By Dr. Margaret Paul
30669 Hit(s)
December 31, 2006
Many people on a healing path have found it extremely challenging to heal their shame. Yet when you understand the purpose of shame, you will be able to heal it.
Shame is the feeling that there is something basically wrong with you. Whereas the feeling of guilt is about doing something wrong, shame is about being wrong at the core. The feeling of shame comes from the belief that, "I am basically flawed, inadequate, wrong, bad, unimportant, undeserving, or not good enough."
At some early point in our lives, most of us absorbed this false belief that causes the feeling of shame. As a result of not feeling seen, loved, valued, and understood, we developed the belief that we were not being loved because there was something wrong with us. While some children were told outright that they were not okay - that they were stupid, bad, or undeserving - other children concluded that there was something wrong with them by the way they were being treated.
Once we establish our core shame belief, we become addicted to it because it serves us in two primary ways:
1. It gives us a feeling of control over other people's feelings and behavior.
As long as we believe that we are the cause of others' rejecting behavior, then we can believe that there is something we can do about it. It gives us a sense of power to believe that others are rejecting us or behaving in unloving ways because of our inadequacy. If is our fault, then maybe we can do something about it by changing ourselves, by doing things "right." We hang on to the belief that our inadequacy is causing others' behavior because we don't want to accept others' free will to feel and behave however they want. We don't want to accept our helplessness over others' feelings and behavior.
2. It protects us from other feelings that we are afraid to feel, and gives us a sense of control over our own feelings.
As bad as shame feels, many people prefer it to the feelings that shame may be covering up - loneliness, grief, heartbreak, sorrow, or helplessness over others. Just as anger may be a cover-up for these difficult feelings, so is shame. Shame is totally different than loneliness or grief or helplessness over others: While shame is a feeling that we are causing by our own false beliefs, loneliness, grief, heartbreak, sorrow, or helplessness over others are existential feelings - feelings that are a natural result of life. We feel grief and heartbreak over losing someone we love, or loneliness when we want to connect with someone or play with someone and there is no one around or no one open to connection, love or play. Many people would rather feel an awful feeling that they are causing, than feel the authentic painful feelings of life.
If you are finding it difficult to move beyond shame, it is because you are addicted to the feeling of control that your shame-based beliefs give you - control over others' feelings and behavior and control over your own authentic feelings. As long as having the control is most important to you, you will not let go of your false core shame beliefs.
You will heal from your shame when:
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You are willing to accept that others' feelings and behavior have nothing to do with you. When you accept that others have free will to be open or closed, loving or unloving - that you are not the cause of their feelings and behavior and you no longer take others' behavior personally - you will have no need to control it. When you let go of your need to control others and instead open to compassion for yourself and others, you will let go of your false beliefs about yourself that cause the feeling of shame.
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You are willing to feel your authentic feelings rather than cover them up with anger or shame. When you learn to nurture yourself by being present with caring and compassion for your own existential feelings, you will no longer have a need to protect against these feelings with blame or shame.
Control and shame are intricately tied together.
When you give up your attachment to control and instead choose compassion toward yourself and others, you will find your shame disappearing. Giving up attachment to control is the result of practicing Inner Bonding. It takes a deeply devoted Inner Bonding practice to eventually let go of control.
Join Dr. Margaret Paul for her 30-Day at-home Course: "Love Yourself: An Inner Bonding Experience to Heal Anxiety, Depression, Shame, Addictions and Relationships."
- Comments
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kimam - Atlanta - 05/24/2009 07:05 AM
I just found this article Margaret and boy, it really speaks to me. I've been trying to heal my addiction to shame for a while now. It helps to learn about how I use it to control all of those feelings I want to avoid feeling. The two steps of healing are my new action steps to pay attention when the shame creeps its way in...I have noticed some progress in these areas in that I am becoming more conscious of the shame...I say to myself, "Oh, there's that shame again" without getting hooked into it. Thank you!
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 05/24/2009 12:04 PM
Kim, I'm so glad to hear that you are making progress in the area. It really is possible to live without any shame!
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magic pebble - 07/17/2010 09:45 PM
I think it is significant too that most addictions bring shame so that we refocus on the shame of the addiction rather than the real feelings. I am also finding that I want to shorten the pain so I go for the shame, self-fixing and self judgment rather than the love and real self healing. But knowing this helps me like Kimam say, O there's that shame again, I'm going to wait for the real feelings that come up when love is present.
I am determined to walk out this process even though it is taking time.
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 07/18/2010 05:01 AM
I'm glad to hear this magic pebble. And don't forget, it also takes time and energy to get stuck in shame!
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Kate - Adelaide - 03/16/2011 02:34 AM
I want to do something about my core shame and I know it is tied to control. It makes perfectly clear and makes total sense and I understand the connection cognitively in my head but when I try to take it further, inside, I end up in a mess. I have spent all my time with IB just shuffling the deck chairs because I always end up back at the same place. I know it goes back to my childhood and my parents (and my grandmother who is long gone). On the surface they are fine but I know they live in so much pain and I feel it (even though I am a million miles away I FEEL it) and I can't do anything about it and if I can let go of feeling somehow responsible (not for the pain .. but for not being able to DO anything about it for them) ... would be a great start.
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Kate - Adelaide - 03/16/2011 02:36 AM
What am I trying to control here?
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 03/16/2011 06:56 AM
Kate, it sounds like you would rather feel the shame that accept the helplessness over them - that as bad as shame feels, you think it feels better than helplessness over others. So perhaps you are trying to control your own feelings of helplessness.
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orangegirl1 - 03/16/2011 07:34 AM
Dr. M's mention of authentic or existential feelings like grief or helplessness over others reminds me of a beautifully written passage in author Louise Erdrich's novel, "The Master Butcher's Singing Club." In addition to now feeling the results of abuse, abandonment, and neglect as a child, I am starting to realize my overwhelming feelings of not being able to control the terribly painful things that have happened to so many of my closest loved ones. Here's the passage:
"She slowly became convinced…that at the center of the universe not God but a tremendous deadness reigned. The stillness of a drunk God, passed out cold…She had learned of it in that house…where the drunks crashed…Things had happened to her there. She was neither raped nor robbed, nor did she experience God’s absence to any greater degree than other people did. She wasn’t threatened or made to harm anyone against her will. She wasn’t beaten, either, or deprived of speech or voice. It was, rather, the sad blubbering stories she heard in the house. Delphine witnessed awful things occurring to other humans. Worse than that, she was powerless to alter their fate. It would be that way all her life – disasters, falling like chairs all around her, falling so close they disarranged her hair, but not touching her."
Part of this really expresses the fear and helplessness of feeling our existential/authentic/natural feelings, doesn't it? Even guilt that we cannot protect others, and anger at a "drunk" God who abandons us? This is one thing I love about literature..It often expresses what I can't quite articulate.
I have hope that, through IB, I can be willing to give up control and let inner peace come in through my Guidance. I wish the same for everyone here. Blessings to you, Jinny
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Kate - Adelaide - 03/16/2011 10:11 AM
Wow. Thanks for that Jinny. Beautiful passage that makes perfect sense to me. I think you are right Margaret. I had a such a bad day today since going back to the control/core shame issue and these childhood feelings come up that I have not been able/willing to process. How I felt 40 years ago is like YESTERDAY and I know I have just buried them/covered them up without processing them. I have never been able to do that because maybe I have not really wanted to give them up and some of that is control over how I feel by remaining a victim ... but really a victim of myself. I have trouble with dates and times and years but not at all with the feelings I experienced. It wasn't a quick thing. Life just became unbearable a little bit at a time ... like being slowly poisoned.
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Utahboy - 03/16/2011 05:20 PM
I think that I am pleaser, so shame settled in when I felt that others were displeased with me. As such, I see the control aspect of this emotion. Still, as a pleaser, I feel that I can or should affect how others feel or view me. I think that when I could not affect this, I felt shamed and failure. I think I struggle with my own ability to discern when I should take responsibility for "doing my best" vs. accepting that others emotions and perceptions are out of my control.
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Kate - Adelaide - 04/28/2012 10:43 PM
(SIGH) ... back here again ...
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 04/29/2012 05:31 PM
Kate, healing always occurs in layers.
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Kate - Adelaide - 04/29/2012 08:13 PM
Thanks for the reminder Margaret :-) I think I still have trouble with this old religious belief that to be human is to be flawed. My WS likes to hang onto that one.
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 04/29/2012 08:26 PM
Remember, our essence is created by God in the image of God and is perfect, but our WS, created by us, is definitely flawed. The wounded self thinks it is who we are, but it is what we created as part of our survival strategies. When you know you are your essence rather than your WS, you know you—the true you—are not flawed. We all need to accept that the WS in all of us is flawed.
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intentional joy - Bridgewater - 05/01/2012 06:52 AM
This article is so clear and helps me see the relationship between shame, control and anger in a way that I haven't before.
Even though a person I work with, criticizes my skill and blames me for her anger- ( she is just a closed hearted person who looks for weakness in others and attacks.) It is heartbreaking and frightening to acknowledge that there are actually human beings like this and my own mother was/is one of them. People are who they choose to be. I NEED to develop a strong L/A to take care of myself in this world.
I have been living in a fantasy/denial world where everyone cares about others. Some unfortunately don't!!!
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Sonnenschein - 05/01/2012 08:11 AM
Intential joy, I do not believe that other CHOOSE to criticize, blame, being angry, being closed hearted and/or looking for weaknesses in others. They just don't know anything better. These people probably don't have idea how they affect others. It is probably what they learned and observed themselves growing up. Their behavior has nothing, absolutely nothing to do with you. Yes, we are the lucky ones to understand this and can do something about it so their negative behavior doesn't need to affect us. Yes, we do NEED to develop a strong LA to take care of our IC. The fantasy is believing that people don't have WS and only behave through their essence. We who know IB are able to notice our WS when it starts to act out. Many people are unaware of it. Just as we were before we came across IB.
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PandP - 05/01/2012 09:44 AM
I've had a couple of days of feeling a lot of shame so this article is timely. For me, it started with trying to learn how to communicate better with my husband by using some communication sheets our therapist gave us and hitting his resistance and then arguing. I wanted to have a good result with the communication and that didn't happen and I felt like a failure at it. Then what tipped the scale for me was just someone I hardly know didn't invite me to go for a walk with her. With the not being invited thing it was like I wasn't welcome in the world, which is an old feeling, and also I didn't want to feel sadness. I have trouble knowing how to feel sadness without getting overwhelmed (and EFT does not work for me). I've been feeling like I'll never get a loving adult because I'm having trouble finding compassion/feeling compassion for myself in these situations.
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intentional joy - Bridgewater - 05/01/2012 10:35 AM
Thanks Sonnenschein, I appreciate your feedback. Shifts things a bit for me. I need to focus on making loving choices for me so my w/s and other's w/s don't affect me.
I am only responsible for me. And in becoming truly responsible for me,I can become a more loving human being.
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kimam - Atlanta - 05/01/2012 11:38 AM
For me, the desire to not have someone else's ws affect me can set up a control and resist dynamic within myself. Even if I am in my LA things like unloving behavior or the "way the world is" can affect me, but without the emotional charge. I tell myself it may be unrealistic to be completely immune to others' energy, BUT if I am simply present for my feelings and understanding of my triggers I can live through the experience with more love available and without any "additional self-induced" suffering.
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intentional joy - Bridgewater - 05/02/2012 04:39 AM
Thank you kimam for pointing out the control and resist dynamic that gets set up when you try to not be affected by someone else's wounded self. Now that you mention it, I am more aware of that dynamic inside of me.
Thanks also for suggestion of how to deal with w/s in a more loving way.
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Dawn_Robin - 05/02/2012 10:12 AM
I've noticed that as I've started to practice being kind to myself and quieting my internal voice that judges and shames myself, I've become much more able to be compassionate with others when they are acting from the WS.
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Ingrid - Aracaju - 05/25/2016 12:03 PM
I wish I already knew and felt the healing of my shame... just being aware of it is so painful that I wonder if I can really touch what is under it. Somehow I don't seem to be able to go there alone and it is so rare to find support for it. Wish I lived closer to attend more Intensives.
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 05/25/2016 01:41 PM
Ingid, why not have some IB facilitation Skype sessions over this issue?
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Ingrid - Aracaju - 05/25/2016 05:28 PM
thank you Dr Margaret, yes I need that, I will arrange that. Thank you!
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 12/10/2017 02:13 PM
Dr M, this is a wonderful article.
I can now see the excellent purpose shame played in my earlier life: it allowed me the illusion of some measure of control vs drowning in despair. I can therefore perhaps reach out with compassion to my shame, stroker her and let her know she can rest now.
Today, I felt flickers of shame lick at me, but was easily snuffed out as I extended compassion to my daughter for being sad that her family is no longer together, and compassion to myself for having every right to her own desires/living an authentic life.
Any hint of acknowledging or reaching for my deepest heart's desires used to bring shame roaring to life and still often does.
I'm turning 60 soon and have great optimism that my life will no longer be ruled by shame and I can enthusiastically and unapologetically reach for my heart's desires, while also honoring the needs of my child and ex-husband.
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mdf - Los Angeles - 12/11/2017 09:32 AM
Thanks...a great reminder...
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 08/14/2019 04:49 PM
What about shame that is a reflection of things society has shamed us for? For ex, in my generation, girls who admitted to feeling horny (esp if they didn't have a BF) were deemed sluts, even if they weren't sexually active. If they were sexually active, the condemnation was worse.
I always thought of sexual desire as normal, despite societal/;family shaming about this, until my mother dragged me to a psychiatrist, after catching me kissing my BF in my second year of college. AFter they both yelled at me in the most shaming manner possible, I began to feel severe shame associated with sexual desire-- to the point where I gave off shamed/ avoiding, eyes downcast clues whenever I was with a boy I liked.
In that case, where I was just absorbing the views of those around me, perhaps shame wasn't linked to avoiding existential pain?
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 08/14/2019 05:42 PM
You were trying to control how others felt about you by shaming yourself.
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 08/14/2019 07:23 PM
That makes sense. I see now what you mean by shame and control are linked
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 05/04/2020 10:22 AM
Dr M it's fun to look back at great articles like this, and the comments I made months or years past. It shows how much I've progressed in IB.
I've been using this quarantine time to try to address my shame (and avoid boredom!) via reaching out for my heart's desires rather than shaming them. I've written to top authors to interview them or take a class with them, wrote to desirable men on match.com, and wrote to magazines I would love to be published in.
I got an awful lot of rejection-- and with each No, the feeling of shame associated with being rejected diminished. Now it's close to zero!
AND--I got some great acceptance. A series of stories that was rejected in many places was accepted by an Italian magazine.
I asked men I liked (through my skype work) if they were single, which they weren't, and I felt only tiny embarrassment that I had asked. And then one man I like a lot is single! And we are conversing and planning to meet when quarantine is over.
Very very healing to let go of self shaming. And also helps reduce judging of others.
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 05/04/2020 10:55 AM
I'm glad to hear all this Suzi! Great progress!
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suziqzee - Charlotte - 05/04/2020 05:31 PM
Dr M bravo to you for never losing your enthusiasm for this important work!
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 05/04/2020 08:05 PM
I never will lose it! I love this spirit-driven work!
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Shakti1008 - New York - 10/15/2024 05:16 PM
Dr Margaret Paul's clarity around issues and stuff is so amazing, reflreshing and everything i ever needed to understand myself and others and move in the right direction.
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Shakti1008 - New York - 10/15/2024 05:17 PM
Dr. Margaret Paul it is too late to lose it lol once you know you know there is no way of going back even if you wanted to ... this is the spirutal path <3
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Dr.Margaret - Berthoud - 10/16/2024 04:38 AM
Well, people still lose it when there are dramatic life changes, but when they are on the path of evolving in love, they find their way back.
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