fbpx
Menu

How to deal with shame?

HomeForumsEmotional MasteryHow to deal with shame?

New Reply
Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #200357
    Nicole
    Participant

    Asked someone for a favor and I somehow ended up triggering bad memories for them. Was definitely not my intention. They still yelled at me and now I feel like trash even though they said sorry for it. That same embarrassing feeling you get when you trip and everyone sees and laughs is what I’m feeling. Just makes me never want to ask someone for things again.

    #200405
    terri
    Participant

    This is not your fault. Maybe them yelling at you has triggered something for you? We can’t control how others think, talk and act. Other people can’t ‘make’ us feel anything. There is something in you making you feel this way. Yes we might get pissed off for a while but you have done nothing wrong here. It does sound like something in you may need to be explored

    #200409
    Anonymous
    Guest

    Dear Nicole:

    The person who yelled at you should not have yelled at you. Maybe if you physically attacked her, then she should have yelled, that would have been a natural and instinctive reaction on her part. A sensible and understandable reaction.

    But what happened, most likely, is that she imagined somehow that you were attacking her. You weren’t, she only imagined it. Here is an example: you sit with that person for dinner and ask him/ her to pass on the salt for you, a favor, a very small favor, and better she passes the salt to you than you reaching out across the table. Makes sense. Here is what happens in her brain, in this example: a past memory is triggered. When she was a child, sitting at a table, she asked an older sibling to pass on the salt and that older sibling took hold of the salt and hit her on the head with it. It hurt and it was humiliating, as other family members were laughing at her, enjoying her surprise and humiliation.

    With that experience triggered, years later, as you asked for her to pass the salt, her humiliation and anger is triggered and she reacts by yelling at you.

    Are you guilty in this example, of anything at all? No. Is she guilty of anything? Yes, she is guilty of yelling at you. She is not guilty of her older sibling years ago hitting her at the table, or for her family members laughing.

    We all get triggered all day long, past experienced triggered, good or bad. We have to pause when triggered negatively, angrily and think: what is it that is being triggered and is this situation here-and-now similar to the old situation, am I being attacked or mistreated here-and-now?

    She or he yelled at you. You can’t help but feel badly being yelled at. Everyone feels badly when yelled at. Now this memory is stored in your brain, being yelled at for asking for a favor.

    anita

    #200565
    Mark
    Participant

    Wow Nicole,

    Examine what you said here.  If someone has an adverse response to your fill-in-the-blank here then you will never want to do that again.

    Your life is now dictated by how people respond to you.

    You can either avoid everything/everyone in life or work on yourself to knowing that 1) you come with good intentions, 2) that you do the best you can, 3) it is always the other person’s stuff that causes them to respond/react.  It is up to them in how they decide to respond.

    Mark

     

Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic. Please log in OR register.