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What To Do With Feelings Of Shame

Do you think it is bad to feel ashamed?

In this interview, Maarten Aalberse suggests that we have a tendency to feel ashamed about feeling shame and that this causes us problems. He suggests responding to those feelings with empathy and compassion instead of trying to reject these painful emotions. What does that look like?

Shame comes up quite often for me. The other day, a participant in a session I was facilitating said, 'Well I think this sort of thing is a waste of time. Nothing ever changes as a result.' and pop there it was... shame. Gnawing away at my gut. Making me want to crawl into a corner and hide.

My mind went into overdrive: I am a waste of space. All those years of training were a waste of time. I have been deluding myself. It was all pointless. ( I actually feel a bit ashamed letting you know the crazy thoughts my mind can come up with!)

And then, I remembered Maarten's suggestions and I breathed and asked myself , 'Can I turn towards this pain with kindness? Can I hold these feelings with compassion? Can I use all of those years of training to choose my next words? Even though the urge to react is so strong?'

This sounded like a good plan, so instead of getting defensive I responded with curiosity, 'What would have to happen for today to be worthwhile? What would we each need to do?'

The conversation moved forward and we made a plan.

I think that Maarten may be right. That allowing those feelings to be there and treating them with kindness may lead to more effective responses.

What about you...are you ashamed of shame? What happens when you treat those feelings with compassion instead? Does that work better for you?

This is a post from the blog I co-author with Rob Archer - www.workingwithact.com