Shame

Shame | Counselling Perth

Shame refers to feelings ranging from mild everyday embarrassment to the acute states of panic and paralysis that most or all of us have experienced at one time or another in our lives – and that some of us experience chronically. Strong shame involves a sense of personal inadequacy in which I am not going to measure up, that I will be shown as deficient (or possibly too much) in some important way. The experience of shame in extreme forms has a way of cutting to the bone of our sense of basic worth and capacity to survive and cope, a kind of background feeling that underlies other feelings and experience. When we are in extreme shame we are in a state of great vulnerability, and even have the potential to become self destructive and/or harmful to others. Alternatively, profound moments of shame can cause paralysis and inability to act and respond, particularly an inability to speak up. At a more chronic level shame can underlie feelings of powerlessness and passivity.

Shame is about the whole self and is distinctly different from guilt, which is often about the transgression of a personal value. In shame one feels naked, lacking in dignity and worth. Shame is often the failure to live up to an ideal image of oneself. We feel shame about being seen as ‘weak’ or ‘worthless’. People don’t actually feel low self-esteem; rather they feel ashamed, worthless, acutely embarrassed. The shamed person feels exposed, defective, diminished, or even has the experience of feeling totally destroyed. The behavioural response, when in a shamed state, is often an impulse to hide, to break eye contact, so as to avoid being seen. Shame is often referred to as ‘losing face’. The linguistic roots of shame are to hide or cover up.

Guilt, on the other hand, generally involves a breach of personal values of right and wrong. Guilt is about something one has done, whereas shame is about whom one is, about oneself not being good enough. We are ashamed about who we are. In guilt we can take action to remove the guilt by making reparation. In shame there is no way to redeem oneself. The shamed person is stuck and immobile until the episode passes.

A sense of shame involves concepts such as ‘self esteem’, ‘defeated dejection’, ‘defective self’, and ‘mortification of being exposed’. Hopelessness and lethargy can reflect an underlying state of chronic shamefulness. Shame is the consequence of well-established self-critical judgments, or deeply held self-critical beliefs, about our perceived or assumed failures and defects. This sense of defectiveness may be out of awareness much or some of the time, and can be activated by external events such as criticism or rejection by others. This activated shame is felt as the experience of being exposed in ways we do not want to be exposed. Exposure can be contrasted to the experience of being seen, which is the nourishing experience of feeling understood and appreciated.

When we feel ashamed we feel a loss of connection to others. A feeling of worthlessness leads to a belief that we are of lesser value in the eyes of the other. This has an important effect in our relationships with others, particularly our loved ones such as life partners.

When there is a sense of personal inadequacy (e.g. doubts about one’s loveableness) in one’s significant relationships there can be a tendency to favor the surface over the depths; we become preoccupied with the appearance of the relationship rather than its reality. We seek the pretty still life picture rather than the truth. This then leads to confusion as to the difference between looking like something and being something. Relationships become dishonest and empty rather than rich and fulfilling. Such shame-based relationships often feature a marked tendency to blaming, either self or other, for personal unhappiness within the relationship, or to clinging and putting-up-with. When relationships like this end (such as in bad divorce settlements) they are often marked by bitterness and a desire for revenge, one-up-man-ship, and winning more than the other.

One can talk about types of shame:

  • Adaptive or ‘healthy’ shame.
  • Feeling overexposed or embarrassed – violation of personal standards
  • Maladaptive or ‘unhealthy’ shame
  • Worthlessness, humiliation, inferiority, unlovable – becomes chronic, global, core self-experience
  • Secondary shame
  • Transient internalised negative self-evaluations, situation – specific (e.g. self-contempt for having been a coward)
  • Shame-related secondary emotions

Anxiety and rage – shame avoidance strategies

So, in summary, the salient characteristics of shame are personal diminishment, break in connection to important others, and paranoia.

It is generally shameful to feel shame, so it is one of the least acknowledged, and hardest to acknowledge, feeling states. Because we don’t speak about shame, we often don’t recognize it and hence have no way to help ourselves see how much influence it is having on our personal and public life.

If you are feeling overwhelmed, and concerned about shame, talking through the issues with someone supportive and empathetic can be a first step towards positive change. If you would like to chat further about shame, please feel free to contact me.

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Life after divorce

Life after divorce | Perth Counselling

If you are going through a divorce you may already be aware that it is one of the most difficult things you can do in life, even if the separation was an amicable one. For many people separation and divorce can be a painful business. Divorce brings up many emotions and feelings that surface when faced with loss, rejection and uncertainty.

People who are going through the breakup of their marriage can experience feelings and emotions such as anger, despair, sadness, guilt, loneliness, disbelief, fear, and anxiety. Some may feel numb or be disconnected from feeling. Often there is an accompanying sense of shame and embarrassment; a sense of deep failure when a marriage ends.

Other responses to the trauma of separation and divorce include physical pain and somatic illnesses, mood swings, fatigue, depression, weight gain or loss, nausea, poor concentration and sleep problems.

The decision to separate may bring major changes in the lives of all family members. Children are especially vulnerable as their lives have suddenly become less reliable, which in turn can result in a child feeling anxious and fearful, (especially of abandonment), confused, angry and lonely. The transition into a new family life situation can initially seem frightening and be unsettling for a child until a new, and often very different routine can be established. Children will sometimes feel rejected by the parent who has moved out, or may feel that their loyalties are divided, feeling pulled in both directions by parents whom they often accurately perceive to be in battle with each other.

Learning how to manage life after divorce can be hard. You are possibly now faced with issues that in the past were not issues to be considered with the same emphasis or significance. Areas that can cause stress and worry are those concerning child custody/ access, separating finances, new living arrangements, children’s schooling and/or day care arrangements, thinking about new work hours or studying for a new career, and often learning to cope with less financially. Often when moving to another area there is the added concern and challenge of making new friends and networks. All of these new considerations can at first be challenging, if not exhausting especially when coupled with the range of emotions you and your family will possibly be experiencing.

Counselling during and after separation and divorce can help you deal with these issues and any new feelings you are experiencing. An experienced therapist can support you through these difficulties, helping you to regain the strength and confidence you may have lost since your marriage ended.

Divorce can be an opportunity to rediscover ourselves, what is currently important to us in our lives, and perhaps the chance to look forward to new and greater things not before imagined. Recovering from the emotional blow of divorce, although painful, can in time be a strengthening and rewarding experience, a challenge and a time of exceptional growth.

Talking through a divorce with someone supportive and empathetic can be an excellent first step towards overcoming the emotion blow of a break-up. If you would like to chat further, please feel free to contact me.

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Jealousy

Jealousy | Couselling Perth

Jealousy is often described as an intense and extremely painful feeling. It encompasses a range of emotions including anger, fear, loss, betrayal, abandonment, grief and humiliation, and those experiencing it can feel as if their minds have been thrown into turmoil. Jealousy can be triggered when the threat of separation or loss of a romantic partner is attributed to the possibility of the partner’s interest in another person. Jealousy is the fear of losing something (affection, fidelity, future) or someone you ‘believed’ to be yours. Whether the cause is real or imagined, jealousy always hurts and often obliterates rational thought, leading to behaviour that can create a self fulfilling prophecy by pushing away the person most desired or needed.

People can experience different types of jealousy, which are evident in everyday activities and settings such as, platonic relationships, work situations, in families, in romantic relationships.

Romantic Jealousy – Occurs when one partner feels that their partner is paying attention to, or has a romantic interest in someone else. Someone else showing an interest in your partner can also give rise to jealousy.

Sexual Jealousy – When a significant other shows sexual interest in another person.

Platonic Jealousy – This form of jealousy is seen in friendships, and is similar to romantic jealousy, in that there is the fear of being replaced by a perceived or real third party.

Workplace Jealousy – is not uncommon, and especially between colleagues who share similar positions, and who may be aiming for the same promotions etc. Employees can also be sensitive to positive feedback given to the other when they think they are more deserving of the praise.

For many people the experience of jealousy includes:

  • Feeling angry and suspicious about a perceived betrayal
  • Insecurity and doubts about a partner’s fidelity
  • Insecurity within self
  • Sadness, uncertainty, and loneliness
  • Fear of loss of a relationship, and in particular losing the loved one
  • to another person
  • Feeling bad about oneself, low self esteem
  • Loss of trust
  • Making assumptions, imagining and being totally consumed by thoughts about partner’s whereabouts, and perceived interest in another
  • ‘Clinginess’ (clinging to partner) possessiveness and controlling behaviours
  • Anxiety and low mood
  • Making accusations
  • Loss of interest in other areas of life usually enjoyed

Anthropologists have suggested that jealousy varies across cultures. What our culture teaches us can influence or determine those situations that trigger jealousy and the ways in which we express our jealousy.

Jealousy comes about due to the insecurity of the jealous person whether justified or not. The higher the level of insecurity or instability, the higher the level of jealousy. Jealousy goes right to the core of the self and its roots are deep, it can’t just be pushed away. Someone who is insecure within themselves can often be the destabilizing partner within a relationship. They are not only jealous of a perceived romantic other, but of any kind of friendship including a child or family member, anything that takes their partner’s attention away from them.

It is important to differentiate between ‘normal’ jealousy and ‘delusional’ jealousy. Normal jealousy has its basis in reality- a real threat to a relationship, whereas delusional jealousy has no basis in reality- there is an absence of any real threat or likely threat. A little bit of jealousy may be normal for a relationship especially in the early stages before trust has had time to develop. It can also be seen as a measure of caring and commitment, but not if extreme.

People who are experiencing jealousy feel a sense of inadequacy, which is uncomfortable and difficult to bear. Their discomfort is often converted into displays of behaviour that include anger, arguing, accusing, distrusting , searching through partners belongings, including mobile phones, and interrogating. They are looking for reassurance or confirmation of betrayal. These behaviours often result in pushing the partner further away.

We are capable of changing our behaviour by recognizing how we are behaving and realising what is normal and abnormal for us in regard to our feelings. By examining the roots of your jealous feelings, you can make change and learn how to cope more effectively. Jealousy can be a trigger for growth both personally and within the relationship, the outcome being increased self awareness, and greater understanding of both you and your partner, and your relationship. Jealousy can serve as a valuable sign for that we need to look inward and consider our self worth and self awareness. This in turn can only lead to improved relationships. It can sometimes be the case that jealousy appears to say more about the jealous person than the misbehaviour of the partner.

You can insure against excessive jealousy by nurturing your relationship and taking time to be together. Spend time talking to your mate even when apart. Instead of assuming the worst, share your feelings and thoughts and communicate in ways that are not hostile or blaming of the other. Effective communication of feelings and concerns can facilitate solutions, change and greater understanding in relationships

If you need help to make sense of a jealousy, either individually or as a couple, please feel free to contact me.

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Fear of Rejection

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Attention from others is a basic and essential human need. Attention in the form of recognition, understanding, and acceptance are essential for us to thrive both psychologically and physically. Often this desire for acceptance is matched by a fear of not receiving understanding and acceptance, thus justifying the creation of a strategy of hiding our true selves and creating a driving force that keeps us from being authentic. Not sufficiently getting the experience of being understood, validated, accepted, considered, and appreciated, as we are, can lead to feelings of shame and unworthiness that then creates a sensitivity to having the feeling of being rejected. The desire for acceptance and the fear of rejection informs many of the actions in our lives and the way we live and interact.

The fear of rejection can affect a person’s choice in many areas including;

  • Intimate interpersonal and marital relationships
  • Level of education
  • Types of career choices
  • Level of achievement and ambition
  • Choice of leisure activities
  • Our behaviour at work
  • Family relationships
  • Our role in community life

Some degree of refusal (which may be experienced as rejection) and actual rejection, from others is an inevitable part of life. Nevertheless, rejection becomes problematic when it is prolonged or frequent, when the source of rejection is an important person in our lives, or when one already has a particular sensitivity to rejection. The person experiencing rejection, can feel that they earned the rejection as a result of some fault in their personality, or deficiency in their physical attributes, or because they could not be all they were expected to be.

The consequences of the chronic experience of rejection can be low self esteem, depression, loneliness, aggression, a heightened sensitivity to future rejection, and a tendency to be self-critical and self-rejecting, and then critical and rejecting of others in turn.

The most important origin of rejection fear is the experience of being rejected in childhood by parents and parenting figures (grandparents, older siblings, teachers etc). This rejection may be in the form of outright hostility, neglect due to lack of interest or lack of parenting ability, or, more commonly, parents not understanding their child intuitively – not being ‘tuned-in’.

Additional causes of rejection fear may include a specific early traumatic experience of loss (such as the loss of a parent) or rejection, being abandoned when young, being repeatedly bullied or ridiculed, having a physical condition that either makes you different or you believe makes you unattractive to others.

Experiences in adult life that can exacerbate feelings of being rejected might include job loss or career setback, experiencing one’s self as not being smart enough, not competent, not financially established enough, not physically attractive enough. As well there are pressure situations where outcomes are important but unknown, such that we are potentially vulnerable. For example, first dates, meeting new people, job interviews, important business dealings, getting married, having a baby.

Some common mal-adaptive coping strategies when dealing with a fear of rejection are:

People pleasing – you may find it impossible to say no, even if this makes your life more difficult. You may be spending a lot of time doing things you don’t really want to do. You may have an excessive work load or burden that can lead to burnout.

Unassertiveness – difficulty or refusal to speak up for yourself, or to ask for what you want or need. Avoiding confrontation is common for people fearing rejection. Those fearing rejection pretend that their own needs are unimportant or don’t matter, and so attempt to shut down or shut out those needs.

Passive Aggressive behaviours – not comfortable with their ‘real’ selves, but still needing to express in some way their own needs. Behaviour includes; chronic complaining, breaking or ‘forgetting’ promises, procrastination, and not fulfilling or efficiently completing work taken on.

Being Inauthentic – Many of those who fear rejection are afraid to present their ‘real’ selves to the world and adopt an ‘as-if’ persona. They assume a way of behaving or being around others that is unauthentic. Often highly monitored and scripted, those fearing rejection, hide behind a mask believing that they will be rejected if they show their ‘true’ self.

Distancing/selfsufficiency – One of the ways we protect against the fear of rejection is by keeping an emotional distance from others. The distant person maintains a mask of aloofness and invulnerability, which prevents others making intimate contact with him; he thus avoids being rejected at the price of avoiding intimacy. The lie he lives by is “I don’t need or want anybody.” He essentially feels unloveworthy and responds to this belief with lonely self-sufficiency. He makes a virtue out of being stoically “independent” or dependent only on himself. He believes he should not reach out because there is no one really there. To confirm this belief he rejects (minimises or devalues) interest, concern, and affection shown or offered.

The problem with these strategies against possible rejection is that they tend to be self-fulfilling as they make longed for acceptance and closeness impossible, they maintain feelings of not belonging and being rejected or rejectable. Achieving healthy fulfilling living involves being open to others, and therefore includes the risk of rejection. One may hold the belief, that the avoidance of the rewards of nurturing contact and intimacy, is a fair price to pay for the avoidance of pain. This belief results in living in an emotional desert.

The only resolution is the reducing of the fear and shame surrounding needing and receiving from others. To avoid internalizing your experience of rejection, you need to proactively make a choice to start to face your fears, and to begin to share yourself more. In doing so, you can reduce feelings of aloneness. As you face your fears and share the emotions that arise as a result of your experience, you are sure to encounter others with similar stories. The realization that you are not alone in the ways you experience rejection, can in itself reduce the feelings of shame and aloneness. Often times taking action can be a powerful way of moving through fear, and sometimes it can be quicker than you may imagine. When we avoid what we fear, our anxieties are apt to worsen over time. Many people shy away from taking healthy risks for fear of appearing ridiculous, foolish and deeply ashamed. Fear when faced, more often than not does not produce the previous feared outcome, or is nowhere near as dreadful as imagined, but the deeply felt negative consequences of not acting can be debilitating. Sometimes we may need support from others in order to explore, dissipate or conquer those fears.

If you are currently struggling with rejection and the fear or anxiety around this issue, it may be helpful for you to work through this with a therapist, in order to address these fears effectively.

If you are feeling overwhelmed with fear of being rejected, talking through the issues with someone supportive and empathetic can be a great first step towards positive change. If you would like to chat further about mechanism to overcome fear of rejection please feel free to contact me.

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