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Michael's avatar

I have found the article "The Genesis of Shame" by J. David Velleman to be insightful. It is by a philosopher, not a psychologist, but I wish it were more widely known in mental health circles.

He argues that shame is essentially just the emotional pain we feel specifically from losing control of our social self-presentation, for any reason.

This could be due to a public failure or embarrassment. But it could also happen when we accidentally reveal something neutral or positive, but that we wished to keep private. It could be due to our bodies and faces physically betraying our emotions. And it could also happen when someone else influences how other people see you socially (for example, someone who experiences racist abuse in public may feel shame even if they reject the abuse and have no respect for the racist. conversely, someone might also feel shame if they are involuntarily made the center of positive attention.)

The way to stop feeling ashamed is to regain control of social self-presentation somehow, and there are many strategies to do this. You can try to integrate/publicly accept the shameful thing (if the shame is from an actual moral failure, then this would look like going from shame -> guilt). Or you can try to ignore the shameful situation and restore your control quickly, and surprisingly people will usually cooperate with you (this is the right strategy if e.g. you do something embarrassing in public). Sometimes you can realize that the social image you felt like you were unable to maintain, was imposed on you -- then by giving up on it, shame dissipates.

I'm not a psychotherapist but I've found it to be a personally useful perspective. It explains odd situations where I previously thought I felt shame "for no reason", and it has helped me deal productively with the emotion in my own life.

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Christine Sutherland's avatar

I view shame as a learned response, in other words, conditioned. And conditioned responses can be extinguished, directly or indirectly. A client who had been working on a number of fears suddenly sat up in her chair one day and exclaimed “I just realised my shame isn’t mine. I’ve been carrying my mother’s shame all these years”. This wasn’t the theme of our work, but it was the result of it - new cognitions arising of their own volition when we no longer see the world through a particular set of conditioned responses. So I think that shame can be successfully resolved, but most likely not via psychoanalysis.

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