Building shame resilience

Shame is a painful emotion caused by consciousness of guilt, shortcoming, or impropriety. Although very painful, the capacity for shame is healthy and part of being human. The function of shame is to prevent us from damaging our relationships and motivate us to repair them if we’ve damaged them.

As Brene Brown explains, guilt says “I’ve done something wrong.” Shame says “I am something wrong.”

Some people grow up mostly feeling like they are fitting in and other people grow up with chronic contextual factors that make them feel like an outsider. Some contextual situations that may have made you feel chronically marginalized include:

● Having a chronic mental health condition, like anxiety, OCD, a mood disorder, or ADHD

● Having a chronic medical condition

● Having a learning or other form of disability

● Experiencing something traumatic that other people around you didn’t experience

● Being of a different race

● Being of a different religion

● Speaking a different language

● Having a different sexual or gender identity

● Having a different financial situation than those around you

If you resonate with any of these situations, you might have a chronic sense of shame or a feeling of shame that pops up frequently. You didn’t do anything wrong. Your mind just perceived a difference between yourself and those around you and gave you a feeling.

Shame is “just” a feeling, but it can become very big and very painful. If it feels very big, it doesn’t mean there is something even worse about you, but rather that there are layers to it. We can make it smaller and more manageable by talking about it and listening to it. When you understand it and the feeling is smaller, it will be easier for you to work with it.

Shame gives us the urge to hide and withdraw. The way through shame is for you to remind yourself of your humanity and share your shame in settings where that sharing reconnects you to others.

Community Time is a safe space that can hopefully help you work through experiences of shame and help you build shame resilience.

Here are some questions to ask yourself to think about your experience of shame:

● When you are feeling shame, how do you know it’s shame?

● What external and internal experiences trigger shame?

● What happens physiologically in your body when you feel shame?

● What happens cognitively in your mind when you feel shame?

● How do these feelings and thoughts compare to other internal experiences like anxiety, anger, loneliness, excitement, or arousal?

● How do you respond to these shifts in your body and mind?

● What storylines in your shame narrative seem true to you?

● Which storylines in your shame narrative don’t seem true to you?

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Experiencing growth through pride

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Helping yourself by helping others