For some reason many of my clients have been obsessed with the subject of why zombies eat brains--at least the adolescents have been. And I guess they feel I would know the answer because I work with brains (note: I do not work physically with brains, that would be a neurosurgeon - perhaps one would get better information by consulting one of them.)
Much of my research focused on physical and psychological needs for zombies to eat brains, as well as habitat needs.
One study found that the undead have a significant reduction in the pineal gland. Perhaps Zombies are compensating for a lack of this significant area of the brain, and by eating brains they feel they will make up for the lack of theirs.
Brains are also very high in protein/nutrients.
Recent studies have shown that glial cells, which make up the bulk of a brain, have the ability to act as stem cells, at least as far as being able to replicate other brain cells. Zombies are probably going after the glial cells to help restore some of their brain function.
Brains are also rich in cholesterol, which is essential for maintaining cell membrane pliability, which is a particular problem at the low body temperatures typical of zombies in non-tropical climates.
Psychologically, the act of eating brains can ease the pain of being dead (see movie "From Beyond")This would actually make more sense, when one considers some studies which note that zombies probably don't eat for nourishment, and perhaps the act of brain-eating represents an unholy, instinctive attempt on the undead's part to regain their lost minds.
Also we need to consider that by being dead, many zombies are missing teeth, and prefer eating something that's easy on the gums.
One last idea is that zombies eat brains as a matter of managing their habitat. As is well-known, a zombie's bite will infect a normal human and turn him or her into another zombie within a matter of minutes or hours. This, of course, assumes that the attacking zombie or its pack do not completely consume the victim. Now, you figure that a solo zombie or even one or two attacking in conjunction cannot eat all of the meat parts of a given victim in one sitting. This means that if a zombie just eats an arm, pretty soon it will be joined by a one-armed zombie that is also now on the hunt. Therefore it must now compete with the nub zombies in the pursuit of tasty human flesh. Eating the brain is both satisfying and prevents the rise of new zombies, so the zombie population does not increase to unsustainable levels.
I hope this helps my clients in their obsession with the subject. For those who are my clients, please don't ask again.
Friday, October 29, 2010
Monday, October 11, 2010
Stages of Pornography Addiction
Excerpt from the Dare to Dig Deeper booklet "Toxic Porn",
Not everyone who sees porn will become addicted to it. Some will just come away with toxic ideas about women, sex, marriage and children. That kind of damage is bad enough. And porn isn't the only ingredient in addiction. Usually, those who become addicted have some kind of emotional opening that allows the addiction to really take root.
Some of you reading this will become addicted, like I was. The porn companies don't mind at all if you become completely addicted to their product. It's great for business. An addicted customer keeps coming back for more. And so they fill their porn with images that will excite you, arouse you and get the hormones flowing. You don't have to shoot up any drug with a needle to get addicted to porn — your body will make its own drugs just by looking at the pictures. Dr. Victor Cline says that sex and pornography can be a more difficult addiction to break than cocaine.
Five stages of addiction
1. Early exposure. Most guys who get addicted to porn start early. They see the stuff when they are very young, and it gets its foot in the door.
2. Addiction. Later comes addiction. You keep coming back to porn. It becomes a regular part of your life. You're hooked. You can't quit.
3. Escalation. After a while, escalation begins. You start to look for more and more graphic porn. You start using porn that would have disgusted you when you started. Now it excites you.
4. Desensitization. Eventually, you start to become numb. Even the most graphic, degrading porn doesn't excite you anymore. You become desperate to feel the same thrill again but can't find it.
5. Acting out sexually. At this point, many men make a dangerous jump and start acting out sexually. They move from the paper and plastic images of porn to the real world.
When I personally got to the "acting out phase," I started fantasizing about what it would be like to actually rape a woman. I finally tried it one night when I saw a woman who "fit" the scenario that porn had taught me to look for. I was lucky. Very lucky. I didn't go through with it. After being reported, arrested and spending some time in jail, I finally was able to begin the process of weeding out the lies in my life that porn had put there.
Other men aren't so lucky. I realize now that with just a little push, I could have gone over the edge. I could have raped that woman and then killed her to cover my tracks. That's how Ted Bundy got started. When the porn he was addicted to wasn't enough anymore, he tried the real thing — rape, and then murder. When he succeeded, he did it again. And again. Pornography addiction is very serious.
Are you addicted?
Some of you reading this may have already developed an addiction to porn. If you see any of the patterns I've described above in your life, you need to put the brakes on right now. Is porn beginning to control your life? You can't put it down — you keep going back for more? Perhaps you find yourself needing to see increasingly graphic pornography. You're masturbating more and more often. You're starting to take risks or act out physically for sexual thrills. If you see yourself at any point on this progression, you are in serious trouble, and you need to realize it — and get help.
Excerpted from the Dare to Dig Deeper booklet "Toxic Porn", by Gene McConnell and Keith Campbell. Copyright ©1996 Focus on the Family.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Dealing with Difficult Ex-Spouses
Dealing with a difficult ex-spouse can be very discouraging and defeating. Yet, we are called to continue trying to pursue good, to “turn the other cheek”, and “walk the extra mile.” Hopefully the following tips can aid you in your efforts to cope—because it’s all about the children.
1. Be sure to notice your own part of the ongoing conflict. Christian ex-spouses, for example, often feel justified in their anger toward their irresponsible ex-spouse. It’s easy, then, to also feel justified in your efforts to change them in whatever ways you feel are morally or practically necessary. Unfortunately, this sense of “rightness” often blinds good-hearted Christians from seeing just how their own behavior contributes to the ongoing cycle of conflict. Any time you try to change a difficult ex-spouse—even if for understandable moral reasons—you inadvertently invite hostility or a lack of cooperation in return. Learn to let go of what you can’t change so you don’t unknowingly keep the between home power struggles alive.
2. Stepparents should communicate a “non-threatening posture to the same-gender ex-spouse. An ex-wife, for example, may continue negativity because she is threatened by the presence of the new stepmother. It is helpful if the stepmother will communicate the following either by phone or email: “I just want you to know that I value your role with your children and I will never try to replace you. You are their mother and I’m not. I will support your decisions with the children, have them to your house on time, and never talk badly about you to the children. You have my word on that.” This helps to alleviate the need of the biological mother to bad-mouth the stepparent or the new marriage in order to keep her children’s loyalties.
3. Keep your “business meetings” impersonal to avoid excessive conflict. Face-to-face interaction has the most potential for conflict. Use the phone when possible or even talk to their answering machine if personal communication erupts into arguments. Use email or faxes when possible. Keep children from being exposed to negative interaction when it’s within your power.
4. Use a script to help you through negotiations. This strategy has helped thousands of parents. Before making a phone call, take the time to write out your thoughts including what you’ll say and not say. Also, anticipate what the other might say that will hurt or anger you. Stick to the business at hand and don’t get hooked into old arguments that won’t be solved with another fight. (For more on how to do this, see the “Be Prepared by Borrowing a Script and Sticking to It” section of the free Common Steps for Co-Parents e-booklet.)
5. Whenever possible, agree with some aspect of what you ex-spouse is suggesting. This good business principle applies in parenting as well. Even if you disagree with the main point, find some common ground.
6. Manage conversations by staying on matters of parenting. It is common for the conversations of “angry associate” co-parents to gravitate back toward negative personal matters of the past. Actively work to keep conversations focused on the children. If the conversation digresses to “old marital junk,” say something like, “I’d rather we discuss the schedule for this weekend. Where would you like to meet?” If the other continues to shift the conversation back to hurtful matters assertively say, “I’m sorry. I’m not interested in discussing us again. Let’s try this again later when we can focus on the weekend schedule.” Then, politely hang up the phone or walk away. Come back later and try again to stay on the parenting subject at hand.
7. When children have confusing or angry feelings toward your ex, don’t capitalize on their hurt and berate the other parent. Listen and help them explore their hurt feelings. If you can’t make positive statements about the other parent, strive for neutral ones. Let God’s statutes offer any necessary indictments on a parent’s behavior.
8. Remember that for children, choosing sides stinks! Children don’t want to compare their parents or choose one over the other. They simply want your permission to love each of you. This is especially important when the two of you can’t get along.
9. Wrestle with forgiveness. Hurt feelings from the past are the number one reason your ex—and you—overreact with one another. Do your part by striving to forgive them for the offenses of the past (and present). This will help you manage your emotions when dealing with them in the present.
10. Work hard to respect the other parent and his or her household. For your kids sake, find ways of being respectable even if you honestly can’t respect your ex-spouses lifestyle or choices. Do not personally criticize them, but don’t make excuses for their behavior either.
Reference: www.SuccessfulStepfamilies.com
1. Be sure to notice your own part of the ongoing conflict. Christian ex-spouses, for example, often feel justified in their anger toward their irresponsible ex-spouse. It’s easy, then, to also feel justified in your efforts to change them in whatever ways you feel are morally or practically necessary. Unfortunately, this sense of “rightness” often blinds good-hearted Christians from seeing just how their own behavior contributes to the ongoing cycle of conflict. Any time you try to change a difficult ex-spouse—even if for understandable moral reasons—you inadvertently invite hostility or a lack of cooperation in return. Learn to let go of what you can’t change so you don’t unknowingly keep the between home power struggles alive.
2. Stepparents should communicate a “non-threatening posture to the same-gender ex-spouse. An ex-wife, for example, may continue negativity because she is threatened by the presence of the new stepmother. It is helpful if the stepmother will communicate the following either by phone or email: “I just want you to know that I value your role with your children and I will never try to replace you. You are their mother and I’m not. I will support your decisions with the children, have them to your house on time, and never talk badly about you to the children. You have my word on that.” This helps to alleviate the need of the biological mother to bad-mouth the stepparent or the new marriage in order to keep her children’s loyalties.
3. Keep your “business meetings” impersonal to avoid excessive conflict. Face-to-face interaction has the most potential for conflict. Use the phone when possible or even talk to their answering machine if personal communication erupts into arguments. Use email or faxes when possible. Keep children from being exposed to negative interaction when it’s within your power.
4. Use a script to help you through negotiations. This strategy has helped thousands of parents. Before making a phone call, take the time to write out your thoughts including what you’ll say and not say. Also, anticipate what the other might say that will hurt or anger you. Stick to the business at hand and don’t get hooked into old arguments that won’t be solved with another fight. (For more on how to do this, see the “Be Prepared by Borrowing a Script and Sticking to It” section of the free Common Steps for Co-Parents e-booklet.)
5. Whenever possible, agree with some aspect of what you ex-spouse is suggesting. This good business principle applies in parenting as well. Even if you disagree with the main point, find some common ground.
6. Manage conversations by staying on matters of parenting. It is common for the conversations of “angry associate” co-parents to gravitate back toward negative personal matters of the past. Actively work to keep conversations focused on the children. If the conversation digresses to “old marital junk,” say something like, “I’d rather we discuss the schedule for this weekend. Where would you like to meet?” If the other continues to shift the conversation back to hurtful matters assertively say, “I’m sorry. I’m not interested in discussing us again. Let’s try this again later when we can focus on the weekend schedule.” Then, politely hang up the phone or walk away. Come back later and try again to stay on the parenting subject at hand.
7. When children have confusing or angry feelings toward your ex, don’t capitalize on their hurt and berate the other parent. Listen and help them explore their hurt feelings. If you can’t make positive statements about the other parent, strive for neutral ones. Let God’s statutes offer any necessary indictments on a parent’s behavior.
8. Remember that for children, choosing sides stinks! Children don’t want to compare their parents or choose one over the other. They simply want your permission to love each of you. This is especially important when the two of you can’t get along.
9. Wrestle with forgiveness. Hurt feelings from the past are the number one reason your ex—and you—overreact with one another. Do your part by striving to forgive them for the offenses of the past (and present). This will help you manage your emotions when dealing with them in the present.
10. Work hard to respect the other parent and his or her household. For your kids sake, find ways of being respectable even if you honestly can’t respect your ex-spouses lifestyle or choices. Do not personally criticize them, but don’t make excuses for their behavior either.
Reference: www.SuccessfulStepfamilies.com
Saturday, October 9, 2010
About Love
A favorite poem of mine states. . . "Their relationship consisted in discussing if it existed." This statement sums up what seems to me to be a frightening state of confusion in current discussions concerning relationships.
A plethora of self-help books claim to tell us how to get love right (a strangely moral term), and advise us that if we are not successful in love it is because we do not know the right techniques, or understand that men and women speak totally different languages.
However well-intentioned these books are, they have severe limitations. Most are devoid of any real clinical evidence, and are based on the underlying assumption that a significant relationship is a "problem" that can be solved. In short, these books present themselves as "salvation systems," even though several of the authors have bought degrees and are unlicensed, and one has been married five times. Most alarming is the fact that many of these books negate the drama, difficulties, and living mystery that forms the core of human love and relationship.
There are excellent clinical studies available which offer extensive research on what factors constitute well-functioning relationships. These studies have also predicted with 94% accuracy what factors, when chronically present, will lead to misery, separation and divorce.
Stable relationships are characterized by people who understand that love is something you don't get "right." It is a mystery to be lived, not a problem to be solved. The studies on stable, well-functioning relationships point to the fact that the people in these relationships understand that as humans they are imperfect and that there will always be some limitations to their happiness with each other.
People need to understand that there are problems inherent in all relationships, some of which can be solved and some of which cannot. I can think of several such relationship problems:
Covert beliefs about the nature of love
These beliefs result from our most significant way of mattering in our family of origin. For example, "she always tries to take care of everybody's needs," or "he always acts like a spoiled child needing attention."
The Hatfields and the McCoys
In other words, the two sets of family rules that have to be negotiated regarding: money, parenting, sex, work, play, etc.
This one is a biggie. . .her family was penurious, his extravagant. Her family believed in spanking, his in "time-out;" she wants sex occasionally, he wants it all the time; she believes in working till you drop, he believes that enough is enough; she wants to go to the opera; he wants to go to the baseball game.
The nature of language
No one understands the same sentence that same way. The problem of communication, which is rooted in the nature of language wrecks havoc in marriages--at work, in raising children and in caring for aging parents. This can be a horrendous problem until a dialogue that fosters love can be learned.
Selfishness
This is an easy one to explain: people want their own way.
The wounds each person carries from the past
These wounds contaminate the present. For instance, she is a "Lost Child," he is the family "Star."
Sex differences and idiosyncratic differences
These are responsible for a lot of issues.
The level of solid selfhood
In other words, the authentic presence each person has achieved.
Familiarity, boredom and routine
The philosopher Hegel once said that the more familiar something becomes, the less we know it. Two hundred years ago, the average marriage lasted fifteen years. Today they are twice as long, since our life span is so much longer.
The mystery of each person's unique self
At the deepest level we do not even know ourselves fully. There will always be a space in our journey to know each other. There are things we can do to achieve healthy relationships. We can challenge our unconscious beliefs about love, change or compromise our family rules, learn new communication skills, grieve our un-grieved childhood wounds and move past them, work on our sexual issues, creatively deal with fate and commit to some spontaneity and renewal.
In the final analysis though, love cannot be defined because it exists between two utterly unique beings. I personally believe that "in the evening of life we will be judged by love alone" and I think that this belief can help us to face these relationship challenges courageously and with hope.
Reference: John Bradshaw - www.shareguide.com/Bradshawtwo.html
A plethora of self-help books claim to tell us how to get love right (a strangely moral term), and advise us that if we are not successful in love it is because we do not know the right techniques, or understand that men and women speak totally different languages.
However well-intentioned these books are, they have severe limitations. Most are devoid of any real clinical evidence, and are based on the underlying assumption that a significant relationship is a "problem" that can be solved. In short, these books present themselves as "salvation systems," even though several of the authors have bought degrees and are unlicensed, and one has been married five times. Most alarming is the fact that many of these books negate the drama, difficulties, and living mystery that forms the core of human love and relationship.
There are excellent clinical studies available which offer extensive research on what factors constitute well-functioning relationships. These studies have also predicted with 94% accuracy what factors, when chronically present, will lead to misery, separation and divorce.
Stable relationships are characterized by people who understand that love is something you don't get "right." It is a mystery to be lived, not a problem to be solved. The studies on stable, well-functioning relationships point to the fact that the people in these relationships understand that as humans they are imperfect and that there will always be some limitations to their happiness with each other.
People need to understand that there are problems inherent in all relationships, some of which can be solved and some of which cannot. I can think of several such relationship problems:
Covert beliefs about the nature of love
These beliefs result from our most significant way of mattering in our family of origin. For example, "she always tries to take care of everybody's needs," or "he always acts like a spoiled child needing attention."
The Hatfields and the McCoys
In other words, the two sets of family rules that have to be negotiated regarding: money, parenting, sex, work, play, etc.
This one is a biggie. . .her family was penurious, his extravagant. Her family believed in spanking, his in "time-out;" she wants sex occasionally, he wants it all the time; she believes in working till you drop, he believes that enough is enough; she wants to go to the opera; he wants to go to the baseball game.
The nature of language
No one understands the same sentence that same way. The problem of communication, which is rooted in the nature of language wrecks havoc in marriages--at work, in raising children and in caring for aging parents. This can be a horrendous problem until a dialogue that fosters love can be learned.
Selfishness
This is an easy one to explain: people want their own way.
The wounds each person carries from the past
These wounds contaminate the present. For instance, she is a "Lost Child," he is the family "Star."
Sex differences and idiosyncratic differences
These are responsible for a lot of issues.
The level of solid selfhood
In other words, the authentic presence each person has achieved.
Familiarity, boredom and routine
The philosopher Hegel once said that the more familiar something becomes, the less we know it. Two hundred years ago, the average marriage lasted fifteen years. Today they are twice as long, since our life span is so much longer.
The mystery of each person's unique self
At the deepest level we do not even know ourselves fully. There will always be a space in our journey to know each other. There are things we can do to achieve healthy relationships. We can challenge our unconscious beliefs about love, change or compromise our family rules, learn new communication skills, grieve our un-grieved childhood wounds and move past them, work on our sexual issues, creatively deal with fate and commit to some spontaneity and renewal.
In the final analysis though, love cannot be defined because it exists between two utterly unique beings. I personally believe that "in the evening of life we will be judged by love alone" and I think that this belief can help us to face these relationship challenges courageously and with hope.
Reference: John Bradshaw - www.shareguide.com/Bradshawtwo.html
Friday, October 1, 2010
What parents should know about sexting
I recently went to a convention where one the topic of discussion was the problem of sexting and how it has become more frequent among children, teens and young adults. This is becoming a real problem and parents, educators and many therapist don't know what to do about it.
Rose Garrett of education.com stated "Parents may never have heard of it, but surveys show that 20 to 60 percent of teens are doing it: “sexting”. While this troubling trend continues full speed ahead, parents, teachers and lawmakers are struggling to react appropriately to the phenomenon that puts kids at risk for exploitation, harassment, and even felony charges.
What is sexting? A combination of the words “sex” and “text messaging,” “sexting” is the sending of sexually provocative messages or visual images to and from cell phones and computers. Kids as young as 9 years old may be doing in it, according to the research of Susan Lipkins, a psychologist specializing in bullying and hazing.
Some teens and young adults use sexting to flirt, others to have fun or be funny, and still others to gain recognition, improve their social status, or hurt or harass. “Sometimes it's gossip, sometimes it's a mating call, sometimes it's sexual harassment,” says Lipkins, who urges a nuanced view of the phenomenon.
“It's an abrupt change that's uncomfortable and scary to adults,” she concedes, but says parents need to look at the trend as an expression of larger changes in the way teens and young adults relate sexually. “It's really an expression of the kinds of sexual behavior they're having,” she says, noting that young people today may be more interested in casual sex than relationships, in contrast with past generations. “Many girls are not looking for a relationship: they're looking for experience and looking for freedom. Sexting is just a reflection of what's actually going on.”
Sexting makes use of cell phone and computer technology to send sexually provocative images and messages, and with increased accessibility comes greatly increased risk. Gone are the days of a girl slipping a suggestive Polaroid photo to her boyfriend: now, provocative photos sent in private can be forwarded to the entire school body after a break-up, posted online, and available in perpetuity over the Internet. That's exactly what happened to 18-year-old Jessica Logan, who committed suicide on July 3, 2008 after her ex-boyfriend forwarded nude images she had sent him to hundreds in their high school.
Emotional trauma is just one of the dangers associated with sexting behavior. Several teens across the country are now facing child pornography charges for sending or receiving sexually provocative images of themselves or peers. In Wyoming, three high school girls have been threatened with child pornography charges over digital photos in which they appear topless or in their underwear, and similar cases have appeared across the country, with charges ranging from misdemeanor to felony obscenity.
"Kids should be taught that sharing digitized images of themselves in embarrassing or compromised positions can have bad consequences, but prosecutors should not be using heavy artillery like child-pornography charges to teach them that lesson," said Witold Walczak, Legal Director for the ACLU of Pennsylvania, which has filed a lawsuit against the Wyoming County district attorney. "Child pornography is a terrible crime that involves the abuse and exploitation of children, neither of which exists here," said Walczak in an ACLU press release. "In many states these charges would land these kids on Megan's Law databases, with their pictures on Internet registries for ten years or more, and prevent them from getting many types of jobs.” That means that convicted teens could end up as registered sex offenders for the simple act of taking and sending photos of themselves.
While the legal system is slapping teens with outsized charges for sexting behavior, it's the real predators that we should be worried about, says Richard Guerry, Executive Director of the Institute for Responsible Online and Cell Phone Communication. Guerry warns that private videos and photos are increasingly becoming stolen fodder for sexually suggestive or explicit websites and blogs, even when the personal content is password protected or saved on a private hard drive.
The consequences of 'sextcasting', the wider dissemination of images and video across the Internet, are far more serious than those of simple camera-phone messaging, says Guerry. “Sexting is limited to cell-phones and is really a method of 'sextcasting,' which is a much larger issue.” Parents and lawmakers worried about sexting are already behind the times, says Guerry, who says that where previously parents worried about keeping kids from stumbling across online pornography sites, now they should be worrying about preventing children from becoming unwitting “content providers”.
It's easy to vilify sexting as an out-of-control trend to be stopped at all costs. But parents should consider sexting in the larger context of the changing sexual and technological attitudes of the next generation. “We need to really take a step back and and look at it and understand it,” says Lipkins, who thinks of sexting as a symptom, not a source, of teen sexual attitudes.
Lipkins says that prosecuting kids for sexting behavior is a misguided approach to a new problem that's best solved the old-fashioned way: by communicating with your child about risks and teaching responsible behavior. “Parents have to talk about sexting behavior as part of other behaviors, and really try to have kids learn how to navigate this world without us, because we're not going to be around forever,” says Lipkins. “We want kids to learn how to make healthy decisions on their own.”
Want to keep your child safe from sexting and its consequences? Here's how to help:
* Communication is Key
Kids probably won't respond well if you ask them pointblank, “Are you sexting?” In fact, many may not even recognize the term. Instead of grilling your child, keep informed about what's going on generally, from crushes and relationships to friendships and bullying. Many small conversations will give you a much better idea of your child's social life than one big interrogation, and you child will be more apt to talk to you if she feels you're consistently on the level. If you learn that your child is dating or engaging in sexual behaviors, have a frank talk about sex and include the topic of sexting. If not, make sure to have a discussion about bullying that addresses the issue of using text messages to harass or humiliate others.
* Be Real About Risks
Teens are neurologically disposed to be more impulsive and less rational than adults, which makes it all the more important that they know the dangers of sexting. Although it might not be an easy conversation, parents should communicate to teens that school-wide embarrassment, legal consequences, and viral distribution across the Internet are among the very real risks of this seemingly inconsequential behavior. Stopping to think twice may make all the difference if your teen is thinking of pressing “send” on something she might regret.
* Emphasize Empathy
Sexting isn't a two-way street: it's more like a multi-lane highway. That means that kids who may not be sending sexts are receiving them, forwarding them to others, and contributing to a potentially malicious environment of gossip and harassment. Urge your child to think before forwarding sexually provocative images of other people – how would he feel if that were his image instead of someone else's? Using empathy may help your teen make the decision to press “delete” instead of saving or forwarding.
* Teach 21st Century Responsibility
Kids who may be model citizens offline can make big mistakes online, so it's important to stress that responsible behavior extends to the world of email, text messaging, video chatting and social networking. Make sure that your child knows that anything posted online, or sent via cell phones or email, can be saved, shared, and virally disseminated across the Internet. That means that friends, enemies, strangers, teachers, parents and future employers could potentially see your images and videos.
Parents should see sexting not as an isolated trend, but as a new expression, fueled by technology, of the social and sexual experimentation that has always characterized adolescence. That means that the best way for parents to keep kids safe is still to send a message of their own, which emphasizes responsibility, explains the risks, and keeps the lines of communication open.
Rose Garrett of education.com stated "Parents may never have heard of it, but surveys show that 20 to 60 percent of teens are doing it: “sexting”. While this troubling trend continues full speed ahead, parents, teachers and lawmakers are struggling to react appropriately to the phenomenon that puts kids at risk for exploitation, harassment, and even felony charges.
What is sexting? A combination of the words “sex” and “text messaging,” “sexting” is the sending of sexually provocative messages or visual images to and from cell phones and computers. Kids as young as 9 years old may be doing in it, according to the research of Susan Lipkins, a psychologist specializing in bullying and hazing.
Some teens and young adults use sexting to flirt, others to have fun or be funny, and still others to gain recognition, improve their social status, or hurt or harass. “Sometimes it's gossip, sometimes it's a mating call, sometimes it's sexual harassment,” says Lipkins, who urges a nuanced view of the phenomenon.
“It's an abrupt change that's uncomfortable and scary to adults,” she concedes, but says parents need to look at the trend as an expression of larger changes in the way teens and young adults relate sexually. “It's really an expression of the kinds of sexual behavior they're having,” she says, noting that young people today may be more interested in casual sex than relationships, in contrast with past generations. “Many girls are not looking for a relationship: they're looking for experience and looking for freedom. Sexting is just a reflection of what's actually going on.”
Sexting makes use of cell phone and computer technology to send sexually provocative images and messages, and with increased accessibility comes greatly increased risk. Gone are the days of a girl slipping a suggestive Polaroid photo to her boyfriend: now, provocative photos sent in private can be forwarded to the entire school body after a break-up, posted online, and available in perpetuity over the Internet. That's exactly what happened to 18-year-old Jessica Logan, who committed suicide on July 3, 2008 after her ex-boyfriend forwarded nude images she had sent him to hundreds in their high school.
Emotional trauma is just one of the dangers associated with sexting behavior. Several teens across the country are now facing child pornography charges for sending or receiving sexually provocative images of themselves or peers. In Wyoming, three high school girls have been threatened with child pornography charges over digital photos in which they appear topless or in their underwear, and similar cases have appeared across the country, with charges ranging from misdemeanor to felony obscenity.
"Kids should be taught that sharing digitized images of themselves in embarrassing or compromised positions can have bad consequences, but prosecutors should not be using heavy artillery like child-pornography charges to teach them that lesson," said Witold Walczak, Legal Director for the ACLU of Pennsylvania, which has filed a lawsuit against the Wyoming County district attorney. "Child pornography is a terrible crime that involves the abuse and exploitation of children, neither of which exists here," said Walczak in an ACLU press release. "In many states these charges would land these kids on Megan's Law databases, with their pictures on Internet registries for ten years or more, and prevent them from getting many types of jobs.” That means that convicted teens could end up as registered sex offenders for the simple act of taking and sending photos of themselves.
While the legal system is slapping teens with outsized charges for sexting behavior, it's the real predators that we should be worried about, says Richard Guerry, Executive Director of the Institute for Responsible Online and Cell Phone Communication. Guerry warns that private videos and photos are increasingly becoming stolen fodder for sexually suggestive or explicit websites and blogs, even when the personal content is password protected or saved on a private hard drive.
The consequences of 'sextcasting', the wider dissemination of images and video across the Internet, are far more serious than those of simple camera-phone messaging, says Guerry. “Sexting is limited to cell-phones and is really a method of 'sextcasting,' which is a much larger issue.” Parents and lawmakers worried about sexting are already behind the times, says Guerry, who says that where previously parents worried about keeping kids from stumbling across online pornography sites, now they should be worrying about preventing children from becoming unwitting “content providers”.
It's easy to vilify sexting as an out-of-control trend to be stopped at all costs. But parents should consider sexting in the larger context of the changing sexual and technological attitudes of the next generation. “We need to really take a step back and and look at it and understand it,” says Lipkins, who thinks of sexting as a symptom, not a source, of teen sexual attitudes.
Lipkins says that prosecuting kids for sexting behavior is a misguided approach to a new problem that's best solved the old-fashioned way: by communicating with your child about risks and teaching responsible behavior. “Parents have to talk about sexting behavior as part of other behaviors, and really try to have kids learn how to navigate this world without us, because we're not going to be around forever,” says Lipkins. “We want kids to learn how to make healthy decisions on their own.”
Want to keep your child safe from sexting and its consequences? Here's how to help:
* Communication is Key
Kids probably won't respond well if you ask them pointblank, “Are you sexting?” In fact, many may not even recognize the term. Instead of grilling your child, keep informed about what's going on generally, from crushes and relationships to friendships and bullying. Many small conversations will give you a much better idea of your child's social life than one big interrogation, and you child will be more apt to talk to you if she feels you're consistently on the level. If you learn that your child is dating or engaging in sexual behaviors, have a frank talk about sex and include the topic of sexting. If not, make sure to have a discussion about bullying that addresses the issue of using text messages to harass or humiliate others.
* Be Real About Risks
Teens are neurologically disposed to be more impulsive and less rational than adults, which makes it all the more important that they know the dangers of sexting. Although it might not be an easy conversation, parents should communicate to teens that school-wide embarrassment, legal consequences, and viral distribution across the Internet are among the very real risks of this seemingly inconsequential behavior. Stopping to think twice may make all the difference if your teen is thinking of pressing “send” on something she might regret.
* Emphasize Empathy
Sexting isn't a two-way street: it's more like a multi-lane highway. That means that kids who may not be sending sexts are receiving them, forwarding them to others, and contributing to a potentially malicious environment of gossip and harassment. Urge your child to think before forwarding sexually provocative images of other people – how would he feel if that were his image instead of someone else's? Using empathy may help your teen make the decision to press “delete” instead of saving or forwarding.
* Teach 21st Century Responsibility
Kids who may be model citizens offline can make big mistakes online, so it's important to stress that responsible behavior extends to the world of email, text messaging, video chatting and social networking. Make sure that your child knows that anything posted online, or sent via cell phones or email, can be saved, shared, and virally disseminated across the Internet. That means that friends, enemies, strangers, teachers, parents and future employers could potentially see your images and videos.
Parents should see sexting not as an isolated trend, but as a new expression, fueled by technology, of the social and sexual experimentation that has always characterized adolescence. That means that the best way for parents to keep kids safe is still to send a message of their own, which emphasizes responsibility, explains the risks, and keeps the lines of communication open.
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Kansas Reflections on Erich Fromm’s “To Have or To Be”
Excerpt from kansasreflections.wordpress.com:
Erich Fromm is an influential social philosopher and prolific writer, whose life work offers a provocative synthesis of Western capitalism, Marxist humanism and socialist rational planning. He defines two modes of being: “to have” and ” to be”, and examines the characteristics and values of lives led in each mode with respect to materialism, politics, religion, spirituality, knowledge, love, sex, language and economics. He asserts that modern living is dominated by the “to have” mode and generalizes it as a soul-less and thoughtless pursuit of material things that disrespects the human soul, love of nature and fellow humans and leads to unsustainable pursuit of things which can lead to poverty, war and extinction. Fromm discards the idea that either conventional Western capitalism or Soviet-style communism offer a way out of the darkness, since both systems remain entrenched in the “to have” mode of being. He offers an escape from this bleak vision of the future, by suggesting that a shift to the “to be” mode of being will bring a change in perspective and behavior at the individual, family, tribe, state and national levels. He asserts this change can bring lives back into harmony with the needs of the human spirit and permit sustainable societies to emerge.His utopian vision of modern living blends the freedom, liberty and productive power of Western capitalism, the central planning and rationality of Soviet style communism, and the tempered and non-materialistic spiritual centeredness of Buddhism and European- style mystics like Meister Eckhart. A society organized along these lines could manifest as economically linked villages of perhaps 100 families. They would be voluntarily joined in support, satisfying the legitimate needs of healthy living through the free exchange of goods and services produced by craftsmen. As craftsmen, people would take pride in and develop a sense of identity through their careful, mindful work and whose stewardship of precious resources would be reflected in a sustainable, respectful partnership with nature and their fellow man. Appetites are suppressed to just those that are commonly and wisely thought to be legitimate. Common spiritual needs are valued and encouraged at each level of social organization. Language itself is amended to reflect the importance of creating “states of being” that reflect nurturing, loving spiritual lives, families, and communities. You will notice this description is full of passive voice, because it is never quite clear “who” will be taking the lead or being the instrument of action in a transformation on a species level. I will address this later in greater detail.
I admire the scope, depth and breadth of Fromm’s vision, and the passion he brought to his life work, and his commitment to living his principles, as seen through his direct engagement with the dominant issues of his day. He was a social philosopher who lived his words and put himself into the arena of ideas and actions to make a difference. He made a positive difference in the lives of millions and those who worked closely with him testify to his optimism, energy, and basic human goodness. Granting all of that, and acknowledging that I have changed my opinion of Fromm’s work after spending time in background research and reflection, I want to engage his work in two useful ways: through disinterested philosophical discourse, and through an abbreviated dialectical materialism: a method of argumentative inquiry that would have come naturally to a Marxist. I decided on this approach after Dr Armstrong asked what Fromm might have said in response to a couple of extended Moodle discussions that were critical of some of his positions.Constructivism is a world view that asserts we are active participants in the creation of our knowledge of the world, particularly in the human, social areas of our lives. There are two well-known forms of dialogue that have been instrumental in the development of social, political and economic knowledge: the disinterested philosophical discourse of ancient philosophers described so well by Hadot (2002) and the dialectical materialism of Karl Marx, which is a fusion of Hegel’s dialectics and Feuerbach’s materialism with roots that reach back to the ancient Greeks as well. (S.E.P, n.d.) (Mao, 1938)
Hadot’s discussion of discourse is thorough. Discourse obliges you to set aside your own perspective, to accept the other participant’s positions and truths, and to transcend disinterestedly to a new perspective which leads both to increased self knowledge, knowledge of the other, and to a new appreciation of the synthesis that is possible through a fusion of different opinions. There is a sense of philosophical cooperation and wisdom in play for true discourse. (Hadot, 2002)Marx’s dialectical materialism describes a dialogue between opposing views as a struggle between forces, with each committing passion and insight to argue a position. The initial argument is known as the thesis, the opposite view as the antithesis. Out of the tension of the vigorous exchange between thesis and antithesis, a broader, more comprehensive synthesis is created, which contains elements of both previous positions but which can be said to resolve the tension, encapsulate the essence of both, and move on to a new and deeper understanding of the situation. As an example, Marx characterize the struggle between owners (thesis) and workers (antithesis) over the means of production as a dialectic which becomes resolved into a synthesis of communism, after the tension of class warfare has run its course and been resolved.
I experienced both of these modes of dialogue and constructive knowledge in my readings of and reflections on Fromm’s work. The effect of the two different modes on my thinking has been instructive for me and serves to demonstrate the utility of both modes. I like the idea that they contribute both heat (the dialectic) and light (the discourse) to my own understanding of Fromm.
Dialectic:
The dialectic generated heat from my emotional reaction to my initial reading of Fromm, as I discovered deep seated and argumentative reactions to his assertions, conclusions, and matters offered in in evidence to support his claims. These responses have roots in my undergraduate days as a student of Asian history and political science in the 1970s when I did a lot of work in the historical events surrounding socialism and communism in Asia and Europe, while simultaneously experiencing and exploring non-Western cultural and religious responses to the challenges of defining and living the good life as seen by Hindus, Buddhists and Taoists.
I read Fromm from that perspective: as a modern who sought to synthesize the ancient and modern thoughts of the good life and human nature with the tidal forces that were defining and shaping human culture through economics and political struggle. I understood his perspective and rationale for opting to follow the path of enlightened Marxism with its foundations in rationality and central planning, its concern for social justice, and his belief that freedom includes the ability to shape our destiny through choice and action, even if it means confronting and opposing what has been thought of as human nature combined with the power of tradition.
The heat came from the difference between his choices and my own, since I have chosen a different approach to understanding, framing and drawing policy conclusions from the same data set. My beliefs and values follow along the lines of valuing individual freedoms in the traditions of Payne and Locke, the political freedoms and limited government of Jefferson, the lack of central planning found in the tenets of laisse-faire capitalism, and the intellectual humility and disbelief in the perfectability of man epitomized by Twain. When the dialectical smoke had cleared though, I found room for Fromm and I to coexist:
Here are three samples of the thesis-antithesis-synthesis threads that I worked through in the dialectical tradition. In each case Fromm plays the role of thesis, as is his right as “first speaker” since we are using his text, not mine. They are representative of the more than 20 different annotated emotionally charged differences I discovered upon my first reading.
a. Tennyson’s poem: Fromm’s thesis is that Tennyson’s speaker tore the flower from the ground to understand it, while the enlightened spirit became one with it as co-members of the scene. My antithesis is that it is a matter of interpretation as to whether Tennyson’s speaker killed the flower, since it could have carefully and mindfully been moved to a new place for examination and understanding without harming it. Indeed, later in the book, Fromm describes the wisdom of a Japanese gardener who transplants plants without harm to create beautiful, spiritual gardens. My synthesis is that while the passive appreciation of the flower in nature is groovy, it is the Western scientists’ inquiry which leads to new knowledge of the world around us, but that a science without humble mindfulness can easily lead to disaster for the race given the reach and consequences of modern technology.
b. Human nature and central planning: Fromm’s thesis is that we can reshape our actions beliefs and destiny through the power of rational thought and disciplined action, and that we can design a universally applicable, better life for everyone. My antithesis is that man is in equal parts, a rational and emotional being; that there are limits to rationality and the persuasiveness of logic and reason; that life is too complex to be reduced to centrally planned, universal designs for the good life; and that the political realities of life do not permit simple transitions due to the nature of power. My synthesis is that we can appeal through dialogue and discourse to the good that is in human nature, and aspire to an improved life for others, and that rugged individualism is not the ideal life for everyone either, despite its personal appeal to me.
c. Black and White classifications: Fromm’s thesis is expressed in absolute terms, making mutually exclusive distinctions in almost every category he considers. Examples include his unqualified support for the success and goodness of the sexual revolution of the 1960s; the characterization of language itself as a conscious means whereby those in power create the meaning of individual words to further their materialistic agenda; that the choice of capitalism must inevitably lead to unbridled appetites for more and more until we exhaust the planet. He takes everything to its logical and often illogical extreme to dramatize the differences in the modes of beings and in the choices presented to people and nations. My antithesis is that there are checks and balances between your values, between members of your family, between friends, interest groups, communities, branches of government, and between nations themselves. Further, these checks and balances are adaptive and dynamic and that it is in the peaceful accommodations and adjustments we make that we have hope for a better future for all; that there are limits to how far a theory or model may be taken to explain phenomena; that there is a limit to the region of fit for any theory. My synthesis is that black and white characterizations can be useful to make dramatic statements that get your attention; that sometimes taking things to the logical extreme is a valuable way to demonstrate the very need for the compromise and discourse that I favor. Discourse:
After declaring a week of truce for reflection and research, I engaged Fromm discursively. I researched his background, his other writings, and the testimony of friends and colleagues concerning his impact on their lives as a scholar and a person. I found that by conducting dispassionate research, I was able to transcend the heat of the dialectic, which actually helped me to complete the synthesis portion of each dialectic thread where I’d experienced an emotional reaction. The syntheses in the three example of dialectic above were only reached after a cooling off period of discourse, research and reflection.
I found that the heat of the dialectic helped me raise the energy to conduct the research. Once engaged in research, my natural curiosity took over and carried me deeper than I would have gone if just motivated by a need to be right in some fanciful, contrived “argument” between Fromm and me. Fromm’s Germanic background reminded me of Hesse’s story of Magister Ludi and the Glass Bead Game, where a traditional game continued to be played long past the time when its origin, relevance and importance had been forgotten.
I grew to respect for Fromm’s independent thinking, even as it caused him to depart over and over again from groups once friendly to his thinking, and where he could have remained and enjoyed the fruits of inclusion. He was a German Jew who left both Germany and the Jewish faith in search of a better life and a deeper spirituality. He was a trained psychologist and psychiatrist who left the confines of the Freudian, Rogerian and Jungian schools of thought to elaborate his own ideas of personality and psychological balance. He was a social philosopher who engaged in the practical worlds of politics and punditry by fighting peacefully against nuclear proliferation and the Vietnam War , and in support of social justice. He was a prolific scholar, yet he wrote many popular books that made his ideas on the good life accessible to the masses. He was a systematic thinker, yet his ideas and concepts evolved through time as he reflected on his experience and the world around him. He was a good friend and a generous humble person by the accounts we have from his friends and co-workers.
And so, I find in Fromm all the elements of the good life defined by Socrates and the ancients. He is a man of passion, intellect, scholarship and good works, who lived an examined life, and who sought to apply his values in daily life. If he and I disagree on certain aspects of how precisely to define the good life and how completely we might propose a design for a good life for all, surely the world is large enough for us to both live in it at the same peacefully and in mutual support.
In the course of thinking about this paper, the design of its concept and flow, the research I conducted, the Moodle discussions where I began to partially explore some of these ideas and in the actual writing this paper, I found the heat of dialectic and the light of discourse to be useful and enlightening. I think that the combination of both perspectives was more important that the exclusive use of either by itself would have been. To have applied just the dialectic would have resulted into an argumentative essay between Fromm and I, whereas a pure discursive paper, with the energy of passion, may have been a theoretical inquiry without the motivation to go beyond my own beliefs.
In conclusion, I have enjoyed and learned from my engagement with the life and works of Erich Fromm."
See http://kansasreflections.wordpress.com/2009/11/25/reflecting-on-erich-fromms-to-have-or-to-be/
References:
Currie, N. (2008). To Have or To Be. frieze magazine: a leading magizine of contemporary art and culture.. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.frieze.com/comment/article/to_have_or_to_be/
Daniels, V. (2003). Lecture notes on Erich Fromm. Victor Daniels’ Website in The Psychology Department at Sonoma State University. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.sonoma.edu/users/d/daniels/frommnotes.html
Fromm, E. (1976). Fromm: To have or to be? New York: Continuum.
Hadot, P. (2002). What is Ancient Philosophy. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Infed editors. (n.d.) erich fromm: freedom and alienation, and loving and being, in education. infed: the encyclopedia of informal education. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.infed.org/thinkers/fromm.htm
Maccoby, M. (1994). The Two Voices of Erich Fromm: The Prophetic and the Analytic. The Maccoby Group: Agents of Change. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.maccoby.com/Articles/TwoVoices.shtml
Mao, T. (1938). Dialectical materialism. Marxist Internet Archive. Retrieved Noc 17, 2009, from http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/volume-6/mswv6_30.htm
MGM830 Moodle entry authors. (2009). Assorted. MGM830 Moodle discussions. Retrieved Nov 15, 2009, from http://www.instituteforadvancedstudies.net/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=26503
New World Encyclopedia editors. (n.d.) Fromm, Erich. New World Encyclopedia. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Erich_Fromm
Pace, G. (1977). Erich Fromm Interview: To Have or To Be. scribd. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.scribd.com/doc/8895007/Erich-Fromm-Interview-To-Have-or-to-Be
Raapana, N, & Friedrich, N. (2005). What is the Hegelian Dialectic?. Crossroads: the Kjol Ministries. Retrieved Vov 15, 2009, from http://www.crossroad.to/articles2/05/dialectic.htm
SparkNotes Editors. (n.d.). SparkNote on The Communist Manifesto. Retrieved November 17, 2009, from http://www.sparknotes.com/philosophy/communist/
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy editors. (2008). Karl Marx: Theses on Feuerbach. The Stanford Encyclopedia on Philosophy (SEP). Retrieved Nov 17, 2009, from http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/marx/#2.4
Erich Fromm is an influential social philosopher and prolific writer, whose life work offers a provocative synthesis of Western capitalism, Marxist humanism and socialist rational planning. He defines two modes of being: “to have” and ” to be”, and examines the characteristics and values of lives led in each mode with respect to materialism, politics, religion, spirituality, knowledge, love, sex, language and economics. He asserts that modern living is dominated by the “to have” mode and generalizes it as a soul-less and thoughtless pursuit of material things that disrespects the human soul, love of nature and fellow humans and leads to unsustainable pursuit of things which can lead to poverty, war and extinction. Fromm discards the idea that either conventional Western capitalism or Soviet-style communism offer a way out of the darkness, since both systems remain entrenched in the “to have” mode of being. He offers an escape from this bleak vision of the future, by suggesting that a shift to the “to be” mode of being will bring a change in perspective and behavior at the individual, family, tribe, state and national levels. He asserts this change can bring lives back into harmony with the needs of the human spirit and permit sustainable societies to emerge.His utopian vision of modern living blends the freedom, liberty and productive power of Western capitalism, the central planning and rationality of Soviet style communism, and the tempered and non-materialistic spiritual centeredness of Buddhism and European- style mystics like Meister Eckhart. A society organized along these lines could manifest as economically linked villages of perhaps 100 families. They would be voluntarily joined in support, satisfying the legitimate needs of healthy living through the free exchange of goods and services produced by craftsmen. As craftsmen, people would take pride in and develop a sense of identity through their careful, mindful work and whose stewardship of precious resources would be reflected in a sustainable, respectful partnership with nature and their fellow man. Appetites are suppressed to just those that are commonly and wisely thought to be legitimate. Common spiritual needs are valued and encouraged at each level of social organization. Language itself is amended to reflect the importance of creating “states of being” that reflect nurturing, loving spiritual lives, families, and communities. You will notice this description is full of passive voice, because it is never quite clear “who” will be taking the lead or being the instrument of action in a transformation on a species level. I will address this later in greater detail.
I admire the scope, depth and breadth of Fromm’s vision, and the passion he brought to his life work, and his commitment to living his principles, as seen through his direct engagement with the dominant issues of his day. He was a social philosopher who lived his words and put himself into the arena of ideas and actions to make a difference. He made a positive difference in the lives of millions and those who worked closely with him testify to his optimism, energy, and basic human goodness. Granting all of that, and acknowledging that I have changed my opinion of Fromm’s work after spending time in background research and reflection, I want to engage his work in two useful ways: through disinterested philosophical discourse, and through an abbreviated dialectical materialism: a method of argumentative inquiry that would have come naturally to a Marxist. I decided on this approach after Dr Armstrong asked what Fromm might have said in response to a couple of extended Moodle discussions that were critical of some of his positions.Constructivism is a world view that asserts we are active participants in the creation of our knowledge of the world, particularly in the human, social areas of our lives. There are two well-known forms of dialogue that have been instrumental in the development of social, political and economic knowledge: the disinterested philosophical discourse of ancient philosophers described so well by Hadot (2002) and the dialectical materialism of Karl Marx, which is a fusion of Hegel’s dialectics and Feuerbach’s materialism with roots that reach back to the ancient Greeks as well. (S.E.P, n.d.) (Mao, 1938)
Hadot’s discussion of discourse is thorough. Discourse obliges you to set aside your own perspective, to accept the other participant’s positions and truths, and to transcend disinterestedly to a new perspective which leads both to increased self knowledge, knowledge of the other, and to a new appreciation of the synthesis that is possible through a fusion of different opinions. There is a sense of philosophical cooperation and wisdom in play for true discourse. (Hadot, 2002)Marx’s dialectical materialism describes a dialogue between opposing views as a struggle between forces, with each committing passion and insight to argue a position. The initial argument is known as the thesis, the opposite view as the antithesis. Out of the tension of the vigorous exchange between thesis and antithesis, a broader, more comprehensive synthesis is created, which contains elements of both previous positions but which can be said to resolve the tension, encapsulate the essence of both, and move on to a new and deeper understanding of the situation. As an example, Marx characterize the struggle between owners (thesis) and workers (antithesis) over the means of production as a dialectic which becomes resolved into a synthesis of communism, after the tension of class warfare has run its course and been resolved.
I experienced both of these modes of dialogue and constructive knowledge in my readings of and reflections on Fromm’s work. The effect of the two different modes on my thinking has been instructive for me and serves to demonstrate the utility of both modes. I like the idea that they contribute both heat (the dialectic) and light (the discourse) to my own understanding of Fromm.
Dialectic:
The dialectic generated heat from my emotional reaction to my initial reading of Fromm, as I discovered deep seated and argumentative reactions to his assertions, conclusions, and matters offered in in evidence to support his claims. These responses have roots in my undergraduate days as a student of Asian history and political science in the 1970s when I did a lot of work in the historical events surrounding socialism and communism in Asia and Europe, while simultaneously experiencing and exploring non-Western cultural and religious responses to the challenges of defining and living the good life as seen by Hindus, Buddhists and Taoists.
I read Fromm from that perspective: as a modern who sought to synthesize the ancient and modern thoughts of the good life and human nature with the tidal forces that were defining and shaping human culture through economics and political struggle. I understood his perspective and rationale for opting to follow the path of enlightened Marxism with its foundations in rationality and central planning, its concern for social justice, and his belief that freedom includes the ability to shape our destiny through choice and action, even if it means confronting and opposing what has been thought of as human nature combined with the power of tradition.
The heat came from the difference between his choices and my own, since I have chosen a different approach to understanding, framing and drawing policy conclusions from the same data set. My beliefs and values follow along the lines of valuing individual freedoms in the traditions of Payne and Locke, the political freedoms and limited government of Jefferson, the lack of central planning found in the tenets of laisse-faire capitalism, and the intellectual humility and disbelief in the perfectability of man epitomized by Twain. When the dialectical smoke had cleared though, I found room for Fromm and I to coexist:
Here are three samples of the thesis-antithesis-synthesis threads that I worked through in the dialectical tradition. In each case Fromm plays the role of thesis, as is his right as “first speaker” since we are using his text, not mine. They are representative of the more than 20 different annotated emotionally charged differences I discovered upon my first reading.
a. Tennyson’s poem: Fromm’s thesis is that Tennyson’s speaker tore the flower from the ground to understand it, while the enlightened spirit became one with it as co-members of the scene. My antithesis is that it is a matter of interpretation as to whether Tennyson’s speaker killed the flower, since it could have carefully and mindfully been moved to a new place for examination and understanding without harming it. Indeed, later in the book, Fromm describes the wisdom of a Japanese gardener who transplants plants without harm to create beautiful, spiritual gardens. My synthesis is that while the passive appreciation of the flower in nature is groovy, it is the Western scientists’ inquiry which leads to new knowledge of the world around us, but that a science without humble mindfulness can easily lead to disaster for the race given the reach and consequences of modern technology.
b. Human nature and central planning: Fromm’s thesis is that we can reshape our actions beliefs and destiny through the power of rational thought and disciplined action, and that we can design a universally applicable, better life for everyone. My antithesis is that man is in equal parts, a rational and emotional being; that there are limits to rationality and the persuasiveness of logic and reason; that life is too complex to be reduced to centrally planned, universal designs for the good life; and that the political realities of life do not permit simple transitions due to the nature of power. My synthesis is that we can appeal through dialogue and discourse to the good that is in human nature, and aspire to an improved life for others, and that rugged individualism is not the ideal life for everyone either, despite its personal appeal to me.
c. Black and White classifications: Fromm’s thesis is expressed in absolute terms, making mutually exclusive distinctions in almost every category he considers. Examples include his unqualified support for the success and goodness of the sexual revolution of the 1960s; the characterization of language itself as a conscious means whereby those in power create the meaning of individual words to further their materialistic agenda; that the choice of capitalism must inevitably lead to unbridled appetites for more and more until we exhaust the planet. He takes everything to its logical and often illogical extreme to dramatize the differences in the modes of beings and in the choices presented to people and nations. My antithesis is that there are checks and balances between your values, between members of your family, between friends, interest groups, communities, branches of government, and between nations themselves. Further, these checks and balances are adaptive and dynamic and that it is in the peaceful accommodations and adjustments we make that we have hope for a better future for all; that there are limits to how far a theory or model may be taken to explain phenomena; that there is a limit to the region of fit for any theory. My synthesis is that black and white characterizations can be useful to make dramatic statements that get your attention; that sometimes taking things to the logical extreme is a valuable way to demonstrate the very need for the compromise and discourse that I favor. Discourse:
After declaring a week of truce for reflection and research, I engaged Fromm discursively. I researched his background, his other writings, and the testimony of friends and colleagues concerning his impact on their lives as a scholar and a person. I found that by conducting dispassionate research, I was able to transcend the heat of the dialectic, which actually helped me to complete the synthesis portion of each dialectic thread where I’d experienced an emotional reaction. The syntheses in the three example of dialectic above were only reached after a cooling off period of discourse, research and reflection.
I found that the heat of the dialectic helped me raise the energy to conduct the research. Once engaged in research, my natural curiosity took over and carried me deeper than I would have gone if just motivated by a need to be right in some fanciful, contrived “argument” between Fromm and me. Fromm’s Germanic background reminded me of Hesse’s story of Magister Ludi and the Glass Bead Game, where a traditional game continued to be played long past the time when its origin, relevance and importance had been forgotten.
I grew to respect for Fromm’s independent thinking, even as it caused him to depart over and over again from groups once friendly to his thinking, and where he could have remained and enjoyed the fruits of inclusion. He was a German Jew who left both Germany and the Jewish faith in search of a better life and a deeper spirituality. He was a trained psychologist and psychiatrist who left the confines of the Freudian, Rogerian and Jungian schools of thought to elaborate his own ideas of personality and psychological balance. He was a social philosopher who engaged in the practical worlds of politics and punditry by fighting peacefully against nuclear proliferation and the Vietnam War , and in support of social justice. He was a prolific scholar, yet he wrote many popular books that made his ideas on the good life accessible to the masses. He was a systematic thinker, yet his ideas and concepts evolved through time as he reflected on his experience and the world around him. He was a good friend and a generous humble person by the accounts we have from his friends and co-workers.
And so, I find in Fromm all the elements of the good life defined by Socrates and the ancients. He is a man of passion, intellect, scholarship and good works, who lived an examined life, and who sought to apply his values in daily life. If he and I disagree on certain aspects of how precisely to define the good life and how completely we might propose a design for a good life for all, surely the world is large enough for us to both live in it at the same peacefully and in mutual support.
In the course of thinking about this paper, the design of its concept and flow, the research I conducted, the Moodle discussions where I began to partially explore some of these ideas and in the actual writing this paper, I found the heat of dialectic and the light of discourse to be useful and enlightening. I think that the combination of both perspectives was more important that the exclusive use of either by itself would have been. To have applied just the dialectic would have resulted into an argumentative essay between Fromm and I, whereas a pure discursive paper, with the energy of passion, may have been a theoretical inquiry without the motivation to go beyond my own beliefs.
In conclusion, I have enjoyed and learned from my engagement with the life and works of Erich Fromm."
See http://kansasreflections.wordpress.com/2009/11/25/reflecting-on-erich-fromms-to-have-or-to-be/
References:
Currie, N. (2008). To Have or To Be. frieze magazine: a leading magizine of contemporary art and culture.. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.frieze.com/comment/article/to_have_or_to_be/
Daniels, V. (2003). Lecture notes on Erich Fromm. Victor Daniels’ Website in The Psychology Department at Sonoma State University. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.sonoma.edu/users/d/daniels/frommnotes.html
Fromm, E. (1976). Fromm: To have or to be? New York: Continuum.
Hadot, P. (2002). What is Ancient Philosophy. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
Infed editors. (n.d.) erich fromm: freedom and alienation, and loving and being, in education. infed: the encyclopedia of informal education. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.infed.org/thinkers/fromm.htm
Maccoby, M. (1994). The Two Voices of Erich Fromm: The Prophetic and the Analytic. The Maccoby Group: Agents of Change. Retrieved Nov 20, 2009, from http://www.maccoby.com/Articles/TwoVoices.shtml
Mao, T. (1938). Dialectical materialism. Marxist Internet Archive. Retrieved Noc 17, 2009, from http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/volume-6/mswv6_30.htm
MGM830 Moodle entry authors. (2009). Assorted. MGM830 Moodle discussions. Retrieved Nov 15, 2009, from http://www.instituteforadvancedstudies.net/mod/forum/discuss.php?d=26503
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Friday, July 30, 2010
How Hypnotherapy Works
The reason hypnosis works to relieve a wide variety of mental and physical problems is that all physical and mental experiences and behaviors, whether they are conscious or unconscious, psychogenic or resulting from physical injury or illness, follow nerve transmissions in the brain. The pathways of these nerve signals can be altered by suggestion when the brain is in an alpha or theta brain wave state. These are the brain wave states that lie between sleeping and waking consciousness.
The task of the hypnotherapist is to activate these naturally occurring brain wave states. The subconscious and unconscious functions of mind are more susceptible to suggestion in these states, so that healing patterns of response can be suggested, practiced and established as an automatic response to a specific experience.
For example, a stress response to job-hunting can change to one of relaxed confidence. Another example is the experience of pain, which can be modified by being blocked or changed via establishing a new neuron pathway, so that the sensation of pain becomes a sensation of warmth, or a slight itch.
While it is the hypnotherapist who speaks the words that induce the alpha or theta brain wave state and and makes the suggestions to set up a new pattern of response, it is the client who determines what the new response will be. Hypnotherapy offers many methods to go about making changes, and a well-educated hypnotherapist knows how to interview a client to determine which combination of methods would be most comfortable and healing for each individual client.
While a hypnotherapist can neither diagnose nor treat medical conditions, clients can use a hypnotherapist's skills to change their automatic responses to conditions that their physicians have already diagnosed, assisting whatever treatments clients' physicians have prescribed. Hypnotherapists work alongside doctors to reduce or transform sensations of pain and can prepare clients for surgery and childbirth ahead of time by teaching them self-hypnosis and giving suggestions for rapid healing after surgery. These same hypnotherapy methods can be used in addition to physicians' treatments for conditions that cannot be addressed with surgery. Hypnotherapy can also be used by clients to augment medical treatment of psychiatric issues.
Enlisting the immense strength and unwavering focus of the subconscious mind can strongly enhance a client's psychological and physical health. However, the only effects produced by hypnosis are those the client agrees are beneficial because the subconscious mind will only accept that which it has already determined is acceptable. In addition, a reputable hypnotherapist will thoroughly discuss and review the suggestions to be made with the client beforehand.
Source: American Association of Professional Hypnotherapists
The task of the hypnotherapist is to activate these naturally occurring brain wave states. The subconscious and unconscious functions of mind are more susceptible to suggestion in these states, so that healing patterns of response can be suggested, practiced and established as an automatic response to a specific experience.
For example, a stress response to job-hunting can change to one of relaxed confidence. Another example is the experience of pain, which can be modified by being blocked or changed via establishing a new neuron pathway, so that the sensation of pain becomes a sensation of warmth, or a slight itch.
While it is the hypnotherapist who speaks the words that induce the alpha or theta brain wave state and and makes the suggestions to set up a new pattern of response, it is the client who determines what the new response will be. Hypnotherapy offers many methods to go about making changes, and a well-educated hypnotherapist knows how to interview a client to determine which combination of methods would be most comfortable and healing for each individual client.
While a hypnotherapist can neither diagnose nor treat medical conditions, clients can use a hypnotherapist's skills to change their automatic responses to conditions that their physicians have already diagnosed, assisting whatever treatments clients' physicians have prescribed. Hypnotherapists work alongside doctors to reduce or transform sensations of pain and can prepare clients for surgery and childbirth ahead of time by teaching them self-hypnosis and giving suggestions for rapid healing after surgery. These same hypnotherapy methods can be used in addition to physicians' treatments for conditions that cannot be addressed with surgery. Hypnotherapy can also be used by clients to augment medical treatment of psychiatric issues.
Enlisting the immense strength and unwavering focus of the subconscious mind can strongly enhance a client's psychological and physical health. However, the only effects produced by hypnosis are those the client agrees are beneficial because the subconscious mind will only accept that which it has already determined is acceptable. In addition, a reputable hypnotherapist will thoroughly discuss and review the suggestions to be made with the client beforehand.
Source: American Association of Professional Hypnotherapists
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
How Shame and Toxic Guilt inhibit Change
I recently conducted two trainings on the subjects of shame and change. One of the trainings was through LDS Family Services and the other was with the Dept of Child and Family Services through the State of Utah. This is the research which goes with the presentation. Much of this research correlates with concepts which are found in my book "Healing Secrets". I had many people from the two trainings ask me to expound on the concepts I introduced there. Here is the response:
SHAME AND GUILT
Recent work on the psychological distinctions between shame and guilt has important implications for mental health counselors. In particular, the work of Lewis (1971) and Tanguey (1990, 1995; Tangney & Dearing, 2002) identifies psychological differences between shame and guilt and how they are phenomenologically expressed that provides helpful insight to those working with clients experiencing these emotions. This paper draws upon this work to establish criteria for distinguishing shame and guilt and to offer guidelines for their treatment.
Distinctions between shame and guilt are often overlooked by those in clinical work (Tangney & Dearing, 2002). Particularly in Western culture, they are often assumed to be interchangeable or synonymous terms (Gilbert, Pehl, & Allan, 1994). Erik Erikson (1950), one of the first to distinguish psychologically between shame and guilt, noted that "shame is an emotion insufficiently studied, because in our civilization it is so easily absorbed by guilt" (13. 252; cf. Lansky, 1995).
This failure to adequately distinguish shame from guilt ignores a growing body of research on important psychological differences between these two emotions (Tangney & Dearing, 2002). Especially noticeable is the absence of studies that explore the implications of these differences for counseling. Research exploring the psychological differences between shame and guilt notes that failure to distinguish between the two emotions contributes to the neglect of shame as a significant clinical problem (Capps, 1993; Konstam, Chernoff, & Deveney, 2001; Tangney & Dearing); furthermore, shame is often mistaken for guilt, leading to ineffective treatment for those suffering from shame (Lewis, 1971; Nathanson, 1992; Tangney, 1996; Tangney & Dearing; Tangney, Miller, Flicker, & Barlow, 1996). These problems are likely to increase, given the conclusion of several notable authors that shame, not guilt, is now the prominent emotion troubling Western culture (Scheff, 1995; Tanguey et al., 1996; cf. Capps, 1993; Cheng & Page, 1995; Fowler, 1996; Kaufman, 2004).
Although shame and guilt show considerable overlap, often appearing together in clients (Tangney & Dearing, 2002), there is a heuristic as well as practical clinical value in reflecting on the differences. This paper reviews recent research on the psychological and phenomenological characteristics of shame as distinguished from guilt. It summarizes important distinctions between the two emotions and how they are experienced. It then outlines the implications of the differences for counseling.
Mental health counselors will especially be interested in the research on differences between shame and guilt because it helps highlight the developmental and growth aspects of these emotions, not simply the life difficulties that may accompany them. Attending to the developmental differences is especially important in formulating treatment goals and strategies.
DISTINGUISHING SHAME AND GUILT PSYCHOLOGICALLY
Erik Erikson (1950) made one of the first psychological distinctions between shame and guilt. His lifespan model outlined the growth of the self, both body and psyche, as it occurs in the context of expanding social interactions. He laid out critical tasks of emotional development occurring throughout the lifespan that promote healthy psychosocial growth. In Erikson's model, growth occurred through balancing the tension produced by certain polarities. However, this is not an even balance of polarities; although both polarities are necessary, health required an "overbalance" of the positive quality. The resolution of each crisis produced an ego strength that was integrated into one's emerging identity and helped one face the tasks of the next developmental stage. Erikson's list of critical tasks included articulation of the development of shame and guilt.
For Erikson (1950), shame preceded guilt developmentally. As with all the critical tasks, without a proper balance of the polarities one did not proceed well to the next task. This meant that without a proper measure of shame, neither guilt nor initiative developed appropriately. However, if there was too much shame, initiative and guilt were overshadowed by compulsive activity. Since shame was connected to the development of autonomy and the ego quality of will, an overbalance of shame and doubt (vs. autonomy with the optimal amount of shame and doubt) resulted in compulsive activity as the ego overcompensated in its attempts to master and manage the expressions of will. By contrast, guilt was associated with initiative and the emerging ego quality of purpose. An overbalance of guilt, instead of an optimal level of guilt with an overbalance of initiative, inhibited productivity and left the person lacking in purposeful drive toward future goals.
Since Erikson (1950), there has been considerable work, both theoretical and empirical, on the psychological distinctions between shame and guilt. Over the past three decades, Helen Block Lewis's distinction (1971) between shame and guilt has emerged as one of the dominant conceptualizations, in large part because it has received strong empirical support from a range of both quantitative and qualitative studies (Gilbert, Pehl, & Allan, 1994; Konstam et al., 2001; Tangney, 1990, 1991, 1995, 1996; Tangney & Dearing, 2002; Tangney, Miller, Flicker, & Barlow, 1996; Tangney, Wagner, Fletcher, & Gramzow, 1992; Tangney, Wagner, Hill-Barlow, Marschall, & Gramzow, 1996; Tracy, Robins, & Tangney, 2007). Lewis's theory and the empirical work it has inspired provide important groundwork for distinguishing shame and guilt psychologically. She articulated cognitive, affective, and motivational differences between shame and guilt that empirical studies have verified (see Tangney & Dearing, 2002, for a summary). Thus it is possible to define certain psychological markers that differentiate shame and guilt.
Cognitive Differences
One of Lewis's major contributions (1971) was to refute earlier social theories (e.g., Benedict, 1946) that described shame as a public emotion and guilt as a private one (Tangney, 1995). Lewis theorized that although the same situation could elicit shame in one person and guilt in another, the differentiating factor was the individual's interpretation of the role of the self in these situations, not whether the experience took place publicly or privately. This different way of seeing the self pointed to cognitive differences in the experiencing of shame and guilt. With guilt, the self was pronouncing judgment on its activity; with shame, the self pronounced a more summary judgment on the inadequacy of the self itself. As Lewis noted:
The experience of shame is directly about the self, which is the
focus of evaluation. In guilt, the self is not the central object
of negative evaluation, but rather the thing done or undone is the
focus. In guilt, the self is negatively evaluated in connection
with something but is not itself the focus of the experience (p.
30).
One might say that the cognitive self-awareness attendant on shame is more encompassing than with guilt. According to Lewis, shame involved more self-consciousness, self-imaging, and greater body awareness than guilt. Similarly, persons experiencing shame seem less able to cognitively sort out their actions from the more fundamental sense of self.
In addition to greater cognitive self-awareness, there were cognitive differences in qualities attributed to the self. Those experiencing shame tended to see themselves as worthless and powerless--unable to make changes in the environment or themselves. By contrast, those experiencing guilt saw themselves as able to take some sort of corrective action either toward the consequences of their behavior or toward future behavior (Tangney & Dearing, 2002; cf. Andrews, Qian, & Valentine, 2002; Efthim, Kenny, & Mahalik, 2001; Konstam et al., 2001).
Another aspect of the cognitive differences between shame and guilt concerned where the sense of evaluation seemed to originate. In shame, the source of blame or negative valuation of the self was localized as "out there," originating in the "other." This externalizing of blame was one of the chief markers of shame (Tangney & Dearing, 2002; Tangney et al., 1992, 1996). Even as an internal experience shame involved judgment of an internalized "disapproving other." With guilt, by contrast, the internal evaluation system was felt to originate more from within a person's own sense of self.
Affective Differences
There also are affective markers that distinguish shame and guilt. Using Lewis's (1971) theoretical distinctions Tangney (1990, 1995, 1996) has developed an instrument (the TOSCA--Test of Self-Conscious Affects) for measuring and distinguishing shame and guilt. Her work with this instrument has verified cognitive, affective, and motivational distinctions between the two emotions that can distinguish them. Following Lewis, Tangney concurred that the chief cognitive differ, race between shame and guilt was how the self was perceived, but she also pointed to affective differences between them.
Lack of empathy. One of Tangney's (1991; Tanguey & Dearing, 2002) central findings was that empathy was a key marker for differentiating shame from guilt. This finding derived from Lewis's (1971) point that shame involves a more global evaluation of the self than did guilt. True interpersonal guilt (feeling bad when one was aware of doing someone harm) hinged on (a) an empathic awareness of and response to someone's distress and (b) an awareness of being the cause of that distress. From this perspective, empathy was an essential prerequisite for guilt (Tangney; cf. Konstam et al., 2001; Leith & Baumeister, 1998). According to Tangney, it was the absence of empathy that was striking about the presence of shame. Tangney theorized that this might be because shame is such a painful and overwhelming experience that it naturally draws the focus away from the distressed other back to the self. Even when a shame-prone individual noticed and initially empathized with another, his or her empathic response might become short-circuited. "When faced with a distressed other, shame-prone individuals may be particularly likely to respond with a personal distress reaction, in lieu of a true empathic response" (Tangney, p. 600). This preoccupation with the self is'inconsistent with the other-oriented nature of empathy.
Anger and aggression. Another distinction is the link between shame, aggression, and anger that Tangney has demonstrated (Tangney, 1996; Tangney & Dearing, 2002; Tangney, Miller, Flicker, & Barlow, 1996; Tangney et al., 1992). This connection could take an active or passive form as the shamed individual attempted to manage his or her feelings. The more passive route was associated with anger turned inward (a ruminative, unexpressed anger), self-directed hostility, and a tendency to withdraw from anger-related situations. The more active route involved reactivating the impaired self through other-directed anger (e.g., by turning the tables and externalizing blame onto others involved in the shame-eliciting situation). For those who took a more active response, proneness to shame is associated with malevolent and fractious intentions and a likelihood of engaging in all manner of direct, indirect, and displaced aggression (Tangney & Dearing; Tangney et al., 1996).
By contrast, guilt-prone individuals were not disposed particularly to blame external factors or other people for negative events. Rather, when experiencing guilt they were likely to become aware of their role in negative interpersonal situations, and by extension felt an obligation to assess their impact on others. Thus, guilt produced a sense of tension and regret borne of empathy, which often led to reparative action such as confession, apology, or making amends (Tangney, 1996; Tangney & Dearing, 2002; cf. Konstam et al., 2001).
Motivational Differences
The movement toward reparative action provides a motivational marker for distinguishing shame and guilt. Shame involves a withdrawing from others--a shrinking or hiding, especially from shame-eliciting situations. Shame moves one away from others, perhaps through passive withdrawal or the externalization of blame. Guilt, on the other hand, moves one toward others in attempts to repair damage done, often through confession and restitution. Those experiencing guilt take responsibility for their actions and the consequences; the shame-prone person, unable to take responsibility, typically shifts the blame to another person (Tangney & Dearing, 2002; cf. Leith & Baumeister, 1998).
Thus, shame and guilt are experienced very differently, in terms of both thoughts and feelings as well as in behavioral motivations. As Tangney (1991) summarized it:
Because of its focus on specific and presumably controllable
behaviors, the guilt experience is uncomfortable but not
debilitating. That is, the self remains "able." Not surprisingly,
phenomenological reports indicate that guilt's consequent
motivation and behavior tends to be oriented toward reparative
action. Shame, on the other hand, is a much more global, painful,
and devastating experience in which the self, not just behavior, is
painfully scrutinized and negatively evaluated. This global
negative affect is often accompanied by a sense of shrinking and
being small, and by a sense of worthlessness and powerlessness.
Phenomenological data also suggest that shame is likely to be
accompanied by a desire to hide or to escape from the interpersonal
situation in question (p. 599).
Tangney and Dearing (2002) further concluded that guilt as the more adaptive of the two emotions was the more developmentally mature emotion to move people toward.
IMPLICATIONS OF THESE DISTINCTIONS FOR MENTAL HEALTH COUNSELING
Although shame and guilt often occur together, the distinctions described provide not only a means for determining whether shame or guilt is the dominant presenting emotion but also offer suggestive lines for the treatment of shame vs. guilt. These two emotions are not only significantly different in a client's experience, they also reflect differences in developmental and coping abilities. Being able to distinguish shame from guilt will help mental health counselors to offer interventions more appropriate to the experience of each emotion.
Criteria for Distinguishing Shame and Guilt
Since shame and guilt are easily confused because they often co-occur (Lewis, 1971; Nathanson, 1992; Tangney & Dearing, 2002), the first way the distinctions noted are helpful for the counselor is in providing criteria for determining whether a person is struggling more with shame or guilt. Since treatment for the two emotions differs (see below), there are several things to listen for or attend to in a client's presentation to help sort out which is dominant.
The "self' vs. the "thing done. "" From Lewis (1971), one would conclude that if the presentation of a problem is focused on a global sense of the person's badness rather than feeling bad about a specific action, then shame more than guilt is the central emotion. Conversely, guilt dominates when the concern is over the thing done rather than the self. This distinction is important diagnostically because a client who can judge his or her actions is at a different place developmentally from one who makes global condemnations of the self. The former has a clear, stable sense of self; the latter has a more tentative, diffuse sense of self.
This difference in the stability and cohesiveness of the self shows up in therapy in various ways. For instance, a guilt-laden depression would be evident in talk about actions taken or not taken, while a shame-laden depression would be characterized by reports of worthlessness or badness of the person (the self) rather than the deeds. Similarly, anxiety in a guilt-prone person would derive from an awareness of others and the harm done to them (e.g., the person is anxious about a mistake that has or will cause others to suffer). Anxiety connected to shame, however, would reflect a concern not with the other but with the self. Thus, the shame-prone person might be anxious because of a fear of being found out and judged (for a violation of standards and expectations either of one's own or others) or a fear of being asked to do things that would reveal one's deficiencies.
Boundary issues and compulsions. Erikson's (1950) placement of shame in a developmental conflict over autonomy suggests that the dominant emotion can be discerned through struggles over boundary issues and compulsions. For instance, clients who show no discretion in the choice of friends or indiscriminately let others take advantage of their good will are likely suffering from a deep sense of shame rather than guilt, which is connected to the less stable sense of self that is characteristic of a shame-dominated person. Because of the more diffuse boundaries to the self, the shame-prone person also might express a fear of intimacy as potentially engulfing. By contrast, the guilt-prone person with a clearer sense of self is not as fearful of the painful interaction with others that often accompanies having done wrong. The guilt-prone person has less fear of interaction because there is no concomitant fear that somehow the self will be overwhelmed or crushed in the exchange.
Boundary issues are discerned not only in concerns with their permeability but also through their rigidity and compulsivity. Learning boundaries (what is permitted or not; where self and other start and end), Erikson (1950) argued, develops the ego capacity of will. Compulsions would indicate deficiencies in ego capacity; the person feels less in control of thoughts or behaviors. Thus, a shame-dominated client will describe addictive behavior (e.g., gambling, alcohol, drugs) as simply his or her nature, something that cannot be controlled. Such a client, stuck in ruminations over how bad he or she is, would be paralyzed and unable to take reparative action. A guilt-dominated client is apt to describe these behaviors as bad choices, something for which he or she needs to make amends.
A different kind of compulsivity and rigidity can be seen in the perfectionist who compensates for a general lack of control by circumscribing a particular area for managing well. Such a person could be considered as struggling more with shame than with guilt. Similarly, the compulsive part of an obsessive-compulsive ritual is often a means of trying to regain control. Ironically, the absence of control over compulsive behavior often brings a greater sense of shame (cf. Carnes's [1983] description of the despair that follows acting out in an addiction cycle).
Although compulsive behavior occasionally can point to guilt (cf. Lady Macbeth's hand washing), Erikson (1950) would help the counselor appreciate compulsions as more a struggle over loss of control or will and thus more shame-based. Conversely, the client who struggles with guilt more than shame is more aware of what he or she can or cannot "do" (i.e., issues of initiative and sense of purpose).
Lack of empathy. Tangney's (1991) work elaborated how the diffuse global evaluation of one's badness that distinguished shame from guilt often manifested as a preoccupation with the self, with a concomitant inability to express empathy for others. Thus, a lack of empathy points to a dominance of shame over guilt (Tangney & Dearing, 2002).
Lack of empathy is connected to developmental deficits in the formation of the self (see above). By contrast, when guilt predominates, there is an ability to empathize and an appropriate concern for damage to the relationship or reparation of the other's loss. Thus, anxiety that derives from a client's ability to see the impact of his or her behavior on others is indicative of guilt. Shame-based anxiety might be characterized by a desire that others see how debilitating the anxiety is for the client and how in need of care the client is.
Blaming and anger. Tangney and Dearing (2002) also pointed to the distinguishing markers of externalizing blame and excessive anger (either internalized or projected outward) as markers that can alert the counselor to the potential dominance of shame. When in describing a problem a person focuses on the fault of another rather than his or her own role in the problem, shame may be more prevalent than guilt. Blaming others is a way of defending against the global, negative evaluation of the self (cf. Nathanson, 1992). Thus, a spouse who has trouble seeing his or her part in the creation of the marital tension or a client who thinks his or her anger is due to the actions of others is likely suffering from a deep sense of shame. The guilt-prone person is more accurately able to accept his or her role in relational problems.
However, the mental health counselor also must remember that some clients will turn the anger and blame inward. The client characterized by a global self-loathing may appear to acknowledge fault but then uses this acknowledgement as an excuse to avoid action. Having declared how bad one is, responsibility is shifted to the other. Where guilt is more dominant, each partner not only can hear the other's side more readily but is in a better place to take restorative steps.
Withdrawal. Both Erikson (1950) and Tangney (Tangney et al., 1996) have noted that a marker for the dominance of shame over guilt is withdrawal from others, which may take the active form of blaming others. Blaming, with its attendant anger, creates distance from others, thus achieving the goal of withdrawal. However, the counselor also must be aware that withdrawal may take a more passive route of isolation from others: Given the global, negative self-evaluation, a client may withdraw out of the conviction that others would not wish to associate with someone so blameworthy. Self-blame as an excuse for lack of action can be another way clients withdraw. By contrast, when guilt is the dominant emotion, the person is more likely to move toward others by making reparative gestures.
Treatment Differences
The characteristic distinctions between shame and guilt also point to important differences in treatment approach. Since shame and guilt often occur together, both will need a response but the proper response to each will differ. Developmental differences in the growth and stability of the self require treatments that take this trajectory into account. When dealing differentially with these two emotions, the focus, the goal, and the modality of the intervention will vary.
Focus of the intervention. When shame is the dominant emotion, the experiences rather than the actions of the self become the focus of interventions. Before someone overwhelmed with shame can properly evaluate the actions of the self, the person must come to grips with the more global negative evaluation of the self. Similarly, before the person overwhelmed by shame can have empathy for another's distress, the distress of the shame-filled person's sense of fundamental flaw must be addressed.
What this suggests in terms of treatment is an approach sensitive to the insight that developmentally shame precedes guilt. When issues of shame and the self lie behind a client's dysfunction, focusing on behavioral change to assuage guilt not only produces results that may be less than satisfactory but is apt to exacerbate feelings of shame. In fact, a counselor might discern when shame is the dominant emotion when a person engages (often repeatedly) in guilt remedies such as confession and forgiveness but finds no sense of relief.
For instance, those suffering from shame are sometimes counseled toward confession and forgiveness--appropriate responses to guilt, but premature or ineffective responses to shame. Forgiveness as an intervention for the guilt-prone is effective because there is a cohesive sense of self that can empathize (cf. McCullough, Worthington, & Rachal, 1997). For the shame-prone, thinking of forgiveness feels like a loss to the self, an invalidation of his or her wound. Even when the shame-prone person expresses a need to forgive, there is a self-focus to the motivation: For example, forgiving is a way to feel magnanimous or to be released from the added shame of not being a forgiving person.
Goals of the intervention. The developmental distinction between shame and guilt means the mental health counselor also must think developmentally about the goals of counseling. For instance, when shame is the dominant emotion, the goal becomes strengthening the self (e.g., helping the person learn to distinguish self from behaviors) as a necessary step to helping move the person toward ability to empathize with the other. Since shame short-circuits empathic response, because the person is too preoccupied with judging his or her flawed nature to attend to the feelings of others, counseling needs to focus first on creating a safe, nonjudgmental context in which a self overwhelmed with shame can relax the defenses that belong to such self-judgment. Far from encouraging the self-absorption that accompanies shame, this aspect of counseling becomes a necessary step in nurturing the ego capacity that makes the next developmental step successful (cf. Erikson, 1950).
Counseling that is sensitive to the developmental relation between shame and guilt will see growth emerging in separate steps. Although the penultimate goal of counseling with those experiencing shame will be to strengthen the self overcome by its sense of being flawed, the ultimate goal with such a client would be to strengthen the self so that it might move toward guilt--that is, toward a response in which the self can see itself as acting badly, see the consequences of its actions, take responsibility for its actions, and move toward reparation in relationships rather than being stuck in self-loathing about feeling essentially and fundamentally flawed (Tangney & Dearing, 2002). Such self-preoccupation actually keeps one distant from others and unable to attend to how one's action affects the other.
Modality of the intervention. Not only must the focus and goal of the intervention be different for shame vs. guilt, its modality must be adapted as well. Since developmentally shame precedes guilt, it involves a different level of ego functioning. Conceptually shame might need more supportive or relationally oriented counseling; guilt would respond to more traditional insight or behavioral change counseling approaches. Behavioral interventions focused on things done, which might work well with guilt, need to give way to relationship building when shame dominates and the self needs strengthening. This is not to say that behavioral treatment will have no impact on shame issues, but it does argue that a shame-based person requires a qualitatively different kind of relational encounter than a guilt-based person. A shame-based person seems to need to experience affirmation and acceptance in the interchange with another, while a more cognitive verification or acknowledgement of the other's forgiveness seems to facilitate release of guilt. There is a subtle yet vital difference in these interactions. In actual practice, of course, for a number of reasons counselors find themselves moving back and forth between supportive and insight-oriented comments, but in this context it may be seen as an aspect of the fact that clients often bring guilt overlaid with shame to counseling (Tangney & Dearing, 2002).
When shame is more dominant than guilt, the client might be expected to be motivated to conceal issues due to fear of a negative evaluation from the counselor that would mirror the client's negative self-evaluation and heightened sensitivity to the thoughts of a projected disapproving other (Tangney & Dearing, 2002). Such negative expectations can impact the quality of the therapeutic relationship (i.e., "transference") and the client's ability to benefit (Gilbert, Pehl, & Allan, 1994). Attending to the quality of the relationship (e.g., negative transference) can open up opportunities for acknowledgement and exploration of shame. Mental health counselors can help those experiencing shame to move toward understanding what these experiences can teach about self and relationships by providing a safe, nonretaliating alternative to self-condemnation and the anticipated judgment from the counselor as disapproving other. This new kind of relationship can provide a foundation for and example of further development of empathy and guilt.
CONCLUSION
Recent literature, both theoretical and empirical, has verified that shame is an emotion distinct from guilt. However, a significant trend in clinical work has been to subsume shame under guilt, to treat it as secondary, or not to recognize it as an important, even key, emotion in its own right. Even though shame is a prominent emotion in our culture, current treatments often focus on modalities that are premature, ineffective, and sometimes harmful to those whose issues revolve around shame rather than guilt. We have argued for the need to recognize the psychological differences between shame and guilt so as to better distinguish and treat those suffering with these emotions. Although both often appear together in clients (to greater or lesser degrees), being able to distinguish between them has both heuristic and practical clinical value.
REFERENCES
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Carnes, P. (1983). Out of the shadows. Minneapolis, MN: CompCare Publishers.
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Fowler, J. (1996). Faithful change: The personal and public challenges of postmodern life. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
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Konstam, V., Chemoff, M., & Deveney, S. (2001). Toward forgiveness: the role of shame, guilt, anger and empathy. Counseling and Values, 46, 26-39.
Lansky, M. (1995). Shame and the scope of psychoanalytic understanding. American Behavioral Scientist, 38, 1076-1090.
Leith, K., & Baumeister, R. (1998). Empathy, shame, guilt, and narratives of interpersonal conflict: Guilt-prone people are better at perspective taking. Journal of Personality, 66, 1-37.
Lewis, H. (1971). Shame and guilt in neurosis. New York: International Universities Press.
McCullough, M., Worthington, E., & Rachal, K.(1997). Interpersonal forgiving in close relationships. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 73, 321-336.
Nathanson, D. (1992). Shame and pride: Affect, sex, and the birth of the self. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
Scheff, T. (1995). Shame and related emotions: An overview. American Behavioral Scientist, 38, 1053 1059.
Tangney, J. (1990). Assessing individual differences in proneness to shame and guilt: Development of the self-conscious affect and attribution inventory. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 59, 102-111.
Tangney, J. (1991). Moral affect: The good, the bad, and the ugly. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 61, 598~507.
Tangney, J. (1995). Recent advances in the empirical study of shame and guilt. American Behavioral Scientist, 38, 1132-1145.
Tangney, J. (1996). Conceptual and methodological issues in the assessment of shame and guilt. Behavioral Research and Therapy, 34, 741-754.
Tangney, J., & Dearing, R. (2002). Shame and guilt. New York: Guilford Publications.
Tangney, J., Miller, R., Flicker, L., & Barlow, D. (1996). Are shame, guilt, and embarrassment distinct emotions? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 70, 1256-1269.
Tangney, J., Wagner, P., Fletcher, C., & Gramzow, R. (1992). Shamed into anger? The relation of shame and guilt to anger and self-reported aggression. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 62, 699~75.
Tangney, J., Wagner, P., Hill-Barlow, D., Marschall, D., & Gramzow, R. (1996). Relation of shame and guilt to constructive versus destructive responses to anger across the lifespan Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 70, 797-809.
Tracy, J., Robins, R., & Tangney, J. (Eds.) (2007). The self-conscious emotions: Theory and research. New York: Guilford Press.
Stephen Parker is affiliated with Regent University. Rebecca Thomas is in private practice in Norfolk, Virginia. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Stephen Parker, 1000 Regent University Drive, Virginia Beach, VA 23464. E-mail: steppar@regent.edu.
SHAME AND GUILT
Recent work on the psychological distinctions between shame and guilt has important implications for mental health counselors. In particular, the work of Lewis (1971) and Tanguey (1990, 1995; Tangney & Dearing, 2002) identifies psychological differences between shame and guilt and how they are phenomenologically expressed that provides helpful insight to those working with clients experiencing these emotions. This paper draws upon this work to establish criteria for distinguishing shame and guilt and to offer guidelines for their treatment.
Distinctions between shame and guilt are often overlooked by those in clinical work (Tangney & Dearing, 2002). Particularly in Western culture, they are often assumed to be interchangeable or synonymous terms (Gilbert, Pehl, & Allan, 1994). Erik Erikson (1950), one of the first to distinguish psychologically between shame and guilt, noted that "shame is an emotion insufficiently studied, because in our civilization it is so easily absorbed by guilt" (13. 252; cf. Lansky, 1995).
This failure to adequately distinguish shame from guilt ignores a growing body of research on important psychological differences between these two emotions (Tangney & Dearing, 2002). Especially noticeable is the absence of studies that explore the implications of these differences for counseling. Research exploring the psychological differences between shame and guilt notes that failure to distinguish between the two emotions contributes to the neglect of shame as a significant clinical problem (Capps, 1993; Konstam, Chernoff, & Deveney, 2001; Tangney & Dearing); furthermore, shame is often mistaken for guilt, leading to ineffective treatment for those suffering from shame (Lewis, 1971; Nathanson, 1992; Tangney, 1996; Tangney & Dearing; Tangney, Miller, Flicker, & Barlow, 1996). These problems are likely to increase, given the conclusion of several notable authors that shame, not guilt, is now the prominent emotion troubling Western culture (Scheff, 1995; Tanguey et al., 1996; cf. Capps, 1993; Cheng & Page, 1995; Fowler, 1996; Kaufman, 2004).
Although shame and guilt show considerable overlap, often appearing together in clients (Tangney & Dearing, 2002), there is a heuristic as well as practical clinical value in reflecting on the differences. This paper reviews recent research on the psychological and phenomenological characteristics of shame as distinguished from guilt. It summarizes important distinctions between the two emotions and how they are experienced. It then outlines the implications of the differences for counseling.
Mental health counselors will especially be interested in the research on differences between shame and guilt because it helps highlight the developmental and growth aspects of these emotions, not simply the life difficulties that may accompany them. Attending to the developmental differences is especially important in formulating treatment goals and strategies.
DISTINGUISHING SHAME AND GUILT PSYCHOLOGICALLY
Erik Erikson (1950) made one of the first psychological distinctions between shame and guilt. His lifespan model outlined the growth of the self, both body and psyche, as it occurs in the context of expanding social interactions. He laid out critical tasks of emotional development occurring throughout the lifespan that promote healthy psychosocial growth. In Erikson's model, growth occurred through balancing the tension produced by certain polarities. However, this is not an even balance of polarities; although both polarities are necessary, health required an "overbalance" of the positive quality. The resolution of each crisis produced an ego strength that was integrated into one's emerging identity and helped one face the tasks of the next developmental stage. Erikson's list of critical tasks included articulation of the development of shame and guilt.
For Erikson (1950), shame preceded guilt developmentally. As with all the critical tasks, without a proper balance of the polarities one did not proceed well to the next task. This meant that without a proper measure of shame, neither guilt nor initiative developed appropriately. However, if there was too much shame, initiative and guilt were overshadowed by compulsive activity. Since shame was connected to the development of autonomy and the ego quality of will, an overbalance of shame and doubt (vs. autonomy with the optimal amount of shame and doubt) resulted in compulsive activity as the ego overcompensated in its attempts to master and manage the expressions of will. By contrast, guilt was associated with initiative and the emerging ego quality of purpose. An overbalance of guilt, instead of an optimal level of guilt with an overbalance of initiative, inhibited productivity and left the person lacking in purposeful drive toward future goals.
Since Erikson (1950), there has been considerable work, both theoretical and empirical, on the psychological distinctions between shame and guilt. Over the past three decades, Helen Block Lewis's distinction (1971) between shame and guilt has emerged as one of the dominant conceptualizations, in large part because it has received strong empirical support from a range of both quantitative and qualitative studies (Gilbert, Pehl, & Allan, 1994; Konstam et al., 2001; Tangney, 1990, 1991, 1995, 1996; Tangney & Dearing, 2002; Tangney, Miller, Flicker, & Barlow, 1996; Tangney, Wagner, Fletcher, & Gramzow, 1992; Tangney, Wagner, Hill-Barlow, Marschall, & Gramzow, 1996; Tracy, Robins, & Tangney, 2007). Lewis's theory and the empirical work it has inspired provide important groundwork for distinguishing shame and guilt psychologically. She articulated cognitive, affective, and motivational differences between shame and guilt that empirical studies have verified (see Tangney & Dearing, 2002, for a summary). Thus it is possible to define certain psychological markers that differentiate shame and guilt.
Cognitive Differences
One of Lewis's major contributions (1971) was to refute earlier social theories (e.g., Benedict, 1946) that described shame as a public emotion and guilt as a private one (Tangney, 1995). Lewis theorized that although the same situation could elicit shame in one person and guilt in another, the differentiating factor was the individual's interpretation of the role of the self in these situations, not whether the experience took place publicly or privately. This different way of seeing the self pointed to cognitive differences in the experiencing of shame and guilt. With guilt, the self was pronouncing judgment on its activity; with shame, the self pronounced a more summary judgment on the inadequacy of the self itself. As Lewis noted:
The experience of shame is directly about the self, which is the
focus of evaluation. In guilt, the self is not the central object
of negative evaluation, but rather the thing done or undone is the
focus. In guilt, the self is negatively evaluated in connection
with something but is not itself the focus of the experience (p.
30).
One might say that the cognitive self-awareness attendant on shame is more encompassing than with guilt. According to Lewis, shame involved more self-consciousness, self-imaging, and greater body awareness than guilt. Similarly, persons experiencing shame seem less able to cognitively sort out their actions from the more fundamental sense of self.
In addition to greater cognitive self-awareness, there were cognitive differences in qualities attributed to the self. Those experiencing shame tended to see themselves as worthless and powerless--unable to make changes in the environment or themselves. By contrast, those experiencing guilt saw themselves as able to take some sort of corrective action either toward the consequences of their behavior or toward future behavior (Tangney & Dearing, 2002; cf. Andrews, Qian, & Valentine, 2002; Efthim, Kenny, & Mahalik, 2001; Konstam et al., 2001).
Another aspect of the cognitive differences between shame and guilt concerned where the sense of evaluation seemed to originate. In shame, the source of blame or negative valuation of the self was localized as "out there," originating in the "other." This externalizing of blame was one of the chief markers of shame (Tangney & Dearing, 2002; Tangney et al., 1992, 1996). Even as an internal experience shame involved judgment of an internalized "disapproving other." With guilt, by contrast, the internal evaluation system was felt to originate more from within a person's own sense of self.
Affective Differences
There also are affective markers that distinguish shame and guilt. Using Lewis's (1971) theoretical distinctions Tangney (1990, 1995, 1996) has developed an instrument (the TOSCA--Test of Self-Conscious Affects) for measuring and distinguishing shame and guilt. Her work with this instrument has verified cognitive, affective, and motivational distinctions between the two emotions that can distinguish them. Following Lewis, Tangney concurred that the chief cognitive differ, race between shame and guilt was how the self was perceived, but she also pointed to affective differences between them.
Lack of empathy. One of Tangney's (1991; Tanguey & Dearing, 2002) central findings was that empathy was a key marker for differentiating shame from guilt. This finding derived from Lewis's (1971) point that shame involves a more global evaluation of the self than did guilt. True interpersonal guilt (feeling bad when one was aware of doing someone harm) hinged on (a) an empathic awareness of and response to someone's distress and (b) an awareness of being the cause of that distress. From this perspective, empathy was an essential prerequisite for guilt (Tangney; cf. Konstam et al., 2001; Leith & Baumeister, 1998). According to Tangney, it was the absence of empathy that was striking about the presence of shame. Tangney theorized that this might be because shame is such a painful and overwhelming experience that it naturally draws the focus away from the distressed other back to the self. Even when a shame-prone individual noticed and initially empathized with another, his or her empathic response might become short-circuited. "When faced with a distressed other, shame-prone individuals may be particularly likely to respond with a personal distress reaction, in lieu of a true empathic response" (Tangney, p. 600). This preoccupation with the self is'inconsistent with the other-oriented nature of empathy.
Anger and aggression. Another distinction is the link between shame, aggression, and anger that Tangney has demonstrated (Tangney, 1996; Tangney & Dearing, 2002; Tangney, Miller, Flicker, & Barlow, 1996; Tangney et al., 1992). This connection could take an active or passive form as the shamed individual attempted to manage his or her feelings. The more passive route was associated with anger turned inward (a ruminative, unexpressed anger), self-directed hostility, and a tendency to withdraw from anger-related situations. The more active route involved reactivating the impaired self through other-directed anger (e.g., by turning the tables and externalizing blame onto others involved in the shame-eliciting situation). For those who took a more active response, proneness to shame is associated with malevolent and fractious intentions and a likelihood of engaging in all manner of direct, indirect, and displaced aggression (Tangney & Dearing; Tangney et al., 1996).
By contrast, guilt-prone individuals were not disposed particularly to blame external factors or other people for negative events. Rather, when experiencing guilt they were likely to become aware of their role in negative interpersonal situations, and by extension felt an obligation to assess their impact on others. Thus, guilt produced a sense of tension and regret borne of empathy, which often led to reparative action such as confession, apology, or making amends (Tangney, 1996; Tangney & Dearing, 2002; cf. Konstam et al., 2001).
Motivational Differences
The movement toward reparative action provides a motivational marker for distinguishing shame and guilt. Shame involves a withdrawing from others--a shrinking or hiding, especially from shame-eliciting situations. Shame moves one away from others, perhaps through passive withdrawal or the externalization of blame. Guilt, on the other hand, moves one toward others in attempts to repair damage done, often through confession and restitution. Those experiencing guilt take responsibility for their actions and the consequences; the shame-prone person, unable to take responsibility, typically shifts the blame to another person (Tangney & Dearing, 2002; cf. Leith & Baumeister, 1998).
Thus, shame and guilt are experienced very differently, in terms of both thoughts and feelings as well as in behavioral motivations. As Tangney (1991) summarized it:
Because of its focus on specific and presumably controllable
behaviors, the guilt experience is uncomfortable but not
debilitating. That is, the self remains "able." Not surprisingly,
phenomenological reports indicate that guilt's consequent
motivation and behavior tends to be oriented toward reparative
action. Shame, on the other hand, is a much more global, painful,
and devastating experience in which the self, not just behavior, is
painfully scrutinized and negatively evaluated. This global
negative affect is often accompanied by a sense of shrinking and
being small, and by a sense of worthlessness and powerlessness.
Phenomenological data also suggest that shame is likely to be
accompanied by a desire to hide or to escape from the interpersonal
situation in question (p. 599).
Tangney and Dearing (2002) further concluded that guilt as the more adaptive of the two emotions was the more developmentally mature emotion to move people toward.
IMPLICATIONS OF THESE DISTINCTIONS FOR MENTAL HEALTH COUNSELING
Although shame and guilt often occur together, the distinctions described provide not only a means for determining whether shame or guilt is the dominant presenting emotion but also offer suggestive lines for the treatment of shame vs. guilt. These two emotions are not only significantly different in a client's experience, they also reflect differences in developmental and coping abilities. Being able to distinguish shame from guilt will help mental health counselors to offer interventions more appropriate to the experience of each emotion.
Criteria for Distinguishing Shame and Guilt
Since shame and guilt are easily confused because they often co-occur (Lewis, 1971; Nathanson, 1992; Tangney & Dearing, 2002), the first way the distinctions noted are helpful for the counselor is in providing criteria for determining whether a person is struggling more with shame or guilt. Since treatment for the two emotions differs (see below), there are several things to listen for or attend to in a client's presentation to help sort out which is dominant.
The "self' vs. the "thing done. "" From Lewis (1971), one would conclude that if the presentation of a problem is focused on a global sense of the person's badness rather than feeling bad about a specific action, then shame more than guilt is the central emotion. Conversely, guilt dominates when the concern is over the thing done rather than the self. This distinction is important diagnostically because a client who can judge his or her actions is at a different place developmentally from one who makes global condemnations of the self. The former has a clear, stable sense of self; the latter has a more tentative, diffuse sense of self.
This difference in the stability and cohesiveness of the self shows up in therapy in various ways. For instance, a guilt-laden depression would be evident in talk about actions taken or not taken, while a shame-laden depression would be characterized by reports of worthlessness or badness of the person (the self) rather than the deeds. Similarly, anxiety in a guilt-prone person would derive from an awareness of others and the harm done to them (e.g., the person is anxious about a mistake that has or will cause others to suffer). Anxiety connected to shame, however, would reflect a concern not with the other but with the self. Thus, the shame-prone person might be anxious because of a fear of being found out and judged (for a violation of standards and expectations either of one's own or others) or a fear of being asked to do things that would reveal one's deficiencies.
Boundary issues and compulsions. Erikson's (1950) placement of shame in a developmental conflict over autonomy suggests that the dominant emotion can be discerned through struggles over boundary issues and compulsions. For instance, clients who show no discretion in the choice of friends or indiscriminately let others take advantage of their good will are likely suffering from a deep sense of shame rather than guilt, which is connected to the less stable sense of self that is characteristic of a shame-dominated person. Because of the more diffuse boundaries to the self, the shame-prone person also might express a fear of intimacy as potentially engulfing. By contrast, the guilt-prone person with a clearer sense of self is not as fearful of the painful interaction with others that often accompanies having done wrong. The guilt-prone person has less fear of interaction because there is no concomitant fear that somehow the self will be overwhelmed or crushed in the exchange.
Boundary issues are discerned not only in concerns with their permeability but also through their rigidity and compulsivity. Learning boundaries (what is permitted or not; where self and other start and end), Erikson (1950) argued, develops the ego capacity of will. Compulsions would indicate deficiencies in ego capacity; the person feels less in control of thoughts or behaviors. Thus, a shame-dominated client will describe addictive behavior (e.g., gambling, alcohol, drugs) as simply his or her nature, something that cannot be controlled. Such a client, stuck in ruminations over how bad he or she is, would be paralyzed and unable to take reparative action. A guilt-dominated client is apt to describe these behaviors as bad choices, something for which he or she needs to make amends.
A different kind of compulsivity and rigidity can be seen in the perfectionist who compensates for a general lack of control by circumscribing a particular area for managing well. Such a person could be considered as struggling more with shame than with guilt. Similarly, the compulsive part of an obsessive-compulsive ritual is often a means of trying to regain control. Ironically, the absence of control over compulsive behavior often brings a greater sense of shame (cf. Carnes's [1983] description of the despair that follows acting out in an addiction cycle).
Although compulsive behavior occasionally can point to guilt (cf. Lady Macbeth's hand washing), Erikson (1950) would help the counselor appreciate compulsions as more a struggle over loss of control or will and thus more shame-based. Conversely, the client who struggles with guilt more than shame is more aware of what he or she can or cannot "do" (i.e., issues of initiative and sense of purpose).
Lack of empathy. Tangney's (1991) work elaborated how the diffuse global evaluation of one's badness that distinguished shame from guilt often manifested as a preoccupation with the self, with a concomitant inability to express empathy for others. Thus, a lack of empathy points to a dominance of shame over guilt (Tangney & Dearing, 2002).
Lack of empathy is connected to developmental deficits in the formation of the self (see above). By contrast, when guilt predominates, there is an ability to empathize and an appropriate concern for damage to the relationship or reparation of the other's loss. Thus, anxiety that derives from a client's ability to see the impact of his or her behavior on others is indicative of guilt. Shame-based anxiety might be characterized by a desire that others see how debilitating the anxiety is for the client and how in need of care the client is.
Blaming and anger. Tangney and Dearing (2002) also pointed to the distinguishing markers of externalizing blame and excessive anger (either internalized or projected outward) as markers that can alert the counselor to the potential dominance of shame. When in describing a problem a person focuses on the fault of another rather than his or her own role in the problem, shame may be more prevalent than guilt. Blaming others is a way of defending against the global, negative evaluation of the self (cf. Nathanson, 1992). Thus, a spouse who has trouble seeing his or her part in the creation of the marital tension or a client who thinks his or her anger is due to the actions of others is likely suffering from a deep sense of shame. The guilt-prone person is more accurately able to accept his or her role in relational problems.
However, the mental health counselor also must remember that some clients will turn the anger and blame inward. The client characterized by a global self-loathing may appear to acknowledge fault but then uses this acknowledgement as an excuse to avoid action. Having declared how bad one is, responsibility is shifted to the other. Where guilt is more dominant, each partner not only can hear the other's side more readily but is in a better place to take restorative steps.
Withdrawal. Both Erikson (1950) and Tangney (Tangney et al., 1996) have noted that a marker for the dominance of shame over guilt is withdrawal from others, which may take the active form of blaming others. Blaming, with its attendant anger, creates distance from others, thus achieving the goal of withdrawal. However, the counselor also must be aware that withdrawal may take a more passive route of isolation from others: Given the global, negative self-evaluation, a client may withdraw out of the conviction that others would not wish to associate with someone so blameworthy. Self-blame as an excuse for lack of action can be another way clients withdraw. By contrast, when guilt is the dominant emotion, the person is more likely to move toward others by making reparative gestures.
Treatment Differences
The characteristic distinctions between shame and guilt also point to important differences in treatment approach. Since shame and guilt often occur together, both will need a response but the proper response to each will differ. Developmental differences in the growth and stability of the self require treatments that take this trajectory into account. When dealing differentially with these two emotions, the focus, the goal, and the modality of the intervention will vary.
Focus of the intervention. When shame is the dominant emotion, the experiences rather than the actions of the self become the focus of interventions. Before someone overwhelmed with shame can properly evaluate the actions of the self, the person must come to grips with the more global negative evaluation of the self. Similarly, before the person overwhelmed by shame can have empathy for another's distress, the distress of the shame-filled person's sense of fundamental flaw must be addressed.
What this suggests in terms of treatment is an approach sensitive to the insight that developmentally shame precedes guilt. When issues of shame and the self lie behind a client's dysfunction, focusing on behavioral change to assuage guilt not only produces results that may be less than satisfactory but is apt to exacerbate feelings of shame. In fact, a counselor might discern when shame is the dominant emotion when a person engages (often repeatedly) in guilt remedies such as confession and forgiveness but finds no sense of relief.
For instance, those suffering from shame are sometimes counseled toward confession and forgiveness--appropriate responses to guilt, but premature or ineffective responses to shame. Forgiveness as an intervention for the guilt-prone is effective because there is a cohesive sense of self that can empathize (cf. McCullough, Worthington, & Rachal, 1997). For the shame-prone, thinking of forgiveness feels like a loss to the self, an invalidation of his or her wound. Even when the shame-prone person expresses a need to forgive, there is a self-focus to the motivation: For example, forgiving is a way to feel magnanimous or to be released from the added shame of not being a forgiving person.
Goals of the intervention. The developmental distinction between shame and guilt means the mental health counselor also must think developmentally about the goals of counseling. For instance, when shame is the dominant emotion, the goal becomes strengthening the self (e.g., helping the person learn to distinguish self from behaviors) as a necessary step to helping move the person toward ability to empathize with the other. Since shame short-circuits empathic response, because the person is too preoccupied with judging his or her flawed nature to attend to the feelings of others, counseling needs to focus first on creating a safe, nonjudgmental context in which a self overwhelmed with shame can relax the defenses that belong to such self-judgment. Far from encouraging the self-absorption that accompanies shame, this aspect of counseling becomes a necessary step in nurturing the ego capacity that makes the next developmental step successful (cf. Erikson, 1950).
Counseling that is sensitive to the developmental relation between shame and guilt will see growth emerging in separate steps. Although the penultimate goal of counseling with those experiencing shame will be to strengthen the self overcome by its sense of being flawed, the ultimate goal with such a client would be to strengthen the self so that it might move toward guilt--that is, toward a response in which the self can see itself as acting badly, see the consequences of its actions, take responsibility for its actions, and move toward reparation in relationships rather than being stuck in self-loathing about feeling essentially and fundamentally flawed (Tangney & Dearing, 2002). Such self-preoccupation actually keeps one distant from others and unable to attend to how one's action affects the other.
Modality of the intervention. Not only must the focus and goal of the intervention be different for shame vs. guilt, its modality must be adapted as well. Since developmentally shame precedes guilt, it involves a different level of ego functioning. Conceptually shame might need more supportive or relationally oriented counseling; guilt would respond to more traditional insight or behavioral change counseling approaches. Behavioral interventions focused on things done, which might work well with guilt, need to give way to relationship building when shame dominates and the self needs strengthening. This is not to say that behavioral treatment will have no impact on shame issues, but it does argue that a shame-based person requires a qualitatively different kind of relational encounter than a guilt-based person. A shame-based person seems to need to experience affirmation and acceptance in the interchange with another, while a more cognitive verification or acknowledgement of the other's forgiveness seems to facilitate release of guilt. There is a subtle yet vital difference in these interactions. In actual practice, of course, for a number of reasons counselors find themselves moving back and forth between supportive and insight-oriented comments, but in this context it may be seen as an aspect of the fact that clients often bring guilt overlaid with shame to counseling (Tangney & Dearing, 2002).
When shame is more dominant than guilt, the client might be expected to be motivated to conceal issues due to fear of a negative evaluation from the counselor that would mirror the client's negative self-evaluation and heightened sensitivity to the thoughts of a projected disapproving other (Tangney & Dearing, 2002). Such negative expectations can impact the quality of the therapeutic relationship (i.e., "transference") and the client's ability to benefit (Gilbert, Pehl, & Allan, 1994). Attending to the quality of the relationship (e.g., negative transference) can open up opportunities for acknowledgement and exploration of shame. Mental health counselors can help those experiencing shame to move toward understanding what these experiences can teach about self and relationships by providing a safe, nonretaliating alternative to self-condemnation and the anticipated judgment from the counselor as disapproving other. This new kind of relationship can provide a foundation for and example of further development of empathy and guilt.
CONCLUSION
Recent literature, both theoretical and empirical, has verified that shame is an emotion distinct from guilt. However, a significant trend in clinical work has been to subsume shame under guilt, to treat it as secondary, or not to recognize it as an important, even key, emotion in its own right. Even though shame is a prominent emotion in our culture, current treatments often focus on modalities that are premature, ineffective, and sometimes harmful to those whose issues revolve around shame rather than guilt. We have argued for the need to recognize the psychological differences between shame and guilt so as to better distinguish and treat those suffering with these emotions. Although both often appear together in clients (to greater or lesser degrees), being able to distinguish between them has both heuristic and practical clinical value.
REFERENCES
Andrews, B., Qian, M., & Valentine, J. (2002). Predicting depressive symptoms with a new measure of shame: The Experience of Shame Scale. British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 41, 29-42.
Benedict, R. (1946). The chrysanthemum and the sword. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
Capps, D. (1993). The depleted self: Sin in a narcissistic age. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press.
Carnes, P. (1983). Out of the shadows. Minneapolis, MN: CompCare Publishers.
Cheng, H., & Page, R. (1995). A comparison of Chinese (in Taiwan) and American perspectives of love, guilt, and anger. Journal of Mental Health Counseling, 17, 210-219.
Efthim, P., Kenny, M., & Mahalik, J. (2001). Gender role stress in relation to shame, guilt and externalization. Journal of Counseling and Development, 79, 430-438.
Erikson, E. (1950). Childhood and society. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
Fowler, J. (1996). Faithful change: The personal and public challenges of postmodern life. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
Gilbert, P., Pehl, J., & Allan, S. (1994). The phenomenology of shame and guilt: An empirical investigation. Journal of Medical Psychology, 67, 23-26.
Kaufman, G. (2004). The psychology of shame: Theory and treatment of shame-based syndromes (3rd ed.) New York: Springer Publishing Company, Inc.
Konstam, V., Chemoff, M., & Deveney, S. (2001). Toward forgiveness: the role of shame, guilt, anger and empathy. Counseling and Values, 46, 26-39.
Lansky, M. (1995). Shame and the scope of psychoanalytic understanding. American Behavioral Scientist, 38, 1076-1090.
Leith, K., & Baumeister, R. (1998). Empathy, shame, guilt, and narratives of interpersonal conflict: Guilt-prone people are better at perspective taking. Journal of Personality, 66, 1-37.
Lewis, H. (1971). Shame and guilt in neurosis. New York: International Universities Press.
McCullough, M., Worthington, E., & Rachal, K.(1997). Interpersonal forgiving in close relationships. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 73, 321-336.
Nathanson, D. (1992). Shame and pride: Affect, sex, and the birth of the self. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
Scheff, T. (1995). Shame and related emotions: An overview. American Behavioral Scientist, 38, 1053 1059.
Tangney, J. (1990). Assessing individual differences in proneness to shame and guilt: Development of the self-conscious affect and attribution inventory. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 59, 102-111.
Tangney, J. (1991). Moral affect: The good, the bad, and the ugly. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 61, 598~507.
Tangney, J. (1995). Recent advances in the empirical study of shame and guilt. American Behavioral Scientist, 38, 1132-1145.
Tangney, J. (1996). Conceptual and methodological issues in the assessment of shame and guilt. Behavioral Research and Therapy, 34, 741-754.
Tangney, J., & Dearing, R. (2002). Shame and guilt. New York: Guilford Publications.
Tangney, J., Miller, R., Flicker, L., & Barlow, D. (1996). Are shame, guilt, and embarrassment distinct emotions? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 70, 1256-1269.
Tangney, J., Wagner, P., Fletcher, C., & Gramzow, R. (1992). Shamed into anger? The relation of shame and guilt to anger and self-reported aggression. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 62, 699~75.
Tangney, J., Wagner, P., Hill-Barlow, D., Marschall, D., & Gramzow, R. (1996). Relation of shame and guilt to constructive versus destructive responses to anger across the lifespan Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 70, 797-809.
Tracy, J., Robins, R., & Tangney, J. (Eds.) (2007). The self-conscious emotions: Theory and research. New York: Guilford Press.
Stephen Parker is affiliated with Regent University. Rebecca Thomas is in private practice in Norfolk, Virginia. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Stephen Parker, 1000 Regent University Drive, Virginia Beach, VA 23464. E-mail: steppar@regent.edu.
Monday, May 3, 2010
My Book
My book has now been published through Cedar Fort Inc. Go to cedarfort.com to pre-order a copy. It will be released on Saturday. Here is a brief description:
Modern life often stabs at our happiness. Love and harmony are not always easy to achieve, especially when so many things are eager to take their place. How does one distinguish hidden dangers, false idols, and destructive habits from fulfilling relationships and true happiness? Seasoned clinical psychotherapist Jade Mangus analyzes different types of dysfunction and alienation and explains how certain patterns become problematic and destructive. Mangus guides the reader through the emotional reefs of overcoming dread, shame, pain, and fear to achieve and reclaim a healthy relationship with self, others, and God. With helpful tools and a no-nonsense approach, this book is sure to open doors to healing emotionally.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Conditioning and Addiction
Through my research for my upcoming book, I found a substantial amount of article which discussed the conditioning factors behind addictive behavior. I feel the reason for the amount could be the fact that the idea of conditioning is almost as old as the study of psychology.
This theory is based in the ideas and research of Ivan Pavlov and his hungry salivating dogs (which most of us may remember from high school psychology class). Pavlov discovered and documented the principles governing how animals, and then adapted to humans, learn. Two basic kinds of learning or conditioning occur: operant and classical.
Classical conditioning, was the initial type of association first discovered by Pavlov as he noticed a relationship between a bell and the salivation of his dogs. Specifically, the animal learns to associate a neutral stimulus (like the ringing of a bell) with a stimulus that has great, even survival meaning based on how closely in time the two stimuli are presented. Dogs are able to learn the association between bell and food, (as humans are between two yellow arches and high calorie hamburgers) and will salivate immediately after hearing the bell once this connection has been made.
Marketers are well aware of classical conditioning. Next time you watch commercials on television, think to yourself, “What is the hidden message in this commercial?” For example, I once saw a beer commercial where a man began to drink the competitor's beer and women around him ran away, next to him was a man who began to drink the advertised beer, and those same women ran up to him and began to take off his shirt—what message is being sent? Sex definitely sells, especially beer!
Operant, also know as instrumental conditioning is a little more obvious than classical. In operant conditioning an animal or human learns to perform particular behaviors in order to obtain an intrinsically rewarding stimulus. For example, why do many people work jobs that they don't enjoy—to get a paycheck.
Many therapist have used the Classical, or Pavlovian conditioning theory to understand the nature of addictions. Truly, there are many obvious examples which would support the classical conditioning aspects of developing a dependence, especially on drugs. The inebriating or “drunk” effects of people given non-alcoholic drinks (such as “near beer”), when the individuals were told they were getting alcoholic drinks can be evidence for this type of conditioning. As with the individual addicted to cocaine, who begins to sweat at the sight of sugar or flour. I have noticed a strong association between “good times” and food. Just think of any typical Christmas party, what comes to mind? If you thought chocolate treats in the shape of Santa Claus, you have experienced the affects of conditioning.
Situational cues and conditioning have an important role in our understanding of addiction. As previously eluded to, there is evidence that many behaviors such as alcohol and drugs can be produced by placebo doses and have to same effects on the person taking them.
Even after long periods of abstinence, a person could still struggle with the affects of addiction conditioning. For example, I once had a client, who after 40 years of sobriety came in to see me because he “scared himself”. He reported how on a previous day, he was driving past an old bar he used to drink at, “without thinking” he found himself parking his car and approaching the door of the tavern. He stated, “It was like I was in a zombie mode... I couldn't think straight!” As he walked through the door, the smell of alcohol reached his senses “I don't remember ever wanting a beer so much in my life!” Fortunately, his wife call his phone and asked, “Where are you?” This was enough “reboot [his] brain”, and he said to her “Wow, I am in a bar”. She calmly replied, “Well, you better get out of there.” Again, he was shocked that this old association was still so very strong. This is the power of conditioning.
This theory is based in the ideas and research of Ivan Pavlov and his hungry salivating dogs (which most of us may remember from high school psychology class). Pavlov discovered and documented the principles governing how animals, and then adapted to humans, learn. Two basic kinds of learning or conditioning occur: operant and classical.
Classical conditioning, was the initial type of association first discovered by Pavlov as he noticed a relationship between a bell and the salivation of his dogs. Specifically, the animal learns to associate a neutral stimulus (like the ringing of a bell) with a stimulus that has great, even survival meaning based on how closely in time the two stimuli are presented. Dogs are able to learn the association between bell and food, (as humans are between two yellow arches and high calorie hamburgers) and will salivate immediately after hearing the bell once this connection has been made.
Marketers are well aware of classical conditioning. Next time you watch commercials on television, think to yourself, “What is the hidden message in this commercial?” For example, I once saw a beer commercial where a man began to drink the competitor's beer and women around him ran away, next to him was a man who began to drink the advertised beer, and those same women ran up to him and began to take off his shirt—what message is being sent? Sex definitely sells, especially beer!
Operant, also know as instrumental conditioning is a little more obvious than classical. In operant conditioning an animal or human learns to perform particular behaviors in order to obtain an intrinsically rewarding stimulus. For example, why do many people work jobs that they don't enjoy—to get a paycheck.
Many therapist have used the Classical, or Pavlovian conditioning theory to understand the nature of addictions. Truly, there are many obvious examples which would support the classical conditioning aspects of developing a dependence, especially on drugs. The inebriating or “drunk” effects of people given non-alcoholic drinks (such as “near beer”), when the individuals were told they were getting alcoholic drinks can be evidence for this type of conditioning. As with the individual addicted to cocaine, who begins to sweat at the sight of sugar or flour. I have noticed a strong association between “good times” and food. Just think of any typical Christmas party, what comes to mind? If you thought chocolate treats in the shape of Santa Claus, you have experienced the affects of conditioning.
Situational cues and conditioning have an important role in our understanding of addiction. As previously eluded to, there is evidence that many behaviors such as alcohol and drugs can be produced by placebo doses and have to same effects on the person taking them.
Even after long periods of abstinence, a person could still struggle with the affects of addiction conditioning. For example, I once had a client, who after 40 years of sobriety came in to see me because he “scared himself”. He reported how on a previous day, he was driving past an old bar he used to drink at, “without thinking” he found himself parking his car and approaching the door of the tavern. He stated, “It was like I was in a zombie mode... I couldn't think straight!” As he walked through the door, the smell of alcohol reached his senses “I don't remember ever wanting a beer so much in my life!” Fortunately, his wife call his phone and asked, “Where are you?” This was enough “reboot [his] brain”, and he said to her “Wow, I am in a bar”. She calmly replied, “Well, you better get out of there.” Again, he was shocked that this old association was still so very strong. This is the power of conditioning.
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Avoidant Personality Disorder: A Defense Against the Social Anxiety Attacks
I have been meeting with a lot of clients who either have an avoidant personality disorder, or live with someone who does - since the majority of people with this type of personality will not meet with a therapist, I thought I would blog on it and give some insights into this issue.
In Avoidant Personality Disorder, the person maintains a systematic avoidance of social contacts and any situation which might result in embarrassment or anxiety. Even with people who are close, he or she avoids a more intimate involvement.
The permanent expectations of being ridiculed, criticized, rejected puts the person constantly at the borderline of suffering anxiety attacks. Then he develops a permanent scheme of self-protection against anxiety.
Some signs and symptoms are found in these people. Sometimes the symptoms predominate and the disorder goes unnoticed by the majority of people with whom the bearer has contact (because symptoms are subjectives).
– They tend to live alone
– Contact with family and friends can be enjoyable, but only for a short period of time (minute or hours) and anxiety can be aroused at any moment.
– They avoid contact with strangers. They are extremely kind when such contact occurs and they do everything possible to make sure that such contact is brief.
– They develop at least one phobia (for animals or objects) whose origin is connected with the earlier appearance of anxiety attacks in social situations. The animal or object connected with such situations unleashes the anxiety and this assumes phobic characteristics.
– They are aware that they have abdicated certain experiences in life in order to avoid suffering.
– They often fantasize about the situations they avoid and yet would like to experience – in their fantasies they exclude the anxiety-provoking stimuli.
– They can be professionally successful, but they could be even more successful if they did not turn their backs on opportunities.
What is the difference between Avoidant Personality Disorder, Shyness, Social Anxiety, Generalized Social Phobia and Introverted Personality?
Shyness – As I see it, the difference is that in Shyness the person still tries to face situations which generate fear, even if only to show others what she is capable of getting. The situation may be uncomfortable yet the person tries to convey the message to those around him that he is liking or enjoying it. The desire to integrate oneself is so intense that the anxiety takes a back seat. Above all, the person has to show that she can get the same things other people can and enjoy them as much as they do.
Social Anxiety – In Social Anxiety, the person avoids social contacts and performance, mainly those that unleash extreme anxiety like panic attacks, but he wants to have such contacts and preserves the potentialities of affective involvement and feels comfortable with people who are close.
Generalized Social Phobia – In Generalized Social Phobia, a.k.a. Generalized Social Anxiety, the person suffers anxiety attacks due to exposure to many social situations. There is avoidance, to protect oneself, but the person wants to live like the others and have the same opportunities.
Avoidant Personality Disorder – In Avoidant Personality Disorder, besides the behaviors and attitudes described, we can see that the person has given up altogether on facing situations that generate fear and does not undergo anxiety attacks simply because she avoids any anxiety-generating situation that is possible. Additionally, she does everything possible not to be noticed.
Introverted Personality - Avoidance Personality Disorder has external similarities to the Introverted Personality. Nevertheless, within people there are differences. The main one is that the person with introverted personality does not feel anxiety when it is necessary to maintain social contact.
In my clinical observation, Avoidant Personality Disorder is preceded by anxiety attacks and even some panic attacks, which become occasional attacks or even stop due to the avoidance mechanisms that are developed.
Source:
www.social-anxiety-shyness-info.com
In Avoidant Personality Disorder, the person maintains a systematic avoidance of social contacts and any situation which might result in embarrassment or anxiety. Even with people who are close, he or she avoids a more intimate involvement.
The permanent expectations of being ridiculed, criticized, rejected puts the person constantly at the borderline of suffering anxiety attacks. Then he develops a permanent scheme of self-protection against anxiety.
Some signs and symptoms are found in these people. Sometimes the symptoms predominate and the disorder goes unnoticed by the majority of people with whom the bearer has contact (because symptoms are subjectives).
– They tend to live alone
– Contact with family and friends can be enjoyable, but only for a short period of time (minute or hours) and anxiety can be aroused at any moment.
– They avoid contact with strangers. They are extremely kind when such contact occurs and they do everything possible to make sure that such contact is brief.
– They develop at least one phobia (for animals or objects) whose origin is connected with the earlier appearance of anxiety attacks in social situations. The animal or object connected with such situations unleashes the anxiety and this assumes phobic characteristics.
– They are aware that they have abdicated certain experiences in life in order to avoid suffering.
– They often fantasize about the situations they avoid and yet would like to experience – in their fantasies they exclude the anxiety-provoking stimuli.
– They can be professionally successful, but they could be even more successful if they did not turn their backs on opportunities.
What is the difference between Avoidant Personality Disorder, Shyness, Social Anxiety, Generalized Social Phobia and Introverted Personality?
Shyness – As I see it, the difference is that in Shyness the person still tries to face situations which generate fear, even if only to show others what she is capable of getting. The situation may be uncomfortable yet the person tries to convey the message to those around him that he is liking or enjoying it. The desire to integrate oneself is so intense that the anxiety takes a back seat. Above all, the person has to show that she can get the same things other people can and enjoy them as much as they do.
Social Anxiety – In Social Anxiety, the person avoids social contacts and performance, mainly those that unleash extreme anxiety like panic attacks, but he wants to have such contacts and preserves the potentialities of affective involvement and feels comfortable with people who are close.
Generalized Social Phobia – In Generalized Social Phobia, a.k.a. Generalized Social Anxiety, the person suffers anxiety attacks due to exposure to many social situations. There is avoidance, to protect oneself, but the person wants to live like the others and have the same opportunities.
Avoidant Personality Disorder – In Avoidant Personality Disorder, besides the behaviors and attitudes described, we can see that the person has given up altogether on facing situations that generate fear and does not undergo anxiety attacks simply because she avoids any anxiety-generating situation that is possible. Additionally, she does everything possible not to be noticed.
Introverted Personality - Avoidance Personality Disorder has external similarities to the Introverted Personality. Nevertheless, within people there are differences. The main one is that the person with introverted personality does not feel anxiety when it is necessary to maintain social contact.
In my clinical observation, Avoidant Personality Disorder is preceded by anxiety attacks and even some panic attacks, which become occasional attacks or even stop due to the avoidance mechanisms that are developed.
Source:
www.social-anxiety-shyness-info.com
Friday, April 9, 2010
Asperger's Relationship
Are Asperger relationships difficult to maintain? The social skill and communication issues inherent in Asperger's syndrome can challenge some relationships. However, there are ways for both the person with Aspergers and loved ones to successfully work through the issues. A person with Aspergers can form meaningful and close relationships with parents, spouses, extended family and friends.
Common Asperger Relationship Issues
A person with Aspergers and his loved ones may find themselves in conflicts that have root in key aspects of the condition. The conflicts are often misunderstandings that stem from differences in emotional responses, communication and social skills problems, routines and obsessive behaviors. The person without Aspergers or neurotypical and the person with Aspergers may have different sets of expectations and ways of relating in a relationship. Learning about Asperger characteristics can help family members and friends better understand their loved one.
Emotional Response
A person with Aspergers has problems understanding another person's emotions. He may not be able to properly interpret facial expressions, body language or gestures. The inability to interpret others emotions is often referred to as mindblindness. This may lead a neurotypical person to misunderstand his reactions to an emotional situation and view a response as inappropriate or negative.
Sometimes a neurotypical person may mistakenly interpret a person with Aspergers' emotional response or lack of response as an inability to feel emotion. This is not true. A person with Aspergers feels emotion but he may have trouble expressing his emotion or find unusual ways to express it.
Communication and Social Skills Problems
Asperger's syndrome causes problems with language, communication and social interaction. A person with Aspergers may not be able to make friends easily and may also find two-way conversation difficult. He may appear to talk at people, rather than with them and fixate on favorite topics even if the other party shows distinct signs of disinterest or distress. He continues to talk about the topic and is oblivious to the other party's reaction. He also may misunderstand language at time and taking many things literally, missing subtlety.
In a relationship, the communication problems can easily lead to misunderstandings. In relationships, the neurotypical person often takes on the role of helping the person with Aspergers and others understand each other better in social situations. Some romantic relationships also become strained because the neurotypical person gets frustrated with being the couple's main social connection to the rest of the world.
Routines and Obsessive Behaviors
Routines and obsessive behaviors are aspects of Aspergers that can also challenge relationships. A person with Aspergers may get extremely upset over interruptions in daily routines or any attempt to redirect him away from an obsessive behavior. The neurotypical person may see the negative reaction to the interruption as irrational. However, the person with Aspergers may see the interruption as a personal insult or an attempt to take away something essential to daily functioning.
Asperger's syndrome may involve obsessive behaviors or sensory issues that some neurotypical people find disturbing. Examples of obsessive behavior include a fixation on an activity like memorizing sports trivia and talking about it for hours or ritualistic hand washing.
It is important for a loved one show some sensitivity in her reaction to the routines and obsessive behavior.
How to Help Relationships Thrive
The most important way to help a relationship thrive is to never give up hope. Learn about Asperger's syndrome through research and talking with therapists. Since each case of Aspergers is unique, pay attention to a loved one's specific concerns and personality. Figure out what is important to him and try to respect necessary boundaries. Find common ground whenever possible and cherish it. Consider participating in family or couple's therapy for Aspergers and autism. Experts can help families find better ways to relate to each other.
Resources For Family Members and Couples
A number of Asperger and autism support organizations have information on local support groups for people with Aspergers and their families and friends. The following websites provide helpful information on relationships:
* FAAAS: Families of Adults Affected by Asperger's Syndrome (FAAAS)has forums, articles and resources for spouses and other family of people with Aspergers.
* IAN Community: The Interactive Autism Network (IAN) site provides articles and a discussion forum with information provided from people with autism spectrum disorder, families and autism experts. The site has a interesting article on a couple dealing with Aspergers.
* ASPEN: Asperger Syndrome Education Support Network (ASPEN) has helpful resources for families and friends of people with Aspergers.
* OASIS: Online Asperger Syndrome Information and Support (OASIS) has detailed articles and support group information.
Hope for Relationships
A person with Aspergers can have healthy and happy relationships with a spouse, parents, extended family and friends. For relationship success, everyone needs to work together. The neurotypical person should gain a strong understanding of both the Aspergers condition and the person involved. The person with Aspergers should be willing to participate on some level. There is always hope when people love each other and have a determination to try to make a relationship succeed.
Sources:
McPartland J, Klin A (2006). "Asperger's syndrome". Adolesc Med Clin 17 (3): 771–88. doi:10.1016/j.admecli.2006.06.010 (inactive 2008-06-25). PMID 17030291.
Baskin JH, Sperber M, Price BH (2006). "Asperger syndrome revisited". Rev Neurol Dis 3 (1): 1–7. PMID 16596080.
Asperger H; tr. and annot. Frith U (1991) [1944]. "'Autistic psychopathy' in childhood". in Frith U. Autism and Asperger syndrome. Cambridge University Press. pp. 37–92. ISBN 0-521-38608-X.
Adrienne Warber (2009) "aspergers in relationships" Needtoknow.com
Common Asperger Relationship Issues
A person with Aspergers and his loved ones may find themselves in conflicts that have root in key aspects of the condition. The conflicts are often misunderstandings that stem from differences in emotional responses, communication and social skills problems, routines and obsessive behaviors. The person without Aspergers or neurotypical and the person with Aspergers may have different sets of expectations and ways of relating in a relationship. Learning about Asperger characteristics can help family members and friends better understand their loved one.
Emotional Response
A person with Aspergers has problems understanding another person's emotions. He may not be able to properly interpret facial expressions, body language or gestures. The inability to interpret others emotions is often referred to as mindblindness. This may lead a neurotypical person to misunderstand his reactions to an emotional situation and view a response as inappropriate or negative.
Sometimes a neurotypical person may mistakenly interpret a person with Aspergers' emotional response or lack of response as an inability to feel emotion. This is not true. A person with Aspergers feels emotion but he may have trouble expressing his emotion or find unusual ways to express it.
Communication and Social Skills Problems
Asperger's syndrome causes problems with language, communication and social interaction. A person with Aspergers may not be able to make friends easily and may also find two-way conversation difficult. He may appear to talk at people, rather than with them and fixate on favorite topics even if the other party shows distinct signs of disinterest or distress. He continues to talk about the topic and is oblivious to the other party's reaction. He also may misunderstand language at time and taking many things literally, missing subtlety.
In a relationship, the communication problems can easily lead to misunderstandings. In relationships, the neurotypical person often takes on the role of helping the person with Aspergers and others understand each other better in social situations. Some romantic relationships also become strained because the neurotypical person gets frustrated with being the couple's main social connection to the rest of the world.
Routines and Obsessive Behaviors
Routines and obsessive behaviors are aspects of Aspergers that can also challenge relationships. A person with Aspergers may get extremely upset over interruptions in daily routines or any attempt to redirect him away from an obsessive behavior. The neurotypical person may see the negative reaction to the interruption as irrational. However, the person with Aspergers may see the interruption as a personal insult or an attempt to take away something essential to daily functioning.
Asperger's syndrome may involve obsessive behaviors or sensory issues that some neurotypical people find disturbing. Examples of obsessive behavior include a fixation on an activity like memorizing sports trivia and talking about it for hours or ritualistic hand washing.
It is important for a loved one show some sensitivity in her reaction to the routines and obsessive behavior.
How to Help Relationships Thrive
The most important way to help a relationship thrive is to never give up hope. Learn about Asperger's syndrome through research and talking with therapists. Since each case of Aspergers is unique, pay attention to a loved one's specific concerns and personality. Figure out what is important to him and try to respect necessary boundaries. Find common ground whenever possible and cherish it. Consider participating in family or couple's therapy for Aspergers and autism. Experts can help families find better ways to relate to each other.
Resources For Family Members and Couples
A number of Asperger and autism support organizations have information on local support groups for people with Aspergers and their families and friends. The following websites provide helpful information on relationships:
* FAAAS: Families of Adults Affected by Asperger's Syndrome (FAAAS)has forums, articles and resources for spouses and other family of people with Aspergers.
* IAN Community: The Interactive Autism Network (IAN) site provides articles and a discussion forum with information provided from people with autism spectrum disorder, families and autism experts. The site has a interesting article on a couple dealing with Aspergers.
* ASPEN: Asperger Syndrome Education Support Network (ASPEN) has helpful resources for families and friends of people with Aspergers.
* OASIS: Online Asperger Syndrome Information and Support (OASIS) has detailed articles and support group information.
Hope for Relationships
A person with Aspergers can have healthy and happy relationships with a spouse, parents, extended family and friends. For relationship success, everyone needs to work together. The neurotypical person should gain a strong understanding of both the Aspergers condition and the person involved. The person with Aspergers should be willing to participate on some level. There is always hope when people love each other and have a determination to try to make a relationship succeed.
Sources:
McPartland J, Klin A (2006). "Asperger's syndrome". Adolesc Med Clin 17 (3): 771–88. doi:10.1016/j.admecli.2006.06.010 (inactive 2008-06-25). PMID 17030291.
Baskin JH, Sperber M, Price BH (2006). "Asperger syndrome revisited". Rev Neurol Dis 3 (1): 1–7. PMID 16596080.
Asperger H; tr. and annot. Frith U (1991) [1944]. "'Autistic psychopathy' in childhood". in Frith U. Autism and Asperger syndrome. Cambridge University Press. pp. 37–92. ISBN 0-521-38608-X.
Adrienne Warber (2009) "aspergers in relationships" Needtoknow.com
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Emotional Avoidance and Traumatic Stress
PTSD and emotional avoidance go hand-in-hand. Many people with PTSD try to get away from or avoid their emotions. Emotional avoidance is part of the avoidance cluster of PTSD symptoms.
Avoidance symptoms make up one cluster of PTSD symptoms. Specifically, the avoidance cluster of PTSD symptoms include:
* Making an effort to avoid thoughts, feelings, or conversations about the traumatic event.
* Making an effort to avoid places or people that remind you of the traumatic event.
* Having a difficult time remembering important parts of the traumatic event.
* A loss of interest in important, once positive, activities.
* Feeling distant from others.
* Experiencing difficulties having positive feelings such as happiness or love.
* Feeling as though your life may be cut short.
The first symptom includes the avoidance of emotional experience, which is common among people with PTSD.
Emotional Avoidance in PTSD
It has been found that people with PTSD often try to avoid or “push away” their emotions, both emotions about a traumatic experience and emotions in general. Studies have found that people with PTSD may withhold expressing emotions. In addition, it has been found that the avoidance of emotions may make some PTSD symptoms worse or even contribute to the development of PTSD symptoms after the experience of a traumatic event.
Why Emotional Avoidance Does Not Work
It is important to recognize that we have emotions for a reason. Our emotions provide us with information about ourselves and the things going on around us. For example, the emotion of fear tells us that we may be in danger. The emotion of sadness tells us that we may need some time to take care of ourselves or seek out help from others. Given the important role they play in our lives, our emotions are there to be experienced and they want to be experienced.
Therefore, while emotional avoidance may be effective in the short-run and may provide you with some temporary relief, in the long run, the emotions you're trying to avoid may grow stronger. Basically, your emotions may “fight back” so they can be be experienced and listened to. If someone is determined to avoid his emotions, he may then turn to more drastic and unhealthy ways of avoiding emotions, such as through substance use.
Avoiding our emotions also takes considerable effort, especially when those emotions are strong (as they often are in PTSD). As avoided emotions grow stronger, more and more effort is needed to keep them at bay. As a result, little energy may be left for the important things in your life, such as family and friends. In addition, using all your energy to avoid certain emotions may make it difficult to manage other experiences, such as frustration and irritation, making you more likely to be “on edge” and angry.
What Can Be Done
The most important thing to do is to reduce the extent that you try to escape your emotions. Of course, this is a lot easier said than done. If you have been avoiding your emotions for a long time, it may be difficult to release them. Sometimes, when we let our emotions build up, they may escape all at once, like a dam breaking. This may lead to our emotions feeling out of control.
It is important to find ways to release your emotions. Therapy of all kinds can be very helpful in this regard. Cognitive-behavioral and psychoanalytic/psychodynamic therapies all give you the opportunity to express and understand your emotions, as well as examine the sources of those emotional responses. In addition to examining emotions connected directly to the traumatic event, cognitive-behavioral approaches may address how certain thoughts or ways of evaluating a situation may be contributing to your emotions. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (or ACT), a particular type of behavior therapy, focuses on breaking down avoidance and helping a person place his energy into living a meaningful life (and being willing to experience whatever emotions arise as a result). Psychoanalytic/psychodynamic approaches may pay more attention to early childhood experiences and their influence on your emotions. Either way, therapy can provide you with a safe place to express and approach your emotions. Seeking social support from trusted loved ones can also provide a safe way to express your emotions. Finally, writing about your feelings can also give you a safe and private way to release your deepest feelings.
If your emotions feel really unclear or unpredictable, self-monitoring may be a useful strategy for you. It can give you a sense of what situations bring of certain thoughts and feelings. Finally, if your emotions feel too strong, try distraction instead of avoidance. Distraction can be viewed as “temporary avoidance.” Do something to temporarily distract you from a strong emotion, such as reading a book, calling a friend, eating comforting food, or taking a bath. This may give the emotion some time to decrease in strength, making it easier to cope with.
Sources:
Hayes, S.C., Luoma, J.B., Bond, F.W., Masuda, A., & Lillis, J. (2006). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Model, processes and outcomes. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 44, 1-25. Hayes, S. C., Strosahl, K.D., Wilson, K. G. (1999). Acceptance and commitment therapy: An experiential approach to behavior change. New York, NY: Guilford Press.
Roemer, L., Litz, B. T., Orsillo, S. M. & Wagner, A. (2001). A preliminary investigation of the role of strategic withholding of emotion in PTSD. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 14, 149-156.
Salters-Pedneault, K., Tull, M.T., & Roemer, L. (2004). The role of avoidance of emotional material in the anxiety disorders.
Applied and Preventive Psychology, 11, 95-114.
Tull, M.T., Gratz, K.L., Salters, K., & Roemer, L. (2004). The role of experiential avoidance in posttraumatic stress symptoms and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and somatization. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 192, 754-761.
Avoidance symptoms make up one cluster of PTSD symptoms. Specifically, the avoidance cluster of PTSD symptoms include:
* Making an effort to avoid thoughts, feelings, or conversations about the traumatic event.
* Making an effort to avoid places or people that remind you of the traumatic event.
* Having a difficult time remembering important parts of the traumatic event.
* A loss of interest in important, once positive, activities.
* Feeling distant from others.
* Experiencing difficulties having positive feelings such as happiness or love.
* Feeling as though your life may be cut short.
The first symptom includes the avoidance of emotional experience, which is common among people with PTSD.
Emotional Avoidance in PTSD
It has been found that people with PTSD often try to avoid or “push away” their emotions, both emotions about a traumatic experience and emotions in general. Studies have found that people with PTSD may withhold expressing emotions. In addition, it has been found that the avoidance of emotions may make some PTSD symptoms worse or even contribute to the development of PTSD symptoms after the experience of a traumatic event.
Why Emotional Avoidance Does Not Work
It is important to recognize that we have emotions for a reason. Our emotions provide us with information about ourselves and the things going on around us. For example, the emotion of fear tells us that we may be in danger. The emotion of sadness tells us that we may need some time to take care of ourselves or seek out help from others. Given the important role they play in our lives, our emotions are there to be experienced and they want to be experienced.
Therefore, while emotional avoidance may be effective in the short-run and may provide you with some temporary relief, in the long run, the emotions you're trying to avoid may grow stronger. Basically, your emotions may “fight back” so they can be be experienced and listened to. If someone is determined to avoid his emotions, he may then turn to more drastic and unhealthy ways of avoiding emotions, such as through substance use.
Avoiding our emotions also takes considerable effort, especially when those emotions are strong (as they often are in PTSD). As avoided emotions grow stronger, more and more effort is needed to keep them at bay. As a result, little energy may be left for the important things in your life, such as family and friends. In addition, using all your energy to avoid certain emotions may make it difficult to manage other experiences, such as frustration and irritation, making you more likely to be “on edge” and angry.
What Can Be Done
The most important thing to do is to reduce the extent that you try to escape your emotions. Of course, this is a lot easier said than done. If you have been avoiding your emotions for a long time, it may be difficult to release them. Sometimes, when we let our emotions build up, they may escape all at once, like a dam breaking. This may lead to our emotions feeling out of control.
It is important to find ways to release your emotions. Therapy of all kinds can be very helpful in this regard. Cognitive-behavioral and psychoanalytic/psychodynamic therapies all give you the opportunity to express and understand your emotions, as well as examine the sources of those emotional responses. In addition to examining emotions connected directly to the traumatic event, cognitive-behavioral approaches may address how certain thoughts or ways of evaluating a situation may be contributing to your emotions. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (or ACT), a particular type of behavior therapy, focuses on breaking down avoidance and helping a person place his energy into living a meaningful life (and being willing to experience whatever emotions arise as a result). Psychoanalytic/psychodynamic approaches may pay more attention to early childhood experiences and their influence on your emotions. Either way, therapy can provide you with a safe place to express and approach your emotions. Seeking social support from trusted loved ones can also provide a safe way to express your emotions. Finally, writing about your feelings can also give you a safe and private way to release your deepest feelings.
If your emotions feel really unclear or unpredictable, self-monitoring may be a useful strategy for you. It can give you a sense of what situations bring of certain thoughts and feelings. Finally, if your emotions feel too strong, try distraction instead of avoidance. Distraction can be viewed as “temporary avoidance.” Do something to temporarily distract you from a strong emotion, such as reading a book, calling a friend, eating comforting food, or taking a bath. This may give the emotion some time to decrease in strength, making it easier to cope with.
Sources:
Hayes, S.C., Luoma, J.B., Bond, F.W., Masuda, A., & Lillis, J. (2006). Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: Model, processes and outcomes. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 44, 1-25. Hayes, S. C., Strosahl, K.D., Wilson, K. G. (1999). Acceptance and commitment therapy: An experiential approach to behavior change. New York, NY: Guilford Press.
Roemer, L., Litz, B. T., Orsillo, S. M. & Wagner, A. (2001). A preliminary investigation of the role of strategic withholding of emotion in PTSD. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 14, 149-156.
Salters-Pedneault, K., Tull, M.T., & Roemer, L. (2004). The role of avoidance of emotional material in the anxiety disorders.
Applied and Preventive Psychology, 11, 95-114.
Tull, M.T., Gratz, K.L., Salters, K., & Roemer, L. (2004). The role of experiential avoidance in posttraumatic stress symptoms and symptoms of depression, anxiety, and somatization. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 192, 754-761.
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