Kintsugi
Sponsor
I seem to experience shame in perpetuity.
I have three main categories of self harm: planned relief/gratification, impulsive relief/gratification, and shame-based impulsive self-punishment. These days, pretty much since I started therapy again about a month and a half ago, impulsive shame-based self-harm has been chief, I'd say, in my symptoms.
Shame has always been a massive issue for me. Literally always. My first memories of close calls with impulsive self-harm were wanting to stab myself over any misstep, and occasionally I would circumstantially have a chopping knife in my hand when getting this impulse.
Anyway, I don't know how to mitigate this symptom. I feel shame over almost everything. I wish I could keep my mouth entirely shut around people, because no matter what I say to anyone else, I can find fault in it, even (especially?) the things I say to people who are extremely close to me. It's painful. It wants to eat me alive. It's like living with stocks around my arms and neck--heavy, burdensome, restrictive.
I've gotten a bit better at letting go of shame. I feel a sharp pang of shame over something I said or did, and I try to logic myself out of it. X close friend wouldn't think terrible things of me for saying Y. A trivial person in my life will never remember I said B.
Learning greater self-acceptance has helped, but not as much as I might've thought, or maybe I just don't have enough of it yet.
Does anyone else experience shame in perpetuity? How do you let go of irrational feelings of shame? Is there anyone out there who used to be constantly plagued by shame and now has days where there's no (irrational) shame at all?
I have three main categories of self harm: planned relief/gratification, impulsive relief/gratification, and shame-based impulsive self-punishment. These days, pretty much since I started therapy again about a month and a half ago, impulsive shame-based self-harm has been chief, I'd say, in my symptoms.
Shame has always been a massive issue for me. Literally always. My first memories of close calls with impulsive self-harm were wanting to stab myself over any misstep, and occasionally I would circumstantially have a chopping knife in my hand when getting this impulse.
Anyway, I don't know how to mitigate this symptom. I feel shame over almost everything. I wish I could keep my mouth entirely shut around people, because no matter what I say to anyone else, I can find fault in it, even (especially?) the things I say to people who are extremely close to me. It's painful. It wants to eat me alive. It's like living with stocks around my arms and neck--heavy, burdensome, restrictive.
I've gotten a bit better at letting go of shame. I feel a sharp pang of shame over something I said or did, and I try to logic myself out of it. X close friend wouldn't think terrible things of me for saying Y. A trivial person in my life will never remember I said B.
Learning greater self-acceptance has helped, but not as much as I might've thought, or maybe I just don't have enough of it yet.
Does anyone else experience shame in perpetuity? How do you let go of irrational feelings of shame? Is there anyone out there who used to be constantly plagued by shame and now has days where there's no (irrational) shame at all?