Psychedelic Stigma

July 14, 2018

I’ve done a lot of coming out in my life. Coming out as bisexual. Coming out as a survivor of childhood sexual abuse. Even coming out as the Shame Lady (ha!). My latest coming out may be the most controversial yet. I am coming out as having used MDMA, a psychedelic drug, in a therapeutic setting.

Don’t get me wrong here - I am NOT a proponent of drug abuse in any form. But as someone who has benefited tremendously from psychedelic medicine, I support research into legitimate therapeutic uses of MDMA and other psychedelic drugs.

I first wrote what was intended to be an anonymous article about my experience with MDMA-assisted psychotherapy as a gift - a contribution in support of the amazing work an organization called MAPS does. But when MAPS - the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies - asked if they could include my name and explained using my real name would help because of the stigma surrounding the use of MDMA. I thought, well, why not? I am The Shame Lady after all :)

No, I am not ashamed of having tried MDMA-assisted psychotherapy. In fact I’m very excited about it’s potential to help a lot of people like myself suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Two groups in particular stand to benefit tremendously: 1. veterans, and 2. adults who suffered from childhood abuse or neglect.

Read my article on the MAPS website here.

While you're at MAPS.org, check out some of the history and research on psychedelic medicine, as well as other resources and information on their site. 

With love,

Kristina

Note: this post first appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/psychedelic

Anger vs. Shaming Anger

October 21, 2017

There’s shame - feeling as though you’re not good enough (to belong).

There’s anger - the feeling of being wronged (unable to exercise a right).

And then there’s Shaming Anger!

You know when you feel Shaming Anger because you slip into the blame game. “You did something you shouldn’t have done!” There’s that “shame-producing should” - this time being lobbed onto someone else.

You know when Shaming Anger is coming at you - berating you not just for something you did or didn’t do, but also with an underlying message of “YOU are not worthy” (of belonging).

Anger can be a helpful emotion. After all - it helps us set boundaries, the most basic of which is “No!” But anger can get yucky when it’s unconsciously mingled with shame (as it so often is!). Let's look at the difference:

shaming+anger+image3.jpg

Sometimes anger becomes shaming anger with a scornful look or a shaming tone of voice - no added shaming words necessary.

But wait! There is a place for shaming anger. There are certainly things I would like others to feel too ashamed to do. But ultimately, when I OWN my anger, I’m thinking in terms of what rights I believe I have that I want to get better at asserting. I can do this more easily when I’m not focused on shaming someone else.

What do you think?

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Note: this post first appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/2017/10/20/shaming-anger

Wearing Shame on Your Shoulders?

February 6, 2017

Excuse me, but is that shame that's weighing so heavily on your shoulders?

I see it in you because I have felt it in myself.

My shame was like a heavy cloak I wore for most of my life. Like a coat that both weighed me down, and also kept me safely hidden.

Even at times in my life when I've thought I was keeping my emotions to myself, I realize that I've been wearing my emotions in and on my body. I never made a choice to display my emotions in this way - it's just, well, part of being human. An embodied human.

Sometimes shame keeps me small

Sometimes happiness uplifts me

Sometimes sadness washes over my heart

Sometimes my face glows with pride

Sometimes joy bubbles up from my belly

Our emotions and our bodies are deeply connected. The emotions we feel have an impact on our bodies. But amazingly, the opposite is also true. Our bodies, and how we hold our bodies, can have an impact on our emotions.

Research shows that...

holding a power pose for 2 minutes makes us feel more empowered

holding a pencil between our teeth (creating a smile) makes us find jokes funnier

holding a warm beverage makes us more receptive ('warmed up') to ideas

This 2-way street of emotion to body and body to emotion can actually be fun to explore. If you're in the Boulder, Colorado area, check out my new Embodied Emotion all-levels yoga class at EarthYogaBoulder.com . Each class focuses on a pair of emotions. The first series focuses on Shame & Pride. Hope to see you there! 

With kindness and care,

Kristina

Note: this post first appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/2017/wearing-shame

PTSD Shame Anyone?

November 6, 2016

I’ve never really liked the term Post Traumatic Stress Disorder – PTSD. It makes it sound like something’s wrong with me – as though I’m ‘disordered.’ When, really, some horrific ‘disordered’ things happened to me and I had a perfectly normal reaction to them.

Had. Past tense. Well, truthfully, this year has been a rough one for me. More terrifying flashbacks, more time spent doing things to numb away the fear and pain (this year my ‘painkiller’ of choice was relatively harmless - an overdose of mindnumbing games on my cell phone), more tiredness, more body pain that somehow took more than 30 years to finally feel.

Should I be ashamed to share all this? After all, don’t I want to convince people I’m well and healed so that they might listen to what I have to say?

News Flash: just because I’ve had PTSD since childhood doesn’t mean I’m not also capable, reliable, hardworking, and intelligent. In fact, I’ve had to fight and work hard for things many people take for granted. I’m used to working hard.

And there are also times when ‘working hard,’ might look like ‘hardly working’ because healing trauma is itself hard work.

I work in a position where I’m blessed to be able to be honest about what’s up for me, and ask for time off when I need it. This is a privilege that not every trauma survivor has, and I have not always had. More often we are left hiding in shame – unable to say what’s really going on for us for fear of losing respect or even losing our jobs. Here’s what IS shameful: A culture where trauma survivors have to hide for fear of discrimination.

I took a risk in sharing – and did it in a big way, working with the amazing Ross Taylor, an award-winning photojournalist and filmmaker, on a short film of my story. For me, the film is a jump forward in losing the shame around my PTSD. My hope is I can contribute to making it easier for others too.

With kindness and care,

Kristina

Note: this post first appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/2016/11/6/ptsd-shame

Mental Health Shame

January 30, 2016

Have you noticed that the ideal in our culture is “perfect mental health”? Anything less is cause for shame. Imperfections are to be hidden at all costs. If we fail to keep them hidden, well, then we are branded as “mentally unhealthy” and may as well have a neon sign of shame on our forehead.

But is it realistic to expect everyone to have perfect mental health 100% of the time? Absolutely not. No more than we can expect people to have perfect physical health 100% of the time. Just as there is a full spectrum of physical well-being, there’s also a full spectrum of mental well-being.

When I broke my arm not that long ago, people went out of their way to be kind to me, opening doors, carrying packages, cooking and cleaning for me.

I don’t even have the expectation of receiving the same level of care and concern when there’s a break in my mental health.

When my arm was broken, I was not afraid of letting people know.

Should I be ashamed to admit when a part of my mind feels broken?

Me, right now, should I be ashamed to admit that I expect to have another flashback?

The last couple months I’ve been working with award-winning photojournalist and filmmaker Ross Taylor on a short film of my story of being sexually abused as a child. It’s been an emotional process, and something I’ve really wanted to do.

Until now I’ve only shared broad statements about my history, and the occasional bit of information. On the other hand, people, readers, maybe even you, write to me, sharing your personal stories, which I always feel honored to receive and to be trusted with.

Now, I want to reciprocate, and make my story available to you, but only for those who wish to hear it. I’m offering my story to you, with humility.

And, I’m also offering my story to the world, with anger. I’m angry that children are sexually abused. I’m equally angry that adults healing from this childhood trauma often don’t get the care, support, and understanding we need and deserve.

This film, my story, contains details of my childhood abuse. But guess what? The scariest bit for me to share is not about my past, but about my present.

It’s this: I expect another flashback.

Who me? The Shame Lady? Someone who has done years of work? Who teaches skills to other survivors and clinicians alike? Won’t sharing this jeopardize my credibility? Here’s why I’m choosing to share:

  1. I know that processing trauma does not mean I’m crazy. It means I’m human. It does not make me incompetent. It does not negate all my accomplishments.

  2. I know my mind has an incredible ability to adapt. Not just because modern neuroscience says so, but also because I’ve had the lived experience of my mind implementing intelligent survival strategies. Flashbacks happen to be an after-effect of this.

  3. I have supreme confidence in my own strength. The kind that comes from surviving not only a difficult childhood, but years of sometimes daily flashbacks.

For me, sharing this is a sign of bravery, not weakness.

Note: this post first appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/mentalhealth

#WhyIStayed : Shame

October 30, 2015

In honor of Domestic Violence Awareness Month, I’m offering up my own story of why I stayed in unhealthy relationships – ones in which my self-esteem took a nose-dive. I offer this story with humility and respect for the full spectrum of experiences – knowing that my own experience is not the worst, and not the best.

Looking back, I stayed for 2 BIG reasons:

  1. It felt familiar. I grew up with an inconsistent sense of safety. Being caught off guard and suddenly feeling unsafe, whether physically or emotionally, was normal to me. As a child, I clung to the breadcrumbs of masculine affection and to the negative male attention that I did receive, while hopelessly yearning for something more substantial and more loving. I carried the same pattern into later relationships with significant others.

  2. My shame infinity loop. I’ve shared before about my own version of the infamous shame cycle, but in this kind of relationship, it was more like an endless, double-headed, self-reinforcing shame infinity loop. Here’s the basic dynamic:

  • My partner shames me by telling me in subtle and not-so-subtle ways that I’m worthless, or unattractive, or crazy, or whatever the painful insult of the day is.

  • I take it in. I buy into it.

  • With friends and family, I’m too ashamed to share how my ‘love’ treats me.

  • I withhold information. I hide it.

I felt shamed by my partner, and ashamed with my friends and family.

“Shamed by” means hearing someone say the equivalent of “you’re not good enough to belong.”

“Ashamed with” means being with others and feeling “I’m not good enough to belong.”

The net result? Not feeling good enough to authentically belong anywhere. And what did that lead to? Clinging to the little sense of belonging I did have with my partner.

A lifetime of shame contributed to self-doubt and assumptions such as "everyone else thinks this person is wonderful- it must be something about me."

I lived in an invisible isolation. The shame infinity loop was like a 2-way blindfold - it kept me from letting myself be seen by others, and also blinded me to my reality and my choices.

How would I fill out my Shame Translator, if I had had this tool back then?

I would start by asking what are my ‘shame-producing shoulds’? My top few: I should try harder; I should be more loveable; I should be more attractive; I should know how to choose a good mate. I should be in a stable relationship. I should think this person is as wonderful as everyone else thinks they are.

Then, using the Shame Translator, here are just a few I come up with. I've included in parentheses the insights that my translations give me.

I am ashamed because within my intimate partnership, anyone who plays the role of female partner should do whatever it takes to please their mate. (Hmmm… I can see where that belief came from, but I don’t really buy into that)

I am ashamed because within my extended family anyone who plays the role of competent family member should have enough intelligence to choose a good mate. (Well, actually humans are complex, and we can’t possibly know what aspects of another person might only become visible later on – that has nothing to do with my own intelligence)

I am ashamed because within my group of friends anyone who plays the role of group member should believe my partner is wonderful. (Well, actually, as this person’s intimate partner, I know better than our other friends, and I’m checking boxes on this list.)

The Shame Translator is available to use for free at ShameTranslator.com . I find it helps me look at each of my shame-producing shoulds in a new way, and reveals paths forward that I couldn’t even see before.

The rest of my story… By luck I ended up marrying a true gentle-man, in every sense of the word. Without having had experienced his genuine love and kindness for 12 years I wouldn’t be who I am today. We’ve been divorced for a decade now, and still hold mutual respect and gratitude.  AND, without having addressed my core shame, guess what? My old relationship patterns sometimes reappeared. Working with my shame in this new way restores my confidence in my ability to hold self-awareness and self-respect going forward.

Please share your own thoughts, experiences, or domestic violence resources in the comments below...

Financial considerations are another common hook. If your #whyistay is because of money, here are a couple resources to check out: https://www.creditcards.com/credit-card-news/secret-financial-escape-plan-domestic-violence-1282.phphttps://www.bankrate.com/personal-finance/rebuild-finances-after-financial-abuse/

Note: this post first appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/2015/10/29/whyistayed

Shame and Social Change

August 13, 2015

Lately I have felt so inspired by people who learn this way of working with shame, and carry it forward. If I’m lucky, I get to witness a ‘housecleaning’ of sorts: people doing a systematic review of the ideals that are held by the groups they belong to.

Why do group ideals matter? Because shame arises when we are failing to live up to these group ideals. Yes, even when we think our shame is all about us, shame really has more to do with our need to belong.

For example, we might feel body shame if we fail to live up to the ideal of a fashion-model figure. Or we might feel ashamed that we weren’t raised within the ideal happy-home environment. Or we might feel ashamed that we don’t earn the ideal income. And that shame might show up differently with our family, our friends, or people at the beach – our various groups, because different groups may hold different ideals.

These group ideals – what we hold to be exemplary – shift from time to time, and they can benefit from a periodic review. Kind of like leftovers that have gotten pushed to the back of the fridge. Not surprisingly, some ideals are just bad and can be tossed (like forgotten rotten tomatoes). Some ideals just need some sprucing up (we’ll just shave the edges off that cheddar). And some are still just fine (fruitcake lasts forever!).

When we feel shame, we can ask: what’s the ideal I’m not living up to? In which group? If we can answer these questions, then we can have the incredibly empowering experience of fully articulating our shame. One way to further work with the shame, is to ask: do I really want to buy into this ideal?

This process has led to some amazing discussions about what ideals we collectively want to continue to uphold. These are the conversations that can drive social change! Consider the ideal of heterosexual relationships vs. the emerging ideal of authentic expression of innate sexual orientation. We’re seeing #LoveWins

I’m humbled to be sharing this empowering way of working with shame. I’m so grateful to those who tell me I inspire them, and I want you to know that you also inspire me. It’s been an amazing journey from a cycle of shame to a spiral of inspiration!

Note: This post first appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/2015/8/13/shame-and-social-change

Shame, Trauma, and Connection

May 30, 2015

When I finally found a way to safely emerge from my own shame, I knew I had something powerful to share.

Shame was like a heavy coat I wore for most of my life. It allowed me to remain hidden, keeping the unacceptable parts of myself from being seen. It kept me safe by not letting others get too close. I felt both burdened, and protected by shame.

Having been sexually abused as a child, I wore this coat of shame from a very young age. I never questioned it, because I didn’t know what it was like to not feel shame’s burden. It was just there, an ever-present part of me, that I couldn’t see, let alone remove.

As a child in school, I sensed I was different from other kids, somehow less capable of friendships. Although I sometimes tried, reaching out to others never felt easeful. Riding in the schoolbus, I didn’t often talk to other kids - it felt much more natural to sit with my forehead pressed against the window, and imagine I was skipping solo in the ditch alongside the bus.

As a teenager, I did have a best friend - Marka - a gay man who made me laugh more than anyone else I’ve ever known. We were close enough that sometimes people asked if we were siblings. And yet, parts of me were still very much hidden - from the world, from Marka, and even from my own self.

Marka would sometimes talk in detail about his own experience of being molested - really unbelievably horrible things. As his best friend, sitting next to him as he spoke, did I offer him compassion, kindness, or empathy? Sadly, no. Here’s what I did instead: dissociated. In other words, I froze, I said nothing, I did nothing, I offered nothing. I wasn’t capable of taking in what he was saying or of responding in any way, because I hadn’t yet processed the similar things that had happened to me.

Shame was deeply entwined with my trauma. I wasn’t consciously aware of what was happening. Looking back, the impact is clear. Shame and trauma kept me from having deep authentic connections with others. Trauma was isolating because I had learned that people, relationships, environments were not safe. Shame was isolating because I didn't want anyone to know that I was damaged and defective.

The difficult and lengthy process of working through my childhood trauma as an adult did nothing to address my shame. In fact, it made it worse. Although it’s normal for survivors to work through the trauma of childhood sexual abuse at age 35 and up, I was ashamed that I couldn’t just “get over it.” I not only felt disoriented by flashbacks - where I would see, hear, taste, smell and/or feel things that were not actually there in the present moment - but I was also deeply ashamed that I was experiencing them.

This bears repeating: healing trauma did not heal my shame; healing trauma increased my shame.

My friend Marka and I had become separated by years, miles, and lifestyle differences. Six years ago, after I'd made some progress working with my trauma, we reconnected. I told him how sorry I was that I had just sat there without responding whenever he had shared details of being sexually abused. I then told him something I had never spoken to him before - that I also had been sexually abused as a child. Without a moment’s hesitation, he replied “I know. You were just like me.” He had seen me more deeply than I had ever realized.

It’s amazing to me that even though back then, my memories of abuse were repressed - hidden from my own conscious mind - my history couldn’t hide from my best friend. A friend who knew what it looked like because of his own personal experience.

During my healing process, I felt shame around the initial abuse, shame that it took me so long to come to terms with it, shame that flashbacks were keeping me up at night, shame that my life was such a struggle. And yet, at least this shame was increasingly in my conscious awareness. I could hide, and know I was hiding. I could pretend that my life was just fine, and know that I was just pretending. I could name my feelings shame.

I had heard that shame means “I am bad” - and so I believed that something was wrong with me. And yet, that just wasn’t true. What was true was that I continued to struggle with connection.

Ultimately, shame is not about us; shame is about our need to belong - our need to connect with others, our need to hear another person say “you are just like me.”

Marka passed away not long after our conversation. For me, it was a reminder that our opportunities to be in connection with one another are so precious.

We might think we are alone in our experience - whatever it is, but chances are we are not. I can now share the painful experiences of my childhood and know that it will touch the hearts of some readers, and serve as an invitation to reach out to me, to share your own experiences of shame, and I will feel honored if you do. And I will always respond.

With great care and compassion,

Kristina, The Shame Lady

Note: this post first appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/shame-trauma-connection

A new definition of shame

May 19, 2015

Shame is all about belonging, and so we can say shame means "I'm not good enough to belong." But there's a little more to it than that. The process I use to transform shame is based on an in-depth definition of shame that comes to us from cognitive scientist Charles M. Jones.

I first met Charles a few years ago in Boulder, Colorado. He is pretty much what you would expect from an incredibly intelligent guy who has devoted his life to studying emotions - generally calm, somewhat serious, and has been known to wear a bow tie. And yet, just as likely to be seen wearing a Grateful Dead t-shirt.

At the time, Charles was successfully using his work on emotions to help executives work with anger. So, I asked him the question, what could this do for shame? I asked the question innocently enough, not having any idea that over the next year or so, I would be so inspired by the answer that I would call myself 'The Shame Lady.'

Here's the full definition of shame, courtesy of Charles M. Jones:

Shame arises

when I am committed 

to personifying an ideal

in a group I belong to

and I'm failing to do so.

Using this complete definition of shame changes our approach to working with shame, and makes a real shift possible!

Note: this blog post originally appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/shame-redefined

Shame does not mean "I am bad"

May 8, 2015

I feel like a bit of a shame heretic by saying that shame does not mean "I am bad." After all, that's how shame is popularly defined, and that's what shame feels like. But the problem is - defining shame as "I am bad" is harmful to our well-being!

Here's what's wrong with the "I am bad" definition of shame:

  1. It's a dead end. We might be able to change our behavior, our surroundings, our thoughts, and other things in our lives, but we can't change who we essentially are.

  2. It inclines us toward depression. Think of what therapists call "globalized negative" statements - "I suck"; "My life is a complete failure"; "I can never do anything right." These are hallmarks of depression. "I am bad" fits right in with these.

  3. It separates us from our social context. We end up looking inward for the problem and a solution. But shame doesn't arise in a social vacuum, so we aren't going to find a fix by only looking within ourselves. 

There is a better way and it starts with a new definition of shame. One that restores the social aspect of shame, and gives us a new perspective.

For me personally, redefining shame was a revelation. I realized that all those books I had read and audio programs I had listened to on shame, self-esteem, self-acceptance, self-love, self-compassion - they were all telling me (usually in a kind way)  that I needed to change something about myself or change my emotions, or that my feelings could or should be overridden.

But what if... what if the problem isn't me? What if the "problem" is actually my very human need for belonging? What if my early life experiences had left me with a deep feeling of "I'm not good enough to belong"? Now that is something I can work with! I felt like I'd been gazing down at my own belly button looking for a solution, when what I really needed to do was look up and look around. THAT is the difference that a new definition of shame has made for me.

Note: this post first appeared at: https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/shame-bad

Stuck in a shame cycle? Here's what mine looked like.

April 14, 2015

My own experience of shame has been lifelong and quite painful. I tried many ways of working with it, even calling the problem by other names - like low self-esteem or self-worth, a problem with self-love or self-acceptance, and impostor syndrome. One thing was present as a basic assumption in all of these methods - something is wrong with me, and I should be able to fix it.

I read that shame means I am bad. I heard that definition reinforced by smart likeable shame-free people. It resonated with my own feelings. So I bought into it, and went to work on trying to convince myself that I was good - which some part of me knew to be true. But, talking myself out of an emotion was completely ineffective! My personal shame cycle went like this:

  1. I felt shame

  2. I named it as shame

  3. I tried to talk myself out of feeling shame, because really, I do know I'm good

  4. It would work for a little while

  5. The shame would spring back up (stuffing an emotion just doesn't work!)

  6.  I would feel more shame because I "should" be able to control this!

  7. Return to number 1 and repeat endlessly. Argh!

I'm an analyst at heart. Something clearly wasn't working here. Then I realized, defining shame as "I am bad" actually feeds the shame cycle. I realized "I am bad" is a misinterpretation of shame. At last, I could say, with a genuinely compassionate hand on my own heart, "No wonder I've been struggling!"

Note: this post first appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/shamecycle

Why Shame?

March 18, 2015

Why Shame? As an adult survivor of childhood sexual abuse (CSA), I struggled with the healing process. I was frustrated that there wasn't something like a 'What to Expect when You're Expecting' for flashbacks. I felt shame about my past, and I felt shame around my processing of it. Somehow I survived.  I emerged with a strong belief that it shouldn't have to be so hard. So I created what I call a holistic healing path for CSA survivors - the Ten Keys.

I wanted it to be freely available for those most in need of it - so I put it on a website. And, a part of me believed no one would actually read this thing I wrote :)  But I slowly started to hear from people that they were reading it, and found it to be a helpful resource. One of those people happened to be a therapist named Brenda Bomgardner. Brenda's company is called Creating Your Beyond, which was one of the sponsors of the very first WINGS conference in Denver. WINGS is an organization in the Denver area that offers support groups for CSA survivors.

I felt honored when Brenda asked if I would do a guest blog post for her site, explaining my motivation for creating Ten Keys.  Here is my story in that blog post.

In the process of creating the Ten Keys, I honed in on shame as a key part of the injury of abuse, and also a key obstacle to healing.  But nothing I could find was effective in shifting my shame. So, once again, I set out to create something that would be helpful.

That turned into The Little Book of Shame.

Note: this post originally appeared at https://www.theshamelady.com/blog-1/2015/3/18/why-shame