Donald Nathanson. The unacknowledged thoughts and feelings become repressed and surface later through substitute emotions and dysfunctional behavior. Other emotions are substituted to hide the shame and maintain self-esteem. Anger, depression, exaggerated pride, anxiety and helplessness are substituted to keep from feeling the total blackness of being bad. The buried shame is expressed through defense mechanisms that shield negative unconscious material from surfacing.

Anger responses are modeled and learned in some families. The anger response is more comfortable than feeling the shame for some individuals. Families where coercive and humiliating methods of discipline are used develop children who are shame prone. Behavior becomes driven by defenses that function to keep from feeling bad. Reality becomes distorted to further protect the self from poor self-esteem. The transfer of blame to someone else is an indicator of internal shame.

Children who live with constant hostility and criticism learn to defend against the bad feelings inside and externalize blame on others. External assignment of blame is a defense against shame. People who are super-critical have a heavy shame core inside. The focus is on finding fault outside yourself, but the mistake is never corrected. If the responsibility for blame can be fixed on someone else, the person may feel pride in getting off scot-free. The rigid thinking is "I'll be pure if I can make him wrong. It is not my problem. It is beyond my control. I just can't allow myself to feel bad inside, so I'll blame him."

The child who has been raised with criticism and parental anger may develop the shame/rage spiral. The shame/rage spiral consists of getting angry and raging when upset, then being ashamed and going into rage to avoid the shameful feelings, etc. The shame/rage spiral keeps others away and helps the person avoid intimacy where more pain and shame might be experienced.

Scheff's theory is that shame causes a breakdown of the integrated self. The bypassed, unacknowledged pain is not available to be looked at due to the mechanism of denial. Dissociation and repression of the bad feelings allow distance from the shame with a cover up of "I am not this needy. This is not I. I cannot feel this vulnerable." Tension is discharged partially through substitute emotions but the core of shame grows even bigger as the individual engages in unhealthy behavior.

Exaggerated pride allows the person to build up feelings of superiority again for the purpose of denying the global negative internal beliefs of "I am bad." The individual reduces his own shame by feeling better than others; he elevates his status by putting others down. Prejudice, bigotry, revenge and grudges towards others are mechanisms that keep the self from knowing and experiencing the shame. Individuals who engage in antisocial behavior have a great capacity for shame and denial. Young people who resort to violence and membership in gangs use feeling superior to avoid feeling bad about themselves. Sadly, gang members describe feeling respected by their peers for the first time in their life.


Teaching Social SkillsBreaking Into the Cycle of Shame and Aggression

Teachers and therapists can help the aggressive child express the vulnerable part that has been hurt by others to break through the outer mask of toughness and defiance. The child who bullies really wants to be listened to and understood, but he does not know how to ask for it. He only knows that his intimidation affects others and he gets what he wants. The submissiveness of others gives him power that substitute for the love he craves. His rage helps him momentarily ventilate the unresolved hurt and shame inside.

Shame or the internal global belief of "I am bad." is thought to be the mechanism that keeps the child caught in acting out behavior. Shame blocks positive information from coming in. The child feels bad about his explosive outbursts that give him the attention that he cannot get from achievement and friendships. The aggressive child desires affection, but is afraid of being swallowed up and depleted by others. He has the mistaken belief that intimacy represents being controlled by others. He learns to substitute enjoyment of hurting others for friendship. It is paradoxical that his anger keeps intimacy away and denies that one thing that the person desires the mostto be loved. The ability to accept kindness and love from someone is a skill that the child has missed out on. The basic skill deficit of the antisocial child is trust of others.

Shame is the Shaper of Symptoms; But It is Also the Way Home

Shame is a fear-based internal state accompanied by feelings of being unworthy and unlovable with intense painful feelings of mortification. Shame feelings are a threat to the integrity of the self. It keeps us caught in fear of being found out by others. The perceived deficit is so humiliating that the person goes to all lengths to hide the flawed self.

Patterns of dysfunctional behavior in a person's life usually indicate a strong internal shame core. Lack of intimacy and connection to others indicates a lack of trust. Repressed shame and guilt cause a lack of trust of others and a deep breach or separation from others and the real self.

At some point in an individual's life, the old defenses no longer work. Shame comes up big time. The person's life crashes around him. Hitting bottom may prompt him to seek psychological help. One purpose of the negative emotion is to help us look at those aspects of ourselves that is incongruent without deepest values and understand of what it means to be human from a soul level. The anxiety around the painful past must be entered into and moved through.

Shame can be released thorough confession and processing the original painful experiences. The repressed, uncomfortable feeling must be accessed and worked through to release the shame energies. The original feelings must be re-experienced and reframed to allow the shift of the shame energy.

The motivated person can learn to become a detective on his own emotions and behavior. He can learn detachment and become an observer of his own internal state of shame choosing not to shut down the painful feelings but to stay present and learn from them.

The release of the deep feelings of vulnerability, fear and humiliation is best done in an altered state of consciousness. The shame reduction work must be experiential; it cannot be released on an intellectual level. Laughter about one's predicament is a shifter of shame energies.

Understanding how shame works helps release it. The cleaning out of the global belief of "I am bad." takes time and exploration but it can be done with a therapist who understands the process of shame release and can stay present with unconditional love.

The way back from shame is a therapeutic relationship where trust can be developed. With caring adults, the child can disclose those all encompassing feelings of shame. He or she can be helped to understand that shame can be released, as it is not a productive emotion. With imaging techniques, hypnosis and the new Energy Psychotherapies, feelings of shame can be erased.

We are more than our physical body. We are much, much more than our painful emotions. We are essence longing to return to our true self. The core negative beliefs of "I am a bad person. I am not safe. I will be rejected because I am unworthy. I will be abandoned." can be worked though. When shame release work is combined in therapy with learning to speak up and say no, to state boundaries and to share feelings, self-esteem zooms upward.

The paradox of the base emotions of guilt and shame keep the person from knowing that he is love and yet the solution in releasing them is to get to the place of knowing "I am love." The deep understanding is that no one can truly be harmed. The integrity of the individual can be brought forward to give a different understanding of the early painful experiences that caused shame.

Turning the shame over to something greater than oneself can negate those global beliefs of unworthiness. Touching into the higher aspects of oneself can elevate the person to knowing that he is worthy of being loved. No easy task, but there it is.



« Last Edit: March 13, 2008, 06:18:05 PM by Gabben »

Gaining Strength

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Re: Article: Shame is The Shaper of Symptoms of The Disowned Part of Self
« Reply #1 on: March 13, 2008, 07:39:23 PM »
Wow - Thanks Gabben. 

My whole experience and battle over the past year and a half can be summed up in these two paragraphs:

Quote
t some point in an individual's life, the old defenses no longer work. Shame comes up big time. The person's life crashes around him. Hitting bottom may prompt him to seek psychological help. One purpose of the negative emotion is to help us look at those aspects of ourselves that is incongruent without deepest values and understand of what it means to be human from a soul level. The anxiety around the painful past must be entered into and moved through.

Shame can be released thorough confession and processing the original painful experiences. The repressed, uncomfortable feeling must be accessed and worked through to release the shame energies. The original feelings must be re-experienced and reframed to allow the shift of the shame energy.

So thankful that you shared this article. 

Gabben

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Re: Article: Shame is The Shaper of Symptoms of The Disowned Part of Self
« Reply #2 on: March 13, 2008, 07:45:46 PM »
Shame can be released thorough confession and processing the original painful experiences.


GS,

I'm glad that this article resonates with you too.

The particular line above really helped me to see how much work I have done. Confession of faults and traits but also the confession of real self or being transparent. I recall how hard it was at first but how much I wanted to be free from the shame and how freeing it felt to see that people or my therapist were not going to run from the room when I shared my real self.

Healing is such a life long process.

Love and hugs to you.

Gabben

Certain Hope

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Re: Article: Shame is The Shaper of Symptoms of The Disowned Part of Self
« Reply #3 on: March 13, 2008, 08:25:43 PM »
Quote
Shame is a result of early developmental loss either real or perceived.
It may begin in parent-infant conflict where there is possible significant loss or threat of loss of the child's basic security.
The child longs for closeness with the mother and father. If there is rejection or love withdrawal from the parent, the child is left with intense, painful emotions. On some level, the beliefs of "I am unlovable" develops and a core of shame starts to build.

 Anna Freud described these experiences as happening before the child develops language and therefore are not remembered. These feelings of not being loved cause the child to rage and/or go into silent withdrawal. Experiences that cause shame alter the child's basic trust of others and are at the heart of dysfunctional behavior.

Silent withdrawal... and a terrible shyness, avoidance of others... along with nervous conditions like hives... and no words for feelings (which were, of course, disallowed) ... all because love and acceptance were withheld. That rings a bell.

Lise, I do believe in confession, and also... I've been thinking about what it really means to receive forgiveness... and then to grant it, freely. An "as far as the east is from the west" sort of forgiveness... 
that's the sort I want, to receive and to give.

Thank you for this.

Hugs,
Carolyn

Kimberli63

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Re: Article: Shame is The Shaper of Symptoms of The Disowned Part of Self
« Reply #4 on: March 17, 2008, 01:20:02 AM »
Thanks for posting this article Gabben.  I have read a lot on this board about shame but somehow it is a word that I never associated with myself. In fact, I have noticed that several people, Ami and Leah, from memory have  posted on the topic. Having read this article that you, Gabben, have posted, I resonant with a lot of what is being said. It seems that I just used a different word to describe the emotion. What exactly that word is, I am not sure. I think it could be hurt but hurt has a different connotation. Maybe, it’s humiliation.

Strangely, I don't remember once hearing the word used in a therapy session.

I will need to think about this concept some more.

Kim in Oz

axa

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Re: Article: Shame is The Shaper of Symptoms of The Disowned Part of Self
« Reply #5 on: March 17, 2008, 09:47:38 AM »
Have not been posting much lately, due to increased workload BUT I had to acknowledge this article.  It is so good.  Interestingly, I see myself in it and also at its extreme I see XN - I feel a little compassion coming on, but only a little.  My own issues with intimacy, which is one of the reasons I believe I hvae been in N relationships, I do believe is grounded in shame.  I know there is something about my distance from my father also having some shame.  My Nmother would have shamed me about wanting to be physical with him.  I will keep this article as I feel it is a window to something very strong.

Thank you,

axa


Ami

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Re: Article: Shame is The Shaper of Symptoms of The Disowned Part of Self
« Reply #6 on: March 17, 2008, 11:33:14 AM »
Dear Lise,
  What a wonderful article. I wish i could wave a magic wand and all the shame would be gone.Wouldn't that be nice??                   Love   Ami
No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.        Eleanor Roosevelt

Most of our problems come from losing contact with our instincts,with the age old wisdom stored within us.
   Carl Jung

James

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Re: Article: Shame is The Shaper of Symptoms of The Disowned Part of Self
« Reply #7 on: March 17, 2008, 04:03:32 PM »
Gabben..........thank you for posting this article. This is exactly the issue i'm dealing with now. Thanks James

Gabben

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Re: Article: Shame is The Shaper of Symptoms of The Disowned Part of Self
« Reply #8 on: March 18, 2008, 08:27:57 PM »
((Amber)) thanks for your post.

Yesterday I sent an email to someone who I respect and admire. What I wrote came from my heart, I was transparent which causes me anxiety and shame. I show who I really am and my head starts screaming things to myself like "he thinks you are an N." "he thinks you are neurotic and hopeless." "He thinks you are a very sick person."

It is as if shame renders me unable to see reality. I have no idea how this person see's me, I just wanted to express somethings that were in my heart but that always seems to be enough to start the shame cycle...like Ami said...where is my magic wand?!?


I'm glad this article was insightful to you (((James.))))