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ashamed

my personal story
keeping in touch...
abandonment
absorbed
abuse
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acknowledged
admiration
affection
affirmed
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aggravated
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agony
alienation
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anger
annoy
antagonistic
anticipation
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apathy
apologetic
appreciation
apprehension
arrogance
ashamed
assertive
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attentive
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avoidance
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awkward

nowhere within the emotional feelings network of sites is any opportunity for me to make any profit from any of the 28 + sites within this network. this network of sites has been put together as a personal mission to help others by informing those who need information concerning mental health, eating disorders, lifestyle factors, and every other topic listed within.

navigational hint: all underlined link words open up a new window instead of changing your present one, taking you to another site within the emotional feelings network of sites - or to another site referencing the underlined link word!

welcome to the emotional feelings network of sites

It's very important that you visit the next page: keeping in touch!
Reason being: If you're here because you're searching for an answer to your feelings of dissatisfaction, unhappiness, feeling sick, or just general feelings of misery in your life - you need to find a volunteer opportunity that you feel comfortable with.
 
For a life changing listen - click here - it's truly life changing and something we all need to listen to. It does take some time to listen to Randy Pausch's Last Lecture, but you won't regret it.
 
You can help yourself by helping others. You might not think so; but it's true. Find something you can do to help some worthy causes. "Keeping in Touch" will show you some important causes that need you!
 
Why not just click here now to get it over with! So even if you leave this site after finding some information concerning an emotion or feeling... you'll also leave with the seed of thought concerning volunteer work that might produce some results bringing you a sense of accomplishment & find yourself feeling better!

  welcome...
i'm really glad to see you!
 
you've found your way to the emotional feelings network of sites!  below you'll find a description of what the emotional feelings network of sites is about as well as the best way to use this invaluable resource for your own personal needs.
 
kathleen

remembering september eleventh
forever free: remembering september eleventh
forever & always

a·shamed   
adj.
  1. Feeling shame or guilt: Are you ashamed for having lied?
  2. Feeling inferior, inadequate, or embarrassed: ashamed of my torn coat.
  3. Reluctant through fear of humiliation or shame: ashamed to ask for help.

please read now!

please read now!

Important notice:

 
is coming along.
 
it's the replacement site for extremely emotional!
 
thanks for your continued patience with me as it takes so long to re-establish all the underlined link words as well as building a new site!
 
kathleen

Attention all visitors!
 
I'd like to offer you an opportunity to visit the up & coming new emotional feelings site called, "more emotional feelings."
 
Here at emotional feelings, home for the entire emotional feelings network of 28+ sites, things are getting a bit tight. Since these sites are "free" sites offered by Tripod - there's only so much space in each site to offer you the great information that authors from all over the world have written concerning the emotions & feelings you find within the site.
 
At more emotional feelings you'll find more emotions & feelings that are the same as the ones here at this site beginning with the letter "A" as well as some new ones - growth is exciting! And growth just proves that people are self helping in emotion & feeling work more & more today.
 
find additional information concerning "feeling abandoned," by clicking the above underlined link!
 
Amiable
to be added at a future date
 
While this site is still under construction, you will find that it offers quite a bit of new information in a newer format - i.e., offering suggestions for problem situations on the same page. Check it out! It's new!
 
 
kathleen

Are you living in the present moment or in your past?

send me an email!

dividing the truths concerning abandonment

 welcome! to emotional feelings!
 
after looking things over here at emotional feelings, try out "the layer down under," (part of the emotional feelings network of sites) & read a special "i just gotta say it" column concerning porn addiction by clicking here! Be sure to scroll down towards the bottom of the right hand column to find it!
 
another important suggestion... visit this homepage to learn more about the features included within the emotional feelings network of sites!

click here to read i just gotta say it!

 
click here!  Bob Woodruff: Turning Personal Injury Into Public Inquiry click here!
 
I was personally very touched by this inspiring story as I watched it on television last night (2/27/07); especially after I experienced a life altering injury which took me 2 years to recover from.
 
What I want to ask you is...
If you can't help out with the helmets, below for our military men, can you volunteer or help our returning soldiers who are recovering with extreme traumatic brain injury?
 
Here are some links!
Check them out, I know that my family will be searching for a way we can help! Remember that those with traumatic or extreme physical injuries most often develop problems with their mental health!
 
 
 

 What is Operation Helmet?

Founded in 2003 by Dr. Robert H. Meaders whose grandson is an active duty Marine in Iraq, Operation Helmet is a nonpartisan 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to providing safer helmet pad upgrade kits to the troops in Iraq & Afghanistan. To date, more than 6,000 kits have been shipped to the troops in the field.

click here to get more info at their website!
please help our troops in iraq!

How this site works best for you!
 
You'll notice that there are many underlined link words in each article below. The reason for this is that you have reached not only, "emotional feelings, the home site," but the emotional feelings network of sites. There are many sites included within the network that'll be visited by clicking on these underlined link words.
 
The reason for this opportunity is very simple & yet you may be unnerved by all those underlined words! I've been in recovery from post traumatic stress disorder, depression & many other dysfunctional ventures & thru it all I've discovered that emotion & feeling work may be the missing link that many people miss when trying to find solutions to their problems.
 
Developing a sense of curiosity about why you feel the way you do, is essential in finding the solution you so desperately are searching for.
 
If you can't find what you came here looking for, visit the homepage for the emotional feelings network of sites by clicking above & read the options on the homepage for the networks index of sites. Try to be specific when looking for an emotion or feeling word & click on the site you need!
 
It's very simple & very interesting to follow your way thru the layers of your buried or stuffed emotions & feelings that have accumulated throughout the years!
 
when you've reached this point, or this website, you know you're making progress!!!! this part gets difficult because now is the time to look within & become emotionally honest with yourself!!!
 
Best of luck & if you're still stuck, send me an e-mail anytime, by clicking here & I'll be glad to send you an immediate personal response!
 
Sincerely,
Kathleen

education is the key to understanding

What is Shame? Where does it come from? Why do we feel it? How can I free myself from the paralyzing effect of my Shame?

Let's start with some defining. Shame is an emotion (or feeling) & emotions are fundamentally not rational, that is to say, not derived from logic or reasoning.

While thoughts may trigger feelings & thoughts may change feelings, the feelings themselves aren't thoughts. One way to describe feelings is to talk about behaviors & thoughts associated with them.

Physical behaviors that are usually associated with shame include:

  • blushing (some famous person whose name I can't recall once said that Man is the only animal that blushes...or needs to)
  • averting our eyes
  • hiding our face

& more. Some of the thoughts associated with shame include:

  • the desire to disappear or die
  • the thought that we're going to be cast out or disowned
  • the belief that we deserve punishment or castigation

& more. As I understand current psychological theory, the capacity for experiencing shame is wired into our brains, along with  the capacity to experience anger, fear, pain, sadness, regret, joy, love, well-being & perhaps some others.

It's part of what it means to be a person. In other words, all human beings are capable of experiencing shame. In all humans' first years we begin exploring our feelings in a variety of ways. Our first use of shame-behavior is to modulate our excitement.

Toddlers will experience excitement building to a pitch that feels unbearable & then experience shame as a way to ease off the excitement. In the toddler, these feelings are experienced without judgments about whether they're good or bad.

As we interact with our parents & siblings we begin to observe that they have judgments attached to feelings & expect us to also. Mommy not only expresses her anger but also communicates that the toddler should feel ashamed.

  • "You shouldn't hit your sister. Aren't you ashamed of yourself?"
  • "Shame on you for not sharing your toys with your friend."
  • " I'm very disappointed with your [angry] behavior."

The message we get is that some of our behaviors & thoughts render us unacceptable or unlovable. So we attach shame to those thoughts & behaviors. We internalize the "shoulds" & "should nots."

Some of this shame-attachment is unquestionably useful to us. Healthy shame helps us to create ourselves as important beings w/ a sense of integrity. We begin to develop a code of behavior towards ourselves & others. It's useful to learn to feel ashamed when, unprovoked, we deliberately hurt someone else, when we steal or cheat. The shame feeling can reinforce a decision to not do that behavior again.

Much of this shame attachment is more ambiguous. While it's useful to learn that there are inappropriate times to show our naked bodies to others, it's not useful & perhaps harmful, to grow up feeling ashamed of our bodies. And making this distinction to a child requires persistence & patience, as well as a belief that being ashamed of our bodies isn't good.

Most of us carry into our lives a whole host of these ambiguous shame feelings. We desire healthy expression of our sexuality, but carry shame-feelings about our bodies, our sensuality, our sexuality, our thoughts & desires. Deep in our memories are confusing "shoulds & should nots" about every aspect of our sexuality.

Often the messages we receive about what's shameful are passed along to us by our parents from messages they got from their parents, etc. Perhaps you've heard the story of the holiday ham.

It seems there was a family gathering for one of the holidays & 4 generations of women were all present. The youngest little girl was helping in the kitchen. Watching her mother prepare a ham for dinner, she observed her mother cutting the ends off the ham. Being a curious child she asked why her mother did this.

Mother thought for a moment, then replied that she didn't know exactly why. Cutting the ends was how her mother had taught her. So they both turned to Grandma, hoping she would explain. But Grandma shook her head in wonder & explained that this was the way her mother had taught her to prepare a ham.

All 3 then went to Great-Grandma, who was sitting in the other room. "Why," the little one asked, "do you cut the ends of the ham off before you cook it?" Great- Grandma smiled & replied that in her old kitchen they had only had a very small oven & so the ham needed to be trimmed to fit inside.

Generations ago something useful to that time & place was being communicated. Unthinkingly, this message, often distorted by time & inaccurate repetition, begins to have a life of its own. Our parents & other adults in our life convey their own unexamined shame to us, sometimes deliberately,

"You are a Winchester & are expected to behave accordingly"

sometimes unconsciously & accidently, as when we witness our parents shame about their own bodies or their sexuality.

Trying to please our parents & adapt to our surroundings we begin to attach the feeling of shame to some of our own feelings & behaviors. With a base of experience that shame modulates excitement, we're especially good at attaching shame to anything which gives us physical pleasure or excitement.

Our parents or teachers or clergy teach us it's shameful to touch our genitals. Thru self-discovery we know it's pleasurable to touch our genitals, so the shame we attach to our genitals is very strong.

Our parents teach us that it is shameful to defecate or urinate in our clothing or our beds. It feels pleasurable to defecate & urinate. We develop strong shame around everything associated w/defecating & urinating, often finding as adults we seem unable to defecate or urinate at any time that might be witnessed or heard by anyone else.

Thus we find ourselves, as adults, experiencing shame about many of our thoughts & feelings. This shame can be intensely painful & is often toxic to our health. In other words, left untreated this shame eats away at our self-esteem & sense of self-worth. This shame hurts or destroys our ability to create satisfying intimate relationships. This shame gets in the way of us knowing what we feel or want. And often, we experience the negative effects of this "toxic shame" w/out consciously knowing that shame is the problem.

The first step in dealing w/our shame is recognizing it.

Each time you feel shame stop & pay attention to it. Each time you feel embarrassed or uncomfortable about something, call it shame & notice how you feel about being ashamed.

  • Is your shame appropriate?
  • Is your shame useful in this particular moment?
  • Is there any good reason for you to feel ashamed?
  • Who's voice is that, inside your head, telling you you should feel ashamed?

Often just asking yourself these kinds of questions, just shining a light on the shame, will have the feeling move & leave you more at choice.

The next step is to experience your shame feelings as a request for love, a cry for love.

Attached to these shame feelings is a belief that we're now:

The moment we're aware of these kinds of thoughts & feelings is the moment to say to ourselves, in the most loving voice we can find:

  • "I really love you"
  • or "I love you unconditionally."

Say it to your reflection in a mirror. Say it to your image of your inner child. Say it in the voice of your father or mother. Say it silently or speak the words out loud. And repeat it.

A third step is to create a declaration or affirmation for yourself to supersede the shame programming. Every day, for at least 30 days in a row, declare what you choose to be true, to yourself in a mirror.

  • "I'm proud of being a sexy, gorgeous guy & I love sex!"
  • "My body is a beautiful temple."
  • "I deserve to feel pleasure."

Reprogram your mind to get rid of the toxic legacy & give yourself the belief system that serves you.

Three steps:

Sometime around the year 200 AD a church father known as Clement of Alexandria wrote

"We should not be ashamed [of] what God has not been ashamed to create."

Amen!

About the Author:

Charles "Chip" August is a personal growth coach & HAI workshop leader. From 1990 thru the present, he has facilitated the Love, Intimacy & Sexuality workshops produced by the Human Awareness Institute (headquarters in San Carlos, California). In 1991 Chip developed the "Free Your Passion Workshop", originally named the Healing Anger Workshop, which he leads worldwide. Chip is a certified Instructor of PET (Parent Effectiveness Training) leading adult education workshops to teach listening, conflict resolution & communication skills to parents.

education is the key to understanding

dividing the truths concerning abandonment

separating important information about abuse

SHAME: A legacy of childhood experiences, even favorable ones

Greetings, my dearest friends. Blessings for all of you. Blessed be your efforts, your progress & your life as a whole. May tonight's lecture again help you advance a step forward on your path.

Perhaps it may also encourage some new friends to enter this path. This lecture is primarily destined to reach inner areas ready to be uncovered in deep self-exploration. Your every effort, even if at the moment you feel discouraged or hopeless, must be crowned w/ success if you persevere.

What may now appear as defeat will soon prove to be victory, an absolutely necessary experience. Please remember, when you go thru a difficult period, that the difficulty isn't caused by this work, but by your unresolved problems that still exist. Remind yourself that awareness is the key - becoming aware of what's in you at the moment.

My friends, you're not yet sufficiently conscious of what really bothers you. If you realize this, you'll know how to proceed in the right direction. You'll not be in despair, because you'll see the missing link & cease to be confused & lost.

Tonight I should like to discuss two specific topics. At first they'll seem unrelated, but they aren't & we shall establish their connection.

The first topic is shame.

This was discussed in the past in certain connections, such as the shame of the higher self, or shame of certain shortcomings. I now will focus on this topic from a very specific perspective. When you pursue this path, you discover certain areas in yourself that you're ashamed to acknowledge, even to yourself.

What you may be ashamed of may be faults, but not always & not necessarily. You may be as ashamed of very legitimate needs as you are of faults, or of assets, for that matter. First you're not even aware that such shames exist. It takes a considerable amount of time & effort before you become aware of those facets within yourself you're deeply ashamed to face.

You cover these facets w/ a pretense that's the reverse of your specific shame.

Slowly but surely, as your pathwork progresses in the right direction, you learn to admit the shame to yourself, but aren't yet able to reveal it to others. When this phase is reached, a certain amount of self-deception has been eliminated. Whatever your personal particular shame & consequent pretense may be, varies.

But whatever it is, when you come face to face w/ such an aspect, it takes a considerable amount of struggle & courage to admit what so far has been inadmissible. When the struggle is overcome, a significant amount of inner freedom & ease has been reached. Such a struggle rarely culminates in one ultimate victory.

The process may have to be repeated because usually the psyche isn't ready to face all its pretenses at once. To the degree you stop pretending to yourself & face what you had regarded as too shameful to admit, you'll feel emotional ease & comfort. Those who have reached the point of such self-admission can exactly pinpoint their shame, their pretense, their self-deception.

They have indeed reached a major step in self-realization. They're way ahead compared to those who are as yet unaware of their own shame & pretense & who therefore believe they're not hiding anything. But then there's a further step. This next step will give you a wonderful opportunity to measure your liberation.

How freely can you discuss your shame with your helper? The degree of ease & emotional comfort w/which you can do this indicates your inner freedom. This important mark on the path is often bypassed & then you gradually forget the significance of what you had admitted to yourself.

As long as the partial admission isn't fully explored, the pretense continues toward the outer world & even toward the self. I'd like to give specific advice in this respect.

First of all, keep your attention alert in this direction. The first stage on this particular road within the path is to become aware of what you've so far hidden from yourself. When this is done to some degree, ask yourself if you've utilized such findings, or whether you have allowed them to become hazy again.

True liberation can't come in half-measures. Making the conscious recognition half-conscious again is due to the specific reason, my friends, that you may not yet be ready & free enough to express to another person - your helper - the shame that you've finally admitted to yourself. And because you can't make yourself admit it, you becloud it again.

The recognition becomes foggy again.

separating important information about abuse

It would be much better & vastly more constructive for you to admit to yourself,

"I can't yet bring myself to reveal & discuss this or that aspect of my personality."

Don't force yourself, because then your anxiety will cause such a strong counter-current that the benefit may be lost & you'd present the aspect you find shameful in a slightly distorted, untruthful, colored way.

Hence the gain would be questionable. This would make you feel guilty & in turn, breed new problems in the relationship between yourself & your helper. This is more harmful than the free admission, "I'm not ready to reveal myself." In this admission you're honest. You don't use too much force.

Then you don't breed guilt & therefore resentment. This is infinitely better than speaking out of a dutiful & harried self-discipline, doing something you're not yet ready for.

Ascertain in your daily review, "This or that factor brings me embarrassment. I feel too uncomfortable to discuss it." Come to terms with it, instead of neglecting to face the significance of your lack of freedom. Find out where you stand, how far you have come, what remains to be accomplished to gain your freedom from shame & pretense?

Come to terms with your restraint & inhibition & tell yourself that perhaps in a week, in a month, in a year, you may get to this point. But in the meantime observe yourself & perhaps, little by little, without forcing yourself, you'll reveal more than you thought you could. At the beginning you'll be uncomfortable & anxious, embarrassed & inhibited, but each time it'll become easier.

As you gain inner comfort while freely expressing what seemed to be so shameful, suddenly you'll see that your entire shame was an illusion. This is your yardstick of liberation. I advise all of you to think about this specific part of the path. Are you aware of what you're ashamed? If not, you'll need to find it. If you are, to what degree do you tackle the issue?

Take it into your self-confrontation, by yourself & probe deeply, bringing out the issue that causes your shame. Don't try to find immediate reasons & answers, explanations & justifications. Simply admit those aspects that cause you shame. Write down in exact & precise terms what it is & why you feel you need to be ashamed. The usual answer is that you're afraid of appearing less in the eyes of others, less lovable & respectable, inviting belittlement & humiliation.

Find how this general observation applies specifically to you. Then challenge yourself to confront the issue of discussing it <