Posted by drjanebolton on May 11, 2009

“I don’t want to feel sorry for myself.” I so often hear clients tell me, when they are sad, discouraged or hurt. If they have sorrow for themselves, they will often next feel guilt or shame. Sometimes they will go on to have absolute contempt for themselves and call their sorrow for themselves having a “pity-party.”
When I ask them how they would feel if the same thing happened to a friend or a child who was hurt, sad, discouraged or distressed, there are two general responses. Some people would feel compassion for the friend or child, but would feel guilty for feeling compassion for themselves. Anything ’selfish’ is bad for themselves. They apply kinder rules to others.
Other people would condemn the friend or child for feeling sorry. They judge the friend as selfish and negative. They also believe that acknowledging feelings “doesn’t do any good.” These people apply the same harsh rule to others that they apply to themselves.
So many limiting beliefs are embedded in the desire not to feel sorrow for oneself. Some of the beliefs may be:
1. It is “weak” to accept or have kind feelings towards a person not in a “powerful” state or feeling. “Vulnerability” is bad.
2. If one doesn’t condemn the vulnerable feelings, they will grow and grow. (The “Spare the rod, spoil the child” mentality.)
3. One may get “stuck” in the shameful feelings.
4. One will not be able to feel powerful again.
5. One is being “negative” and therefore “bad.”
But the irony is that anytime we condemn ourselves for how we are feeling, that is when we are weakening ourselves. The way to ’strength’ is to validate ourselves for how we are feeling. The root of the word ‘validate’ means to strengthen. To in-validate is to weaken.
To validate ourselves, we need to let ourselves know that it makes sense to feel however we feel. We need to let ourselves know that we can understand ourselves. This may take as little as a few seconds.
THEN, and only then, can we work at shifting and improving our state of mind.
There are so many ways we can work at regulating and adjusting our feelings. But shaming ourselves for how we feel only makes it take longer. So I say, have compassion for yourself. By all means work towards joy and zest.
I believe that in the words of the song, “There’s A time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance.” So when you are feeling sad, first feel sorry for yourself.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: anxiety, codependency, depression, doubt, empathy, feeling sorry for oneself, inner child, psychotherapy, recovery, self esteem, shame, shoulds, stress, women | 1 Comment »
Posted by drjanebolton on April 16, 2009
I just finished a session with a client I will call “Joanne.”* She has upgraded her internal voice recognition software and that has changed her life.
She wants to start her own business, and previously has felt too scared to leave her day job. Her work on herself is an example of what we can all do when we gain awareness and understanding of the internal voices that we all have.
Joanne says, “I am so happy about how I have changed. I don’t succumb to the voice in my head that says, whenever I think about starting my business, ‘Who do you think you are.’ I now see that the voice is my mother’s– NOT MINE. I even see her expressionless face as she says it. I can also hear my father’s kinder, but still suppressive voice, ‘You’re getting a little bit too big for your britches.’
“Before, I would get panicky when I heard those voices. I thought that I was the one thinking those thoughts- and I believed them. Now I can hear one of them say, “You need to go sit in the corner now.” I was panicking then because I knew on some level that I was being abandoned when I was excited and hopeful and feeling powerful. And I was being asked to not be who I was. I was also panicking recently because I soooo much want to start my business, and I know now that when I sit in a corner metaphorically, I am killing my spirit. But now that I know those voices are not ME I know that I can just notice them and go on doing what I think is right.
“ Wow. I feel so real and I feel so much power. I don’t think I’m crazy anymore for what I want. I can go for it!”
Recognizing and managing our self-diminishing inner voices makes so much possible for us. I wish that for everyone!
*therapists hide the names & other identifying characteristics of clients to protect their confidentiality
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: anxiety, authority figures, depression, doubt, fear, inner child, power, self esteem, shame, shoulds | 1 Comment »
Posted by drjanebolton on January 28, 2009
How do you treat your Self when you are tired, sick, hurt, sad, discouraged, or depleted? How do you treat yourself when you are excited or in the midst of creating? Whether you are kind or mean to yourself says volumes. A big part of raising self esteem has to do with how we treat our Self when we are vulnerable, exuberant, or in a creative state. These are the states of our Inner Child.
So much healing can occur when we learn how to treat those child states within us. Yet, so many people are “turned off” or find it “ridiculous” at the mere idea of Inner Child comforting. That is a reflection of the belief they internalized- that vulnerable parts of us are “weak.” So the very thing that would help to heal shame, Inner Child work, is spurned because it is considered weak.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: co-dependency, inner child, self esteem, shame | Leave a Comment »