I’ve been thinking about this recently. it’s something we talk about a lot in group. we wrestle with, at the same time, trying to maintain this sense we’re OK as we are, and where we are, being works in progress, while striving each day to climb out of someplace dark over to somewhere brighter.

it seems as though shame is always kind of hanging around very close by, if not actively attacking us, in either of those moments. it’s a constant fight simultaneously to accept that we’re enough as we are, and trust the process that we can become better.

I don’t know that most understand how easy it is to make someone feel abject. shame is used as a weapon in society to get people to feel badly about things they should not feel badly about. there are people who are ill who feel shame about their illness. it’s not their fault. but we shame people for substance abuse disorder and depression. we put them in a box and label it the same way we label files or clothes.

for bad moral and cultural interaction, there’s room for shame. that’s it’s only function. but when you’re going through something dark, and especially when you believe enough in the change you want to make that you are willing to do the hard work, even if that means experiencing the twinges that never quite go away on the path to becoming better, where’s the shame in that?

being surrounded by people who are on the same journey is the best way I know to do the hard work. we show up for it everyday. shame shows up, too, but it’s not an invitation we have to accept. we don’t have to do what it wants us to do.

there are words like shame, and shameful, and shameless. there’s no word, I don’t think, for, oh, this person is doing something to make themselves better and they’re going to live with the shame you’re throwing on them. so when shame comes for you, you can just duck it and move on.

oh, and this is a cover of Friday I’m In Love by The Cure from last Friday’s group meeting:

20 responses to “shame”

  1. “Enough as we are” is a powerful mindset. It shows that no matter what you’re going through, whether it’s addiction or depression or anxiety, you are still enough because you’re you. You’re a human not a label in a box.
    I love how you say we can duck under shame. I agree. Best to avoid it and the person who tries to shame you can deal with their own issues.

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    1. yes because we all have some great or small issue, that’s true. thank you, Sara. hope you liked The Cure.

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      1. Yes it sounded great!

        It’s definitely relatable when you have a job you don’t like too much. Fridays are magic. 🙂

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      2. oh thank you I was wondering whether you in particular liked it. x

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      3. OOh well I certainly did! I look forward to hearing more of your songs. 🙂

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  2. There is a Mindful exercise in the course ‘ACTivate your Life’ we taught in the community as a team of 3 nurses. People closed their eyes, imagined sitting next to a river where a tree drops leaves into the water and the leaves float downstream before you. Any unwanted thoughts or words that entered your mind during this Mindful session were thrown onto the leaf/leaves where it/they floated away. Away from your mind and into the distance. The word Shame belongs to that leaf scenario. Another phrase which hit home for myself was ‘You are not your mind’. It has rationale behind the phrase as to why. Too much information for condensing the holistic Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) picture here. But I realised the mind gets up to all sorts of shenanigans. It can’t keep still, so it keeps pushing. You yourself write down your information extremely well cookie. Explain with clarity. It also allows ‘leaf’ clearance and at the same time gives others great advice of how to rid the mind’s negativity when it happens.

    And that’s an awesome cover. One of my fave Cure songs. All the best.

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    1. leaf clearance, writing here is like that for me. I always liked that band and a couple more from that time. so maybe more covers to come? thank you, Gray.

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      1. That’s a great expression ‘leaf clearance’. That period? The Cure, Echo and the Bunnymen. Two bands consistently great.

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  3. “but it’s not an invitation we have to accept…”
    wisely said, Cookie….to society… will it ever change….doubt it … makes your words more profound 🤍✨

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    1. thank you, Destiny. one small step at a time. that seems to be the way to anything.

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  4. Hey Cookie, I think the word you are looking for is “unapologetic.” (Doing something to make ourselves better & living with the shame you’re being thrown at) 🤗🌸
    Nice post!

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    1. that is a good word, Mia, thank you 😊

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  5. First, a lovely musical share, as you do. I value your written voice, too. Your essay invokes many thoughts. Your sentence: “… even if that means experiencing the twinges that never quite go away… ” feels like acceptance. A subtle but powerful word and experience. Thoughtful reflection, cookie.

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    1. you write to me with so much compassion, you always do, and it means everything to me. x

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      1. Thank you, kindred, for appreciating my thoughts, sincerely shared. 🙏🏻 x

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  6. acceptance is such an important journey into self as is your music, Cookie❣️

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    1. it’s hard work and worth it, Cindy. x

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