There is something wrong with you

CeeJay1981

Banned
Many people, to some extent or another, have a CORE BELIEF that something is wrong with them, that they are broken in some way and it's very important that nobody else ever find out what that is.

To compensate for this feeling of shame we could use any number of coping strategies. We might use humour, or intelligence, or an ability to perform well at something. We might hide behind being too fat, skinny, tall or short, or by being an alcoholic or drug addict. We might create a fantasy reality where we imagine ourselves to be better than others or to try and control others.

Perhaps we imagine that people don't like us (or do like us), when they may not be paying much attention to us either way. We may try to cope by being macho, or by being pitiful. There are scores of ways a person suffering from shame could attempt to cope. All the emotional dysfunctions (anger, sadness, anxiety, substance abuse, fear, depression, powerlessness, relationship problems, and many others) can be shame-based.

A person suffering from shame may function well in the world, or their shame may keep them from being functional in many situations. We might feel comfortable when performing a role, like our job, but when in social situations feel painfully inadequate.

Sometimes shame is layered beneath many defense mechanisms, and the outer appearance is one of "I'm fine. Nothing bothers me." Other times, it is so close to the surface the slightest thing can send the person into tears, anger, depression, or some other reaction.

So where does shame come from? It comes from abuse, from trauma suffered when we were too small to have any filters to tell us why it is happening and what it really means. If the people who are supposed to love and care for us hurt us, neglect us, criticize us, or worse, then the obvious conclusion, from a child's point of view, is that there must be something wrong with us. Otherwise, why would these big, powerful, God-like people who have every reason to care about us treat us with so much anger, contempt, or neglect?

Sometimes this trauma is inadvertent, coming from the death of a loved one, or situations the parents could not cope with themselves. Sometimes it comes from the fact that the parents were treated the same way when they were young, and it's all they know. But finding someone to blame isn't the point, and it isn't productive. If trauma happened, the resourceful thing to do is to deal with it now, get rid of it, and move on.

From this trauma, the child draws two conclusions. One is that the world is dangerous, and as a result they have to be on the alert for danger. Second, the child concludes that there must be something deeply wrong with them, at the very core, and that to survive, they must NEVER let anyone know that this defect exists. To accomplish this, elaborate armoring, physically, emotionally, and spiritually - an elaborate facade - is created.

A person living with shame generally exists in one of two ways: they create so much self- armoring that they don't feel much of anything, no one can get through to them on an emotional level, and life becomes a process of toughing it out. Or, they fail to create effective armoring, and go through life easily triggered by people and events around them (what is sometimes termed a low threshold) or emotionally collapsing whenever the going gets the slightest bit tough. Most social anxiety sufferers fall into this latter category. Dealing with shame becomes the central point of such a person's life.

What makes it difficult to deal with shame is that we want so much to hide it. It is nearly impossible to ask for help, since this means revealing to someone else that we are totally broken. This is why therapy can be so difficult.

Here's an interesting fact about shame. 99% of people are carrying around a sense of shame on some level. Each person has developed their own act designed, in part, to dance through life without revealing this awful secret. They don't realize that the people they're trying to fake out are doing the same to them too. No wonder that the relationships they create seem so unfulfilling - they are relationships between two facades. At the same time, the real, hurting individual is trapped underneath, crying for intimacy and understanding.

So what can we actually DO about all this. Well, the solution is to discover, and then heal, our own personal CORE BELIEFS about ourselves. Once we discover HOW we are creating our own facades we have a shot at seeing through the illusion and moving past them. We then reclaim our personal power and can start creating the lives we want, instead of avoiding the kind of lives we don't want.
 

Ashiene

Well-known member
There is something wrong with all of us, of course. We are imperfect- genetically, physically, mentally and spiritually, because Nature cannot create perfection.
 

CeeJay1981

Banned
There is something wrong with all of us, of course. We are imperfect- genetically, physically, mentally and spiritually, because Nature cannot create perfection.

The idea that there is 'something wrong' with us is created in our own heads. It is coming from within US and not OUTSIDE of us.

The trick is to become AWARE of when we are focusing on what we DONT want (like imagining imperfection everywhere) to focusing on what we DO want (like saying "OK given that the world is imperfect, how can I be happy and successful anyway?")

Think of those really bad contestants on Pop Idol. In their own minds they are world class singers and performers. They have 'deluded' themselves that they are good.

Well, I'm suggesting that as Social Anxiety sufferers, we have 'deluded' ourselves that we are inadequate.
 

DASwife

Well-known member
Instead of thinking there is something "wrong", maybe we should look at is as something being different. While perfection is an unattainable goal, we shouldn't rush to call our imperfections "flaws". Each and every thing "wrong" with us makes us unique, and therefore special...

Just something I picked up in temple, thought it would be cool to share.
 

CeeJay1981

Banned
This is a good point DAS. The trouble is actually BELIEVING those things. We might know INTELLECTUALLY that there is no such thing as perfection and that all differences should be honoured and respected. However, if we are generating RESULTS in our lives which are counter to this then we don't truly believe it on a deep level - and that's where it counts.

For example, we may have a belief that we are BROKEN in some way and we need to be careful not to expose our FLAWS to others. Unfortunately, the mind takes whatever we focus on as an instruction to create something. It doesn't know the difference between what we WANT and what we DONT WANT. Consequently, the mind is busy, busy, busy all day long keeping gaurd so that our FLAWS are not apparent and there is little spare capacity left to do or think of anything else.

The solution is to BECOME AWARE of what we believe and then watch to see how they play out in our lives and create the outcomes we get. Then, once we can see them manifesting IN REAL TIME we have CHOICE over whether or not to keep believing them.

Hope this helps
 
Hey CJ, great posts. I think this is at the root of most of my problems. When your early environment wants you to be a certain way that you're not, you struggle to adapt to that image, out of fear for your life. Your genes want to survive, even if they have to sacrifice your soul to do so. So you try to bury all these things about yourself that you think would get you abandoned or killed outright.

When I went through CBT a long time ago it was with the goal of further adapting to society. It worked to a certain extent, but whatever success I had left me feeling pretty empty. I think it was because it never touched at all on these issues. I'm doing psychodynamic therapy now to try to deal with them. But the parts of me that got repressed are pretty damn scared about revealing themselves!

One book I've found that gives me hope is 'Opening Up' - which uses journaling about traumatic events to try to integrate them into your psyche, instead of just trying not to think about them. I'm gonna try this also, to see if it'll help in dealing with some of this stuff.
 
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