My feelings about shame have evolved as I have thought a lot about it over the years.
I tend to think you have to put it into context in one’s own life, but here is how I view it.
Shame is painful. It’s a good precipitator for change. Fear is useful too, it can save you from hurting yourself. But fear and/or shame as a lens to look through dictates thoughts and actions and it hinders one’s ability to see the right path they should take.
Shame os accumulating if you never work though it. Mine started as an abused child who truly believed myself to be damaged goods, dirty, bad. It sexualized me at a young age, and when you experience emotional neglect from your parents on top of that, then you start getting attention from people leading with your sexuality.
This lens led me to do things that only compounded my shame. So then I became avoidant, my self worth was skewed, and I being vulnerable became harder and harder as this accumulated.
So when I talk about shame it’s never just about the affair. I will always be ashamed I had one and I think that is healthy. But when I say as a ws I had to work through my shame, it was an unlayering of what I believed about myself to the core. Stripping those layers require courage and dedication.
So fresh off of dday, it wasn’t necessarily shame of just the affair holding me back, it was shame of who I am that I had carried through my entire life and had reinforced through acting out of that place as well as now seeing how far down I had gone.
So, when I say shame I am not just talking about having an affair. I am talking about a lens that my entire being was built on. That’s when it’s unhealthy because it guides your thoughts and behaviors to ne super reactive rather than being proactive and managing things that you need to cope with. It makes it painful to look at yourself because you hate who you are. And this was me far before ever having an affair. I looked at myself and the world very critically
And this shows up in so many ways. I no longer talk badly about people I know, I will be compassionate when they falter, I can be trusted with secrets because I do not need the attention someone gives me with gossiping. I think positively more than not and am more patient and understanding in general. I have learned not to take things personally. Why? Because I am doing these things also for me. And our relationship with ourself dictates our relationship with others. I also hold them accountable for hurting me, lying to me, or not considering me. Those are things I was incapable of before because I didn’t think I deserved those things. Or I just have done something wrong for them to act this way. But now that I abide by certain things I find I expect them in return.
I think a lot of ws experience this. But some do not. A very current case we have seen in the wayward side is a good example of a ws not really held back by shame, but in selfishness. Your standards for yourself and vision for who you want to be have to be high enough that you feel you have done something morally wrong. Some people simply do not have that instinct.
But I have always said overly selfless people and overly selfish people have the same problem: it’s all trying to fill a void. Overly selfless people get love by overdoing and over compliance. Overly selfish people get love by being demanding and monitoring all the ways you could show them.
So, to tie a bow around my usual ramblings and meanderings- this to me probably is a rough guide. I think the overly selfless ws end up being the ones that have that accumulated shame. I think the overly selfish have less issue with shame and more issue with being demanding about what they want. There is surely a gradient of this, and exceptions, but this is kind of the pattern I have noticed in what I have seen here.
Takers just don’t seem to have the same barrier, though they suffer from a lot of the same root causes. But, sometimes I think if you don’t have a healthy amount of shame over what you have done then that’s when some will become a serial cheater.
How do you know when it’s your spouse? I don’t know. I will say that my husband isn’t one to carry shame, and I do think he is has been more selfish than me over the course of our marriage but I don’t really see him out of balance in those two things. Maybe he is more of a gradient in that way, but I don’t think if I hadnt cheated that he would have ever done it so that’s the best I can tell you.
Shame when you have an abundance of it is not crippling unless it already existed and accumulated, and I think you will find a lot of those we are the ones you find that they are at rock bottom. They know something has to change because the pain they are in feels unsurmountable.
[This message edited by hikingout at 11:19 PM, Tuesday, June 18th]