When shame comes over me, I often don’t recognize it. Not at first, anyway.
I often find myself feeling angry and hurt over some small thing. Someone might have insulted me. Someone might have simply disagreed with me. A person might have been rude or belittled me in some way. Maybe some tiny way.
And something in me feels ready to explode. I’m furious. I’m hurt. I feel the need to strike out and hurt whoever is hurting me. I just want the hurting and humiliation to go away. And that’s about the time — if I’m lucky — that I’ll realize I’m dealing with shame.
Someone has pushed one of my buttons. Maybe it was an intentional slight. Maybe not. Either way, I feel shame. Before long, the shame has morphed into a passive form of self-directed aggression. I’m not good enough. I’ll never be loved or understood.
Then my harsh and brutal superego — the imagined channeling of my childhood father’s voice — tells me to stop whining. To stop feeling anything.
“Just get over it,” the voice screams.
And then I hate myself for having needs. I hate myself for hurting. I hate myself for feeling anything. As I simmer in this toxic stew of shame and hurt, I realize I’m not as close as I’d thought to the emotional health which I’ve been seeking for decades.

Christmas marks God’s attempt to connect us to himself and others
Visit with high school best friend leaves me pondering my old fears
‘Resisting arrest’? When police have wrongly invaded your home?
Sex abuse of powerless rampant; denying its serious harm obscene
Political attitudes about race prove we’re still living in a tribal world
Steve Jobs goes out as iconoclastic visionary many of us long to be
Briefly: Comic perfectly captured what I wrote about this weekend
We project an image for others, but few see us as we really are