
Toxic shame is the feeling that you’re worthless at your core – so you deserve to be rejected, mistreated and ignored, despised and punished by the people in your life. These are damaging, erroneous beliefs.
Shame develops in response to being abused and unloved, especially by the people who are close to you.
Toxic shame often takes the following forms:
1. Feeling bad (utterly shameful) about something terrible that was done to you.
2. Feeling bad (utterly shameful) about choices and actions that belong to someone else. Here, the shame is “guilt by association” – even where the choices and behaviours have nothing at all to do with you.
3. Feeling stigmatized, or experiencing some form of prejudice, where you feel judged and less than other people. Here, the shame generally relates to feelings of inadequacy related to something beyond your control.
4. Experiencing shame in response to the way someone else sees and judges you.
5. Experiencing shame because you have different outlooks and values from someone else.
6. Feeling awful (and wrong) because you have set and/ or enforced appropriate and healthy boundaries – boundaries which another individual isn’t happy with (usually because they want to control you and the situation).
7. Feeling ashamed of having and expressing emotions, and especially intense and/ or negative emotions.
8. Feeling ashamed of having and expressing legitimate needs, and asking for those needs to be met.
How to Cope with Toxic Shame
Self-compassion is the key to getting free of toxic shame. It is making the choice to show compassion to yourself in situations where you feel like a failure, or inadequate, or where you hurt, or are suffering, or are struggling, or weak. It is making every effort to be kind to yourself, and being gentle, understanding and patient with yourself.
Something to Think About
“Having compassion starts and ends with having compassion for all those unwanted parts of ourself.” – Pema Chodron
Could you start to show this compassion to yourself?
Reblogged this on Therapy Bits and commented:
As an abuse survivor I have felt this very deeply throughout my life. This is a great definition of what toxic shame actually is.
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Reblogged this on Disablities & Mental Health Issues.
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Thanks for sharing this 😊
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As always😉
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Number 4 has been the hardest for me. When someone you love says and acts like there’s something fundamentally wrong with you, it’s hard to keep your head up. This was especially hurtful, because I thought this someone truly loved me.
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I agree. The messages that those closest to us send, are very powerful. They have a huge impact on the way we see, and feel about, ourselves.
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But I am strong at the broken places—thanks to God’s grace. 🙏😊
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Amen! It’s so important to emphasize this!!!
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Powerful. With your permission, I would like to reblog this.
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Please do Anna. I hope it helps your readers!!
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Reblogged this on Survivors Blog Here Mental Health Collaborative .
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Witnessing in others the negative aspects of stress and depression, I understand how feelings of shame can take one down a river of no return. The quote from Pema Chodron offers an encouraging opportunity to arrive back on shore.
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Shame can take us to really dark places. Yet all of us fail, and fail terribly at times .. and all of us deserve a fresh start as well. Our past is not our present or our future.
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[…] the following post from the blog Don’t Lose Hope https://sexaddictionpartners.wordpress.com/2023/03/04/what-is-toxic-shame/ was directed to those harmed by a partner’s sexual addiction, it applies to all those […]
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Thanks for sharing this with your readers Anna. I hope they find it helpful.
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[…] the following post from the blog Don’t Lose Hope https://sexaddictionpartners.wordpress.com/2023/03/04/what-is-toxic-shame/ was directed to those harmed by a partner’s sexual addiction, it applies to all those […]
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Thanks for sharing this with your readers.
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