Art, imagination, shame, morality and power ……                       The images have been posted

“Encouraging creativity and nurturing the imagination are some of the most neglected aspects of modern education systems….we let their [children’s] imaginations starve… Children enter school gifted with a rich imagination and they graduate with stunted and stifled imaginations.” Eugene Trivizas

 “It is no accident that experiences of shame are called self-consciousness. Such experiences of shame are characteristically painful. They are usually taken as   something to be hidden, dodged, covered up _even, or especially, from oneself. Shame interrupts any unquestioning, unaware sense of oneself. But it is possible that experiences of shame, if confronter full in the face may throw an unexpected light on who one is and point the way to who one may become. Fully faced shame may become not something primarily to be covered, but a positive experience of revelation” Helen Merrell Lynd

“The shame topic opens up into the whole notion of internalization, and who you become, and are you integrated or fragmented? Are you more like an archipelago or a unified continent in terms of your self-structure? And what do you do with these islands, as it were, that have been, you just took in, you drank them, you internalized them with mother’s milk when you were a year old?” Rick Hanson

 “Curiously enough, if we primarily try to shield ourselves from discomfort, we suffer. Yet when we don’t close off and we let our hearts break, we discover our kinship with all beings.” Janina Fisher

Today’s post includes a new painting I’ve been working on, a TED talk by Eugene Trivizas, notes on the Being Well podcast by Rick and Forrest Hanson that focuses on some of the many ways we can view and understand shame, especially, unnecessary shame, and also, a few short videos with shame related topics. I have written about shame before, especially, trauma and toxic shame, but topics can never be discussed extensively in any one post or article, and there are always so many aspects and perspectives to explore.

Eugene Triviza’s talk with the title, Let’s Imagine, [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tx67UwCrqkU] focuses on the value of myths, fairy tales and imagination, and on the necessity to cultivate and nurture our children’s innate capacities to imagine and be creative. Imagination is what allows children to be themselves, to be inventive, to thrive, and also, to understand things like science and mathematics. A scientist he mentions once said: “To invent you need just a good imagination and a pile of junk.”  Trivizas has said that “education should aim not so much to impart knowledge – given that knowledge nowadays is easily accessible – but to cultivate children’s creativity and imagination, so that this knowledge is employed in innovative ways and that fairy tales “transmit the message that we are able to overcome the limitations of our roles, our environment and our existence”. They “offer children the hope that we can defeat the dragons and the monsters that threaten and oppress us.”

In the video Trivizas refers to a study where people were asked to describe all possible uses of paper clips. 98% of the younger children came up with more than 145 possible uses. As they got older the number decreased significantly and adults were able to come up with 10-15 uses at the most. Eugene Trivizas is an author of children’s books and playwright. He has written something like 150 books. One of his most well known book is The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig, which reached the second place in the American best seller list for picture books and has won many distinctions. He believes that the stereotypes of good and evil which are propagated through children’s books are often wrong and they lay the foundations for prejudice against minorities, as well as breeding many other social ills. He tackles issues of war, violence, prejudice and bullying in his books for children of all ages. For instance, the issue of racist genocide is tackled in The Last Black Cat, where members of a secret superstitious sect are convinced that black cats bring bad luck and consequently decide to exterminate them, supported by financial circles that trade cat traps and political leaders who find black cats to be convenient scapegoats for their disastrous policies.

Trivizas has studied law and economics and is a professor of criminology in England. Another interesting fact about Trivizas is that in 1997 he won a legal battle against Coca Cola for unlawfully appropriating his intellectual property, preventing the company from registering in Greece the title of his TV serial and comic-strip books, Fruitopia, as a trademark for beverages.

I became familiar with Triviza’s books more recently. Actually I was gifted one of his books by the kids at an Internship context. The book has the title: Amy and the Banana Skin. Amy or Anna in the Greek edition drops a banana skin in the street on her way home from school, but when she gets home she starts feeling deep shame, guilt and unbearable remorse. She starts thinking of all the possible catastrophes that might occur. Maybe a pastry chef will step on it and slip followed by many assistant pastry chefs loaded with pastries or a general on parade with an army marching behind him will all come tumbling down or even a bride followed by the groom and the wedding procession, and so on. Amy’s imagination goes wild and unable to bear this she decides to sneak out of her house at night to return to the “crime scene” to pick up the banana peel. Always anticipating the worst she imagines herself being locked up in prison:

“Firefighters, police / investigators and traffic wardens will come. / They will point to me and say: There she is. This Anna threw a banana skin. / I will be dragged to prison in chains / and I will spend my life / in a dark cell….”

She soon finds out that the banana peel in the middle of the street has definitely triggered events, but not the way she had expected…. The people of the town, including the mayor, will not only thank her, but also, award her with the key and lock of the town….

Speaking of shame and other related emotions and states like guilt and remorse this week’s Being Well  podcast [https://www.rickhanson.net/being-well-podcast-changing-your-relationship-to-shame/] touches upon many aspects and adjacent topics to shame. Rick and Forrest Hanson begin by talking about the biological roots of shame and how it evolved to help primates and humans survive, even escape death in certain circumstances. They refer to Paul Gilbert and others, who have pointed to the ways in which shame is rooted in submission behaviors of monkeys and other primates, and presumably early humans, in which there’s the movement of a looking away, of getting small, and avoiding really aggressive conflict. In the wild this behaviour can be effective in not getting exiled from the band and surviving the more aggressive Alpha males and passing on genes.

It is true that shame may still prevent us from getting exiled from certain groups or from being punished. On the podcast shame is also referred as the “exile emotion” because it can prevent exile from the group. They describe how when people go through a major process of internal change, it almost always brings them into intense conflict with the groups that they are a part of, because all groups seek to stay the same to preserve their homeostasis. This can happen for those who change major aspects of identity, but also in smaller ways as people decide, for instance, that their friend group or job or family structure or religious group or outlook on life or something else is not healthy or right for them anymore. Shame can arise, but also, shaming tactics can be inflicted on people to prevent them from rocking the boat or moving on or doing things differently and even protecting themselves.

They also discuss shame and impropriety, which raises the question of who makes those choices, who defines what is improper and why do they do so, and also, the psychological process of internalizing these often shame inducing messages. They claim that a lot of this unnecessary and often toxic shame can be traced back to our early upbringing, and more broadly to the Victorian era culture and Freudian ideas rooted in the Victorian era. Conservative western religious contexts, with beliefs of being born in shame and sin, also contribute to unhealthy shame and disempowerment. Many messages about our worth and about what is proper or right come from authority figures of different kinds invested in certain outcomes, and many of our early models of morality are likely to be driven by our early relationships at home, at school, in church and in society in large. They refer to Erick Erickson’s work of developmental stages, the second early developmental stage, in particular: shame or autonomy, which has a lot to do with toddlers’ toilet training … It is that phase where young children’s attempts for exploration and autonomy are either encouraged or stifled.  Rick Hanson says: “So you think about body shame, private parts, bodily wastes being revealed, this should be kept out of sight, this should be pushed away, and then you can have a broader societal view, which is, again, very Freudian and very cultural to its time, basically civilization contrasted to savagery…. And it’s really interesting for people to reflect on whatever might be relevant for you in your early childhood experiences. And then you can think about not just physical things that leak out, but what about emotions, the desires that are supposed to be hidden….”.

They do talk about the better known relationship between shame and trauma. Unfortunately, when we have being traumatized, mistreated or abused we end up carrying shame and unjustly internalizing others’ projections because that is how our brain / body respond to trauma. This kind of toxic shame, unlike healthy shame or remorse and moral sensibility that rise from the awareness that we have done something wrong, is unnecessary and unhealthy. They distinguish between guilt based on some wrong doing and being overly self-conscious about hurting others. This second kind of guilt is usually based on a lie, and this is especially true for people who have grown up in cultures of guilt, often with a religious framing around it, or a cultural framing around duties and loyalties. Rick Hanson suggests that as adults it serves us to step back from all these various beliefs, or rules, or standards and ask ourself – “Is somebody lying to me here?” We can ask ourselves is this shame being driven by any kind of objective sense, of appropriateness or morality or is it perhaps driven by our unconscious and unexamined schemas.

As discussed on the podcast because it is human beings that define many shoulds and don’ts it is important to reflect on them and check their current validity. Without being moral relativists it is wise to engage in some level of inquiry and to establish our own integrity system, which may to some extent differ from our family’s, culture’s or religion’s integrity systems.

Some of the many questions suggested on the podcast:

What’s my integrity system? What’s my moral basis? Who decides what being good looks like? Who decides what moral behavior looks like? What are the big themes in your shame story? What are the categories of things that activate a really strong feeling of shame for you? When did shame start getting attached to that other thing, that idea, that category, that way that you are? Did that happen pretty early on? Is it a more recent development?

Aspects of the emotion of disgust are also explored, which Rick Hanson notes is  neurobiologically, evolutionarily, pretty close to shame. From our own experience we may be aware that in overly oppressive and judgmental cultures there is a lot of disgust and loathing of the Other. Rick Hanson says: “…we feel that others are disgusting, others should be ashamed of themselves……” We think “They ought to be guilty, they ought to have remorse, they’re doing bad things, they’re bad, they’re wrong, I’m morally superior to them…..”  Essentially this has little to do with morality and goodness, and more to do with power and control. It is suggested that “we turn it into a morality play because morality is a wonderful lever that we can apply to people to curtail their behavior. That’s the mechanism, that’s the fulcrum.” If this is taken further it can lead to dehumanizing and objectifying of the Other and from that place it is easier to attack and harm other people. One form of shame is identity related shame, which applies to groups that society has attached a variety of labels to do with their worth or goodness and even right to exist. In her book On Shame And The Search For Identity Helen Merrell Lynd claims that shame hinges upon the clashing of different social or moral ‘values’ in specific places and times, emphasizing the trauma experienced by members of communities marginal to dominant culture: those most likely to feel shame are those made to feel ‘inappropriate’ by dominant cultural norms.

This relationship between shame,, morality and power starts early on. Of course, it is necessary and totally unavoidable to teach children values and model behaviours for them. Rick Hanson says: “to get children to internalize reasonable societal standards – we stop at red lights, that’s an important thing, we try to take care of the youngest among us, and we try to be kind – you know, there’s a place for that internalization, but, just like you say, what happens when it goes too far….” This is the reason why it is important to distinguish our own core integrity system, become conscious of our own standards and the impact we have on other people from systems of morality in the service of power. Often people have been gaslit in their family and culture. Every so often it is desirable to reflect on how we may have at times not acted accordingly to the values that are close to our heart due to unskillfulness or being unaware and ignorant. And also, to learn about the larger systems we are part of and the larger societal influences at play.

Mindfulness can be one way in unpacking our shame stories, both through awareness of bodily sensations like nausea and bodily pain and through awareness of thoughts and beliefs. Because shame and other emotions have evolved in community healing requires community. On the  podcast it is suggested that healing takes place in “community and relationships, including special beings who affirm you, and see value in you, and good in you, not because they’re flattering you or working you for some price they want, but because they genuinely witness in you that which is good and worthy.” Finding other forms of social support outside of the groups that one is currently a part of or the group that one might be making an exit from is also important.

Other topics mentioned on the podcast are: shame in relationship to group belonging, generosity of forgiveness and skillful correction when that is possible, although, as they say, “there are things in our life that we can’t fix with the person that we wronged back in junior high school”, for instance. They also mention the ‘Shame Proneness Scale’, different people vary in how shame-prone they are, how to disrupt unhelpful narratives about ourselves, about other people, about the world, through what they call the process of reverse engineering to understand where the story came from so that we can make a more active choice in the here and now about whether or not we want to hold on to it.

A few short videos on different ways to view and / or work with different aspects of complex emotions like shame and guilt. They are, one could say, complementary to the podcast material.

Some of my earliest readings on trauma and shame were Dr. Janina Fisher’s articles and website material. In this short video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yxpUGOu_yjE she shares 3 interventions drawn from neurobiologically-oriented therapies.

In this video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FPZHqImgUZ0 Dr. Pat Ogden provides an introduction to the relational nature of shame from a sensorimotor psychotherapy perspective, the link between shame and systemic oppression, how to work with the parts of our psyche or body that carry the shame.

In this video at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qQiFfA7KfF0 Brene Brown, PhD, talks about shame, empathy and human connection and how shame disrupts our connection to others, whereas qualities or capacities like empathy and courage support us in this process.

In this short TED talk at: https://www.ted.com/talks/june_tangney_what_s_the_difference_between_guilt_and_shame professor of clinical psychology, June Tangney, mentioned in the Being Well podcast, discriminates between constructive guilt and crippling shame so that we can learn to identify and deal with these difficult emotions.

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