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A
Dance of Suffering, Shame,
and Self-abuse
"The reason that we
have not been Loving our
neighbor as ourselves is
because we have been doing
it backwards. We were
taught to judge and feel
ashamed of ourselves. We
were taught to hate
ourselves for being
human."
"If I am feeling like
a "failure" and
giving power to the
"critical parent"
voice within that is
telling me that I am a
failure - then I can get
stuck in a very painful
place where I am shaming
myself for being me. In
this dynamic I am being the
victim of myself and also
being my own perpetrator -
and the next step is to
rescue myself by using one
of the old tools to go
unconscious (food, alcohol,
sex, etc.) Thus the disease
has me running around in a
squirrel cage of suffering
and shame, a dance of pain,
blame, and
self-abuse."
Codependence:
The Dance of Wounded Souls
Codependence is an
incredibly powerful,
insidious, and vicious
disease. It is so powerful
because it is ingrained in
our core relationship with
ourselves. As little kids
we were assaulted with the
message that there was
something wrong with us. We
got this message from our
parents who were assaulted
and wounded in childhood by
their parents who were
assaulted and wounded in
childhood, etc. etc., and
from our society that is
based on the belief that
being human is shameful.
Codependence is
insidious because it is so
pervasive. The core
emotional belief that there
is something wrong with who
we are as beings affects
all of the relationships in
our life and keeps us from
learning how to Truly Love.
In a Codependent society
value is assigned in
comparison (richer than,
prettier than, more
spiritual than, healthier
than, etc.) so that the
only way to feel good about
self is the judge and look
down on others. Comparison
serves the belief in
separation which makes
violence, homelessness,
pollution, and billionaires
possible. Love is about
feeling connected in the
scheme of things not
separate.
Codependence is vicious
because it causes us to
hate and abuse ourselves.
We were taught to judge and
shame ourselves for being
human. At the core of our
relationship with ourselves
is the feeling that we are
somehow not worthy and not
lovable.
My father was trained
that he was supposed to be
perfect and that anger was
the only permissible male
emotion. As a result, that
little boy that made
mistakes and got yelled at
felt like he was flawed and
unlovable.
My mother told me how
much she loved me, how
important and valuable I
was, and how I could be
anything that I wanted to
be. But my mother had no
self-esteem and no
boundaries so she
emotionally incested me. I
felt responsible for her
emotional well-being and
felt great shame that I
couldn't protect her from
father's raging or the pain
of life. This was proof
that I was so flawed that,
though a woman might think
I was lovable, eventually
the truth of my
unworthiness would be
exposed by my inability to
protect her and insure her
happiness.
The church I was raised
in taught me that I was
born sinful and unworthy,
and that I should be
grateful and adoring
because God loved me in
spite of my unworthiness.
And, even though God loved
me, if I allowed my
unworthiness to surface by
acting on (or even thinking
about) the shameful human
weaknesses that I was born
with - then God would be
forced, with great sadness
and reluctance, to cast me
into hell to burn forever.
Is it any wonder that at
my core I felt unworthy and
unlovable? Is it any wonder
that as an adult I got
trapped in a continual
cycle of shame, blame, and
self-abuse?
The pain of being
unworthy and shameful was
so great that I had to
learn ways to go
unconscious and disconnect
from my feelings. The ways
in which I learned to
protect myself from that
pain and nurture myself
when I was hurting so badly
were with things like drugs
and alcohol, food and
cigarettes, relationships
and work, obsession and
rumination.
The way it works in
practice is like this: I am
feeling fat; I judge myself
for being fat; I shame
myself for being fat; I
beat myself for being fat;
then I am hurting so badly
that I have to relieve some
of the pain; so to nurture
myself I eat a pizza; then
I judge myself for eating
the pizza, etc. etc.
To the disease, this is
a functional cycle. The
shame begets the self-abuse
which begets the shame
which serves the purpose of
the disease which is to
keep us separate so the we
don't set ourselves up to
fail by believing that we
are worthy and lovable.
Obviously, this is a
dysfunctional cycle if our
purpose is to be happy and
enjoy being alive. The
way to stop this cycle is
two-fold and simple in
theory but extremely hard
to implement on a
moment-to-moment, day-to
day basis in our lives. The
first part has to do with
removing the shame from our
inner process. This is a
complicated and
multi-leveled process that
involves changing the
belief systems that are
dictating our reactions to
life (this include
everything from positive
affirmations to
grief/emotional energy
release work, to support
groups, to meditation and
prayer, to inner child
work, etc.) so that we can
change our relationship
with ourselves at the core
and start treating
ourselves in healthier
ways.
The second part is
simpler and usually harder.
It involves taking 'the
action.' ('the action'
refers to the specific
behavior. We have to take
action to do all of the
things listed in the first
part as well.) Changing the
behavior that is giving us
a reason for the shame.
Just saying 'no' - or 'yes'
if the behavior in question
is something like not
eating or isolating or not
exercising. And even though
it may sometime work in the
short run to use shame and
judgment to get ourselves
to change a behavior, in
the long term - in
alignment with our goal of
having a more Loving
relationship with ourselves
so that we can be happy -
it is much more powerful to
take that action in a
Loving way.
This involves setting a
boundary for the little
child inside of us, who
wants instant gratification
and instant relief, out of
the Loving adult in us who
understands the concept of
delayed gratification. (If
I exercise every day I will
feel much better in the
long run.) True pride comes
from action taken. It is
false pride to feel good
about ourselves in
comparison because of
looks, talent, intelligence
or for being forced to
become spiritual, healthy,
or sober. Those are gifts.
True pride is taking credit
for the action we have
taken to foster, nurture,
and maintain those gifts.
The way to break the
self-destructive cycle, to
stop the dance of shame,
suffering, and self-abuse,
is to set Loving boundaries
for ourselves in the moment
of that desperate need for
immediate gratification and
to know that - though it is
not shameful if we can't do
it perfectly or all the
time - we need to 'just do
it.' We need to stand up
for our True Self to our
wounded self in order to
Love ourselves.
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