I Thought It Was Just Me
(But It Isn’t)
Making the Journey from “What will people think?” to “I am enough”
Brene Brown
Who should read: Anyone suffering from imposter syndrome, feeling that they aren’t “enough”, or suffering from shame (different than guilt!).
Favorite quotes: “When we believe success should be effortless, we simultaneously set ourselves up for shame and diminish the efforts of people who are working on their issues around perfectionism”
Shame Versus Guilt
Have you ever stopped to wonder whether shame is good or bad for you? When you experience shame, how do you feel? Brene Brown asked that question to hundreds of individuals. Their answers indicate an emotional, physiological and psychologically dark experience. If your initial reaction was that shame can be good, you are probably using the term synonymously with guilt. The author does not- she has gathered significant evidence that shame is damaging, and needs to be distinguished from guilt. Her distinction is thus: “Guilt is holding an action or behavior up against our ethics, values and beliefs. [We] feel guilt when the behavior is inconsistent with who we want to be. Shame is focusing on who we are rather than what we’ve done.” Shame creates feelings of fear, blame and disconnection which are counterproductive to positive action and growth. Guilt motivates positive behavior change, whereas shame tends to paralyze or create negative behaviors.
Shame and the Veterinary Profession
Our profession is ripe with opportunities for shame. Clients and society love to blame us for financial limitations in treatment, inability to divine a diagnosis without diagnostics, and making mistakes. We face the opportunity for shame on a daily basis. And sadly, many of us readily accept it, or create it for ourselves! Shame thrives in isolation, which drives disconnection, which is a huge factor in burnout and suicide. Shame is something we need to be paying attention to in our field. The bright spot in this, is that Brene Brown’s studies have shown that we can develop skills to be resilient against shame. She uses this book to outline the skillsets and strategies she has identified in individuals she classifies as “shame resilient”.
Number 1 Strategy to Combat Shame
One of the most universal skills identified in shame resilient individuals is the ability to give and receive empathy. Empathy towards others and towards self is equally critical. And it needs to be distinguished from sympathy. Sympathy is to be sorry or sad for someone, but not try to understand it from their perspective. Empathy is to compassionately place yourself in the other’s persons shoes and understand what they may be feeling or going through. If someone is experiencing shame, and receives sympathy rather than empathy, it can backfire and cause the individual further shame. If you choose to work on one skill towards shame resilience, empathy, and emotional intelligence will be your biggest bang for your buck!
Supporting Skills for Shame Resilience
Shame resilient individuals can recognize shame in themselves as it is occurring, and have developed patterns and behaviors to negotiate the experience in a constructive way.
In addition to empathy, high shame resilient individuals had the following characteristics:
1. Recognize shame and understand triggers
Shame often has physical and physiologic response (feeling hot, short of breath, heart rate changes) that can be markers for helping you identify moments when you are experiencing shame. Emotional response that are very common are fear and blame. Every individual will experience it differently, but the key is to recognize your markers. Recognition might seem like a silly task, but it is necessary to be able to manage shame effectively. Practice often and frequently! As you become skilled at recognizing you may start noticing patterns or specific events or comments that trigger the feeling of shame. Knowing these triggers will help you identify shame even quicker, and perhaps even manage things enough to avoid your triggers.
2. Practice critical awareness
The common responses to feelings of shame are to individualize (make it personal and feel as though you are the only one to experience this), pathologize (feeling as though there is something wrong with you), and reinforce (I should be ashamed of myself). Individuals with high shame resilience learn to replace these response with more constructive reactions. Instead, they contextualize (identify the place this situation has in the big picture), normalize (recognize and/or identify the common experience) and demystify (share knowledge of the situation with others).
3. Reach out
Shame needs isolation to thrive. In connection and community, and bathed in empathy, it cannot survive. Shame resilient individuals resist the urge to hide their shame, and they intentionally connect with others that help them contextualize, empathize and feel the normalization of the situation.
4. Growth Mindset
People that have developed the shame resilient skill can and will effectively communicate how they are feeling, and ask for help. They very proactively choose growth over perfection.
Dangers of Indulging Shame
These are not skills that are learned overnight. These are skills that were fought for and earned through blood sweat and tears. But I believe they are desperately needed, and an awareness and open discussion of how dangerous the consequences of shame are needs to be infused into our profession. In addition to prohibiting our personal and professional growth, shame is dangerous due to it’s association with addiction. There seems to be a bit of a chicken and an egg scenario with addiction: those suffering from addiction are going to experience shame, but individuals susceptible to shame may “self-medicate” with addictions. A vicious cycle develops. Given our responsibilities and access to controlled drugs, and the perpetual opportunity for shame, it creates the perfect storm for some of us. Being self-aware can also help us recognize when others may be at risk or struggling, which may be an opportunity to save colleagues from a world of hurt or deadly choices. So, regardless of whether you feel like this information is personally applicable, it is good information for our profession at large.
If the topic interests you, the book delves into exploring the research behind resilience and factors that may contribute to shame (gender, socioeconomic status, age). Brene is also dedicated to using stories and real-life examples to demonstrate her points, so brings more of a concreteness to the abstract concepts of her research.
Go forth and be resilient, my incredible and amazing colleagues!
Practical Implementation Exercises:
1. Next time someone shares a difficult experience with you, examine your response- did you respond with empathy or sympathy? Can you recall a time someone responded to you with empathy, and how that felt different?
2. Keep a logbook of moments throughout the week that you felt shame. Note the emotional or physical responses associated with those moments. Continue this logbook until you feel that you are recognizing shame in the moment.
3. Think about who you would trust most to try to share a moment of shame, be it small or big. If you feel you don’t have someone you could share with, would you be willing to share with a counselor or therapist?
4. Examine a moment of shame. What could you do in the future to avoid a similar moment of shame? If a colleague were describing the situation to you, as though it had happened to them, how would you respond? Could you respond to yourself in a similar manner?
Additional resources:
Understanding Emotional Intelligence
Whats up this is somewhat of off topic but I was wondering if blogs use WYSIWYG editors or if you have to manually code with HTML. I’m starting a blog soon but have no coding skills so I wanted to get advice from someone with experience. Any help would be enormously appreciated!
I’d have to examine with you here. Which isn’t something I normally do! I enjoy studying a put up that can make folks think. Additionally, thanks for permitting me to remark!
This post is genuinely a good one it assists new internet visitors, who are wishing in favor of blogging.
Thanks for another magnificent post. Where else could anyone get that type of info in such an ideal way of writing? I have a presentation next week, and I’m on the look for such information.
I don’t even know how I ended up here, but I thought this post was great. I don’t know who you are but certainly you’re going to a famous blogger if you aren’t already 😉 Cheers!
It’s really a cool and helpful piece of information. I’m glad that you shared this helpful info with us. Please keep us up to date like this. Thanks for sharing.
Hi there, You have done an excellent job. I will certainly digg it and personally recommend to my friends. I am sure they will be benefited from this site.
Hi, Neat post. There is a problem together with your web site in internet explorer, may check this?IE nonetheless is the market chief and a huge element of other people will pass over your wonderful writing due to this problem.
Throughout the grand pattern of things you actually secure a B+ with regard to effort and hard work. Exactly where you lost us was first on all the specifics. You know, it is said, the devil is in the details… And that could not be much more true in this article. Having said that, allow me reveal to you just what did do the job. The authoring is certainly quite powerful and this is most likely why I am taking an effort to opine. I do not really make it a regular habit of doing that. 2nd, although I can notice a leaps in reasoning you make, I am not confident of exactly how you appear to unite the ideas which in turn make your final result. For right now I shall yield to your position however trust in the foreseeable future you actually connect the facts much better.
you have got an amazing blog right here! would you prefer to make some invite posts on my weblog?
I will immediately grab your rss as I can not find your email subscription link or e-newsletter service. Do you have any? Kindly let me know in order that I could subscribe. Thanks.
Once I initially commented I clicked the -Notify me when new comments are added- checkbox and now every time a remark is added I get four emails with the identical comment. Is there any manner you can remove me from that service? Thanks!
Appreciating the commitment you put into your site and in depth information you present. It’s nice to come across a blog every once in a while that isn’t the same old rehashed material. Wonderful read! I’ve bookmarked your site and I’m adding your RSS feeds to my Google account.
Thanks for your submission. I would also love to opinion that the very first thing you will need to complete is find out if you really need credit restoration. To do that you will have to get your hands on a copy of your credit profile. That should never be difficult, ever since the government mandates that you are allowed to obtain one totally free copy of the credit report every year. You just have to inquire the right people today. You can either look into the website for the Federal Trade Commission or maybe contact one of the main credit agencies right away.
Hey there I am so glad I found your web site, I really found you by accident, while I was browsing on Google for something else, Anyhow I am here now and would just like to say thank you for a remarkable post and a all round thrilling blog (I also love the theme/design), I don’t have time to look over it all at the moment but I have saved it and also included your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be back to read much more, Please do keep up the excellent work.
Very nice post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wished to say that I have truly enjoyed browsing your blog posts. After all I will be subscribing to your rss feed and I hope you write again soon!
Thank you a lot for sharing this with all folks you really realize what you are speaking approximately! Bookmarked. Kindly also talk over with my web site =). We could have a link change contract among us!
Hi, i think that i saw you visited my web site thus i came to “go back the preferâ€.I am trying to in finding things to enhance my site!I assume its adequate to make use of a few of your ideas!!
I am really impressed with your writing skills as well as with the layout on your blog. Is this a paid theme or did you customize it yourself? Anyway keep up the excellent quality writing, it’s rare to see a nice blog like this one today..
You really make it seem so easy with your presentation but I find this topic to be actually something which I think I would never understand. It seems too complex and very broad for me. I am looking forward for your next post, I will try to get the hang of it!