Shame is the enemy
Happy New Year!
This time a year is usually a time to create a New Year's Resolution. I think this is a great way to focus your energy and attention on areas in your life you want to change. However, in my line of work, doing so often leads to feeling more like a failure. Losing weight or going to the gym is a very popular resolution for the New Year. If you tend to have emotional issues with food and your body, you may end up doing more harm to yourself than good. Failure to keep up with a diet plan or failure to continue going to the gym can leave you feeling bad about yourself. You may actually turn toward food to cope. Thinking you failed leads to feeling shame. Shame is a major contributor to the binge/purge cycle.
Many people think that if you beat yourself up for not doing something,
it will increase your motivation to do it. A great example of this is
judging yourself (or others) for not having the will power to lose weight.
We believe that telling ourselves that we "should" do something
is supposed to motivate us to go to the gym or eat better or be a better
person. Often, we learn this from our parents or from peers and then we
do it to ourselves. Notice your thoughts toward yourself and see if you
can count how many times you say "should" or "shouldn't",
or other negative words. These are all shame-based methods in which we
hope for change. This rarely works, especially for long term positive
change.
Shame only adds to hating ourselves more and thus caring for ourselves
less . Shame keeps us small, hidden, distant, cold. Take a breath and
feel shame in your body. Notice where it is in your body. Notice how much
space it takes up. Now, imagine it's gone.
Most of us feel so much shame that we shrink away from the world, and
away from ourselves. What would it be like to have no shame? My bet is
you would feel great about who you are and what you do. You would be more
motivated to go to the gym. You would want to take care of your body because
you would feel good and proud to be in your body. You would take up more
space in the world and you would be noticed more by others.
How do we cope with shame? I think this is the main fuel for addictions.
Shame is so debilitating, that we must push it down. Eating, dieting,
purging, bingeing are all ways to push down shame. But, shame doesn't
just go away. Each time you push it down, you add to it and it pushes
back up. It's like the diet cycle (see "Why Diet's Don't Work"
in my website archives), you eat to push down shame, you feel bad about
eating, so you purge. You feel more shame and the cycle starts again;
the shame is fed and grows.
Working on your disordered eating will help bring up this shame so you
can work on it. Shame doesn't want to be punished or hidden. Shame has
something to tell you. Perhaps, if it could talk, it would say "I'm
hurt" or "pay attention to me" or "I'm scared".
Shame is an emotion, like sadness and joy. Emotions are natural and healthy.
They help us feel alive. However, if we don't express these emotions when
they surface, they build up inside. They begin to feel too overwhelming
and we become afraid to express them. As the shame lessens so does your
desire to binge and purge.
Although there are many other emotions underneath disordered eating. I
believe shame is a big one and one that drives most disordered eating
behaviors.
Activity:
On a piece of paper, write the heading "Eating Disorder Self"
and next to it write "Healthy Self". Under each column, give
each a "voice". If the Eating Disorder part of you could talk,
what would it say? For example: "I can't stop eating", "I
am fat", "No one will like me if I'm fat", etc. Now give
the Healthy Self a voice. What would it say? For example, "It is
okay to eat and enjoy food", "I feel sad", etc. For many
of us with issues around food and appearance, there will be a very small
Healthy Self. Therefore, this column may have less entries.
Now look at your "voices". Notice how many of them have shame
language. Notice how this feels. Add your feelings to the Healthy Self
column. It is healthy to feel and your Healthy Self wants to feel things.
Now, share this exercise and what you noticed
with a friend who supports you. Ask this person to just listen. One of
the best ways to lessen shame is to share it. Talk about the things you
feels shame about and notice it diminish.

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