Welcome to Fostering Resilience! This blog is dedicated to providing recovery resources for individuals, families and counselors. You will find educational videos, articles, meditations and other tools to promote successful long-term recovery. I hope you find something to help you grow in your knowledge, strength and resilience. Thanks for stopping by, KJ 🌺
Showing posts with label drug addiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drug addiction. Show all posts
Monday, May 25, 2020
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Monday, May 18, 2020
Monday, May 11, 2020
Monday, May 4, 2020
Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Sunday, April 26, 2020
Thursday, April 23, 2020
Toxic Shame: The True Soul Sickness of Addiction
Shame is a complex emotional state which can be difficult to define
and understand. Many think of shame as
similar to guilt but they are inherently different emotions. A very simple way of understanding the difference
is in the way we think and behave in response to these emotions. When we feel guilty about something we’ve
done, our self-talk about the situation is usually something like “I feel bad
about what I did,” and typically we will move toward the source of our mistake
in order to apologize or otherwise repair the misconduct. On the other hand, when we feel shame we
think and behave very differently. Our thinking,
or self-talk, is more along the lines of “I am such an idiot” or “I am so
stupid” instead of “I did something wrong” or “I made a mistake.” Unlike guilt, however, where we move toward
connection in an attempt to restore and repair, when we experience shame we
will move away, avoid, or even hide in order to disconnect from others and our feeling
of shame.
When trying to understand the role shame plays in addiction, it is further
complicated and misunderstood because of the dual nature of shame. Shame is experienced at healthy levels
(innate moral shame) and toxic levels (internalized shame). John Bradshaw, in his book Healing the Shame That Binds You, does a
great job explaining this dual nature of shame with his cholesterol analogy. Just as there are two kinds of cholesterol,
HDL (healthy) and LDL (toxic), there are also two forms of shame; healthy and
toxic.
Healthy shame keeps us grounded.
It is our reminder that we are not supreme and all powerful (aka God),
that we are human, and we make mistakes.
Healthy shame points us in the direction of some larger meaning. Healthy shame is the essential foundation for
spirituality and the psychological ground for our humility. Healthy shame is good for us and will often
be the emotional prompting that encourages individuals to seek help for their addiction. Any true surrender can’t occur without a
healthy dose of shame. I can’t tell you
how many times I’ve heard people say “I couldn’t stand to even look at myself
in the mirror. I was disgusted with the
person I had become.” This rings true
regarding my own recovery from addiction.
Internalized shame, on the other hand, is like LDL
cholesterol. It is destructive and if
left unchecked will ultimately kill us.
Instead of a momentary feeling of being embarrassed, making a mistake or
feeling less than, a person comes to believe that their whole self is
fundamentally flawed and defective. We
are no longer perfectly imperfect human beings, we are totally and absolutely
imperfect. When shame becomes
internalized or absolutized, it becomes a state of being. Toxic shame is the most destructive emotional
sickness of self a person can have. It
is a true soul sickness that serves as both root cause and perpetuator of all
addictions. It lethally disgraces us to
the point where we literally disown ourselves. This self-alienation requires an
elaborate masking or cover-up of the true and authentic self by creating a false
self, which is essentially our protection against our felt sense of toxic
shame.
The fuel of all addictive behavior is this rupturing of the self,
the belief that we are flawed and defective human beings; we are a
mistake. Deep, internalized, toxic shame
gives rise to distorted thinking where our worth is measured on the outside
instead of the inside, “I need something outside myself (alcohol, drugs, sex, money,
power, food, etc.) in order to be okay,” which results in acting out on this
thinking, followed by more shame over the consequences of our behavior. Addiction in and of itself can quickly turn
healthy shame into toxic shame. I see
this very often with the young people I work with who are barely out of their
teens. The role of addict is the only
identity they’ve ever known, with the compulsive cycle of addiction being
fueled and regenerated by their identity and shame as an addict.
Healing toxic shame is an essential part of all addiction
recovery. Unfortunately, it is an
extremely painful process and especially difficult because pain is essentially
the very thing we are trying to avoid.
The pain comes in having to expose and look at the toxic shame, which is
necessary and critical in order to reduce, and ultimately heal internalized
shame. Shame thrives in darkness. The more we avoid it, the more it grows and
the worse it becomes. We need to bring it out of hiding. Healing internalized, toxic shame requires
what Bradshaw refers to as “externalizing” the shame. This can be tricky because there is the risk
of premature exposure, or exposing our shame before we are ready, which can, in
turn, create more internalized shame. The
key to successful externalization is finding a non-shaming intimate person or
support group and honestly sharing our innermost feelings. Brene Brown, in her research on shame,
credits this willingness to become vulnerable and exposed as an essential element
in the healing of shame. When we trust
someone and experience their unconditional love and acceptance, we begin to change
our beliefs about ourselves. One of the
reasons 12 Step programs are so successful is in their inherent ability to heal
toxic shame. The birth of AA was created
through the very act of two people coming together (Bill W. and Dr. Bob) and exposing
themselves and their pain to each other and then, of course, ultimately, to other
suffering alcoholics.
Alcoholics Anonymous and 12 Step Recovery has by far been the most
successful approach to healing toxic shame.
That being said, there is a significant population of individuals for
whom 12 Step programs are not appealing and who continue to suffer and struggle
because of their reluctance to engage in the healing process 12 Step recovery
affords. And although I am a devoted
supporter of 12 Step programs, and credit it with my own personal recovery, I
believe it is possible to heal toxic shame without a 12 Step program. Conversely, I have also found that many
struggling with toxic shame require more than a 12 Step program in order to
fully heal their internalized shame. I am in no way recommending anyone forego
12 Step recovery, but simply acknowledge that it is possible to heal toxic
shame through other means. This can be
accomplished through an intimate, unconditionally loving, and non-shaming,
relationship with a support group, mentor, clergyman or therapist. Whichever the route, however, in order to
heal, we must be willing to come out of hiding and connect with others. There
is virtually no other way.
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