Eclipsing Shame: The Victory of Self-Belief in Life's Arena
Recent eclipse? Piece about shame and prophecy? Choice title.
What do you regard as most humane? To spare someone shame.
Prophecies Of Shame
You know, kids, there’s a powerful concept in psychology that’s a bit like watching a plant grow from a seed we’ve sown ourselves, whether we meant to plant it or not. It’s called a self-fulfilling prophecy.
This idea that sometimes, just by believing something will happen, we start acting in ways that make that belief come true. Now, there’s a particularly tricky feeling that can really set these prophecies in motion: shame.
Shame is a heavy, uncomfortable coat that’s much too big for you. It doesn’t fit right, and it certainly doesn’t feel good, but there you are, wearing it. Shame is feeling bad about who we are, feeling like we’re somehow less than we should be. Shame is looking in the mirror and not liking what we see—not what’s in the reflection, but what we believe about it.
When someone feels shame, it’s like they see themselves through a lens that highlights only the bad, ignoring the good. This can really mess with a person’s self-esteem.
It makes them think, "If I’m this bad, surely I’ll fail," or "No one’s going to like me." Thinking like this might lead them to not try as hard, or to not try at all, to avoid doing things with others or new situations where they think they’ll just mess up again.
And here’s where it gets really interesting, the science part of it all. Our brains, these incredibly intricate organs, respond to shame in very specific ways. There are parts of our brain that light up when we feel social pain—the embarrassment or fear that others are judging us.
These are the same parts that help us figure out what others might be thinking about us. So, when we feel shame, our brains are working overtime to prepare us for more hurt, making us want to run away or hide.
From a more philosophical angle, think about this: some pretty smart thinkers like Jean-Paul Sartre have said that shame is how we realize that others can see us, that we aren’t just the observer of the world—we’re also a part of it.
And sometimes, that realization makes us see ourselves as objects that can be judged, which can really twist the way we think about who we are and our worth.
Shame can feel like it’s protecting us by keeping us from making fools of ourselves, but what it often does is keep us so scared of living our lives that we end up proving our worst fears true—we fail because we don’t try, or we push people away because we think they won’t like us. It’s a cycle, see?
But here’s the kicker, and something I want you to remember: just because we feel shame about something doesn’t mean we need to let it set the rules for how we live.
We might feel like we’re going to mess up, or that we’re not good enough, but every day gives us a chance to try and prove that wrong, not just to the world but to ourselves.
Imagine the stories we might hear in therapy or read in books about people who felt trapped by their shame but decided one day to act against it, to do something that scared them.
And by doing so, they started to break that heavy chain of shame. They proved to themselves they were more than their fear and shame told them they were.
So, if ever you feel that weight of shame about who you are or what you’ve done, talk about it, understand why you feel that way, and then, let’s figure out together how to prove it wrong. Because you are more than your fears, and you are more than your mistakes.
Each of you is capable of breaking those chains, and I’ll be right here, cheering you on every step of the way. Remember, recognizing how shame shapes our fears and actions is the first step to making sure it doesn’t get to write our story.
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Wise words, beautifully written. Thank you.
Nice. Well said.
Shame, anger, despair, depression, addiction, ect are all transcended in much the same way. Through surrender. I have learned this lesson many times and in many different ways. Through near death experiences, addictions, psychedelics, trauma, and many times in grief.
Once you see the way broadly, you see in it all things. I always rejected the idea as a child in church, had to see it for myself I guess.
Gotta let go.