Toxic Shame: What It Is And How To Heal From It

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 2.3K

  • @sarahcox1197
    @sarahcox1197 ปีที่แล้ว +4080

    This video just made me realize that I am addicted to self improvement. I am constantly trying to fix something wrong with me, and so long as I'm continually working on myself then I will earn whatever love comes my way. I never stop and trust that anyone loves me as is. It's as if I'm bargaining and apologizing for my existence 100% of the time. Damn that hurts

  • @sofiya90
    @sofiya90 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +761

    This woman is gonna save us all

    • @rafeeqwarfield9690
      @rafeeqwarfield9690 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Literally

    • @donoghmckeogh573
      @donoghmckeogh573 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +55

      She can only show you the road, you got to walk it yoursel...f

    • @MeissnerEffect
      @MeissnerEffect 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      I agree!! Amazing ✨🦋

    • @conniethornbury9464
      @conniethornbury9464 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +25

      She's definitely going to show us how to save ourselves! I've gotten more out of her videos than I have the previous 10 years of therapy.

    • @NicoleC.Morris
      @NicoleC.Morris 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Facts

  • @MaggiDaC
    @MaggiDaC 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +795

    "The only way to relax and be authentic is to be alone." Hearing that is a lot.

    • @jowiens32
      @jowiens32 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Same. 😢

    • @SuLawn
      @SuLawn 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

      That is my experience. I need to be alone a lot.

    • @tamiespe4164
      @tamiespe4164 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      😭😭😭

    • @janlong3548
      @janlong3548 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Q.q​@@SuLawn

    • @veganworldpeace2649
      @veganworldpeace2649 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Same for me, ever since the 1960s as a young child.

  • @dgvfsa66
    @dgvfsa66 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +550

    "Somewhere in the past, your will was broken." Absolutely true, and absolutely heartbreaking.

    • @1oldlady1000
      @1oldlady1000 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      That hit home for me too and led to a life of letting people use and abuse me just trying to get accepted for who I am.

    • @guillermoalvarezlabastida4628
      @guillermoalvarezlabastida4628 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      This rang a bell for me too. It was inevitable for me to recapitulate those moments that made me think that I was totally shattered and therefore worthless. We will make it together. Big hugs for both of you

    • @MsAudreytoo
      @MsAudreytoo 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

      My mother apologized to me as an adult. She was well into her battle with Lewy Body Disease & very humbly said to me,"I'm sorry I broke your spirit, Audrey. No one should ever do that to a child."
      While getting that acknowledgement from her was a beautiful & validating experience, it did not undo the profound & lasting effects my traumatic upbringing caused in me. I've worked very hard for nearly 4 decades trying to heal & overcome it all....
      That quote spoke to me in my bones.
      I'll be ordering Bradshaw's book ASAP

    • @dgvfsa66
      @dgvfsa66 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@MsAudreytoo Too little, too late

    • @lorihry6236
      @lorihry6236 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@MsAudreytoowow she admitted to it?! That’s ‘nice’ but doesn’t undo any of the harm done to you.
      It was my mom too that broke me I am just learning through this video.

  • @zaviansyed7701
    @zaviansyed7701 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +418

    I was raped as a child, I never told anyone. In my entire life. Recently I told my partner, he mentioned about your video. Each and every word of you is so true. Thank you.

    • @closethockeyfan5284
      @closethockeyfan5284 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

      May deep healing find you at the pace that is right for you. You never deserved any of that trauma and are a wonderful person inherently deserving of love.

    • @TheVainGame
      @TheVainGame 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      I hope you find peace and that your life be filled with happiness.
      I apologize for my wording but I am proud that you've taken steps towards finding that joy. Best wishes

    • @mediabreakdown8963
      @mediabreakdown8963 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +45

      You are incredibly brave for sharing such a thing. I too was attacked as a child. And as a man, I’m supposed to be the initiator of romantic stages; the pursuer in the bedroom. It took a long; long; LONG time for me to overcome the fear that showing someone physical affection in a romantic way would somehow harm them. It helped that I found a partner who was incredibly patient and gentle with me. I didn’t have my first kiss until I was in my 30s. 🤦🏻‍♂️😂. But it’s ok. I’m glad you are healing. I am too. May we both continue on our journey’s forward. ❤️

    • @xoxo3703
      @xoxo3703 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      You can get through this ❤️🫶

    • @belliwatching
      @belliwatching 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      You showed great courage telling your partner, and telling us here. And it's angering because it was not your fault, not your shame to carry. I hope you are receiving the support you need to free yourself from this traumatic experience.

  • @redj1101
    @redj1101 ปีที่แล้ว +682

    “Addictive behaviors in the shame-bound person develop as a replacement for human intimacy.” Wow, I feel called out

    • @ChaoticallyCreativeGinger
      @ChaoticallyCreativeGinger 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Omggg 🥺

    • @elizabethjwilliams6420
      @elizabethjwilliams6420 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Same... making appointments for therapy.

    • @AB-qe8cs
      @AB-qe8cs 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      and when you find human intimacy, if you're addicted to something, sometimes the addiction gets in the way of what you originally wanted to begin with!!

    • @e-j-7308
      @e-j-7308 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      You could also check out Gabor Mate's views on trauma and addiction !

    • @defender2415
      @defender2415 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thanks for quoting her. Needed this so much.

  • @SUNNofODIN
    @SUNNofODIN ปีที่แล้ว +1442

    14:29 "To be shame-bound means that from a young age we learned that there was something wrong with the fact that we have feelings." annnd now I'm crying at work.

    • @heidipriebe1
      @heidipriebe1  ปีที่แล้ว +102

      ❤️

    • @lunamoth7044
      @lunamoth7044 ปีที่แล้ว +42

      Growing up, I remember when I used to have a stepfather who would shame me for being too emotional.

    • @thombaz
      @thombaz ปีที่แล้ว +63

      @@lunamoth7044 Yeah, old man who grow up with an old men who grow up with an old men ect that did the same to them. Forsaken little boys in an old man body, I pray for them, and for us to stop being one of them.

    • @danielblair5970
      @danielblair5970 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      Not gonna lie, that's why I don't watch videos like these unless I'm prepared to cry. This one is definitely hitting hard.

    • @sab_1055
      @sab_1055 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      @@heidipriebe1 I was a toddler when I learned that there was something inherently wrong with me. I'm still afraid to show anger. In the last decade, I've cried once. I'm used to the former but the latter is worrying.

  • @Chirpy-eo8jq
    @Chirpy-eo8jq ปีที่แล้ว +878

    I’ve lived my entire life stuck in fantasy books, and I’m now looking up from 12+ hours every day on fanfiction and realizing that I have an intolerance for staying present. It might be because of ADHD, but I can’t believe that’s all of it.
    I’ve thought I’m addicted to stories before, but it always felt like an excuse. I want to be the people in my stories. I want to live their lives and have their friends and eat their food and run and jump and cry and laugh as them. Who needs this husk of a body? Who needs this discard of a mind?
    This feels too over the top to post, and I want to delete it, but I also, really, really want to move on. Thank you for posting this video and helping so many people, including myself.

    • @mir6598
      @mir6598 ปีที่แล้ว +141

      Your post isnt over the top. It was very well articulated and I actually relate to it. I feel obsessed with imagination based books/ movies/ stories etc. and being imaginative is where I live in my mind. It is an escape of some sort but I never really figured out the nuances because sometimes it’s hard to figure out which part is trauma and which is just something I love. But I feel my happiest within this scope. I know that there is an element to it from ADHD also.. maladaptive daydreaming. It’s interesting once you start figuring out how all these things connect. I almost deleted my comment too and thought oh its too long but then you encouraged me to just speak my mind given your comment about it towards the end. Thanks for sharing your thoughts ^_^

    • @juliejolie344
      @juliejolie344 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      Thanks both of you for sharing I relate

    • @ResurgentVoice
      @ResurgentVoice ปีที่แล้ว +57

      I feel you too! I have always lived in my fantasies too. I also have ADHD. I’ve always wanted to write my own stories too, but I am to scared that they won’t be good enough. When they are just fantasies in my head, no one can judge them, no one can say they aren’t good enough. And I can keep fantasizing about becoming a writer because I haven’t been rejected yet. But I’m getting older now and since I haven’t written my stories down, it starts to feel more and more pathetic to keep pretending that I’ll be a writer someday. If I don’t get this figured out soon, I won’t have failed and been rejected because I wrote a bad story, I’ll fail and be rejected because I never even managed to get myself to try. 🤦‍♀️

    • @louiefuton3732
      @louiefuton3732 ปีที่แล้ว +40

      ​@@ResurgentVoicePlease give it an authentic try. You need to try. Now. Now is not too late to start.
      I've got Aspergers and Disorganized attachment, not ADHD, but I'm a musician and am just starting to write songs and learn to sing. Was told I sucked at singing back in my teenage years (I'm 29), and I hated anything I wrote. I also felt hopeless since most songs are love songs and I've had a very infrequent love life. What the hell, I'll write about women rejecting me and/or leaving me. I'll play music every day because it's what I need to do to be happy
      Don't feel like your writing isn't good enough. It's much better than u think. If u practice writing (maybe short stories) everyday, you'll get better and better. Then the stories that are ur favorites u can self publish. The ones that aren't your favorites, you don't have to make those public, but don't be embarrassed that they exist in your laptop. Even the bad content is good enough to just exist, because it helped u practice and learn to make your good stuff. The best is yet to come.
      Never stop being creative- I think thats the real cause of depression.

    • @lunamoth7044
      @lunamoth7044 ปีที่แล้ว +28

      I relate to this so much. It was especially true when I was growing up, using books as escapism and imaging what it would be like to be someone else. I had such hard time making friends and I wanted so much to meet people that were like those characters. It's still difficult for me to make friends. I'm starting to wonder if that'll ever change.

  • @JK-xr4yp
    @JK-xr4yp 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +149

    Been distracting myself from facing my feelings for 40 years. Thanks to my wife and this TH-camr, just starting to work on my shit. Thank you!

    • @mirandaivanochko6377
      @mirandaivanochko6377 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      By far the coolest comment! Best of best wishes to you and your wife!

    • @amandachristie7886
      @amandachristie7886 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Your wife truly LOVES you.. ❤️❤️❤️

    • @jjoannaelena
      @jjoannaelena หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      so proud of you stranger, keep on going !!! i hope everything feels lighter for you already although the journey is long ❤️‍🩹

    • @pelligroovy
      @pelligroovy หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I love this- makes me wanna tear up a little. How was she able to get you to begin looking and understanding and accepting?

    • @iceland110
      @iceland110 วันที่ผ่านมา

      ​@pelligroovy I believe only true and unselfish love is capable to move ppl to want to change. But the actual work has to be done by the individual who needs to change. How wonderful that this gentleman found true love and took courage from that love to start the path towards healing. It means he loves his wife too and want to be a better husband. Rooting for them and for everyone who wants to change for better and to heal past wounds to feel better 🎉💞🙏🏻

  • @tabeabauchspeck600
    @tabeabauchspeck600 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +237

    Holy shit. I just broke down crying. I've been working so much on myself for years, I've been to therapy twice, and only now all of it finally makes sense. How natural lying comes to me, the addictions, the feeling of being better & smarter & more capable (if I'd choose to try) than people around me while simultaneously thinking of myself as rotten to the core, the frequent meltdowns where I cut off everyone, that I'm very good at talking about vulnerable topics without actually being vulnerable, never having experienced REAL intimacy in all my relashionships, my approaching panic attacks as soon as someone catches a glimpse of "me" behind all my guards and masks and filters, the constant feeling of walking on the edge of a cliff...
    This changed a lot for me. I feel like I can finally work on the underlying issue rather than patching up symptom after symptom. Thank you so much for this video 💜
    (This is hard to post. Even while opening up I HAVE to have control, every word has to be carefully chosen so no stranger on the internet would ever see sth of me I did not intend to show 🙃)

    • @cej499
      @cej499 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      ❤ to you, very courageous ❤

    • @e-j-7308
      @e-j-7308 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      That is so well put, I feel it. Being able to talk about vulnerable things without actually being vulnerable. It must be why I end up failing a lot of friendships I try to create. People sense I have a veil. Or I seem judgemental, when truth of what I attempt to be is so far from that. Thanks for sharing a glimpse of something that was hard to show, even to internet strangers :)

    • @TamaraTkacova
      @TamaraTkacova 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      I felt this comment in my bones, it feels surreal to see a stranger describe my own situation so precisely in such vivid detail. I don't know you, but I know that you've got this ♡

    • @KarizmaJones-oi9er
      @KarizmaJones-oi9er 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      🥹Thank you 🙏🏾

    • @blackmansVW
      @blackmansVW 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Thank you.

  • @ChannelMath
    @ChannelMath ปีที่แล้ว +89

    Anyone else think there's also a secret pathological pleasure in thinking you are uniquely terrible? Like, "at least I'm special"? That it might feel like a loss to realize you are just like everyone else? Or is that just another fantasy to distract yourself with?

    • @seanmccullough3863
      @seanmccullough3863 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Definitely another fantasy to help cope. I can relate to that a lot. Believing that maybe I’m supposed to be the supervillain of the story is something I’ve done to justify my own existence. If I lose my shame, then I’m not the supervillain anymore therefore I cannot justify my own existence.

    • @agreeablegraylife
      @agreeablegraylife 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I like the way you think.❤

    • @kirstencabatu
      @kirstencabatu 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      I think the popularity surge of mental health and trauma throughout the years on social media have made me like this. I think there’s something satisfying about being able to have such traumatic experiences that shock other people but don’t seem to bother me when I share them. Something about having “gone through more shit” than the average person makes me feel like I’m better or even just more “relatable” to others.

    • @allthatyousee18
      @allthatyousee18 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@kirstencabatu yes, I have felt something similar, at least to some degree. In my case it might be a twisted way to get validation -- "see when I share a tiny sliver of my experience people are horrified!! This proves how awful my life has been!!" In really bad moods this turns into obsessions with figuring out the exact words to use to hurt someone emotionally -- "see if I know how to hurt you, this proves how much I was hurt by others!!"
      It's screwed up, though at least I'm recognising the patterns

    • @jenniferwrack2897
      @jenniferwrack2897 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Definitely, I totally understood what u were saying

  • @simonwilson7581
    @simonwilson7581 ปีที่แล้ว +719

    37:00 The most painful part about healing is remembering back to all the moments of self-doubt, and imagining where you would have been in life if it were not for the abuse we suffered.

    • @davidbriggs1148
      @davidbriggs1148 ปีที่แล้ว +142

      The grief of realising that i have spent 40years hiding and deliberately not engaging with life is the hardest thing to bear.

    • @jupiterskiss3473
      @jupiterskiss3473 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      Yep... It's all lessons

    • @АлександраГришина-с5р
      @АлександраГришина-с5р ปีที่แล้ว +21

      Yeah, it's all sucks so much, honestly I don't understand why do I live haha

    • @lesliemctavish4300
      @lesliemctavish4300 ปีที่แล้ว +38

      I think sometimes that this just leads to painful regret or sense of loss. As I feel we can't say how our lives would have turned out even if we were raised in a "safe family".

    • @idunusegoogleplus
      @idunusegoogleplus ปีที่แล้ว +39

      ​@@lesliemctavish4300I prefer to believe that radical acceptance and even love of reality no matter how painful it can be, leads to genuine happiness and even late in one's 70s or 80s it could still be sweeter than having 60 years of not living the truth.

  • @annquigley7585
    @annquigley7585 ปีที่แล้ว +897

    “Core wounds that kicked us off our own teams” that’s a great way of expressing it

    • @miriamadahan1730
      @miriamadahan1730 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      The first time you 😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😮😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😮😢😢😮😢😮😢😢😢😢 3:30 😢i😢😢years gone yfrom now 😮😮😮

    • @alainapoindexter3482
      @alainapoindexter3482 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      That hit hard for me, too. I had to stop for a few minutes to let it sink in…. I’ve never heard it put in such a specific and understandable way.

    • @ChannelMath
      @ChannelMath ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Yes. After hearing this, Groucho's famous joke just hit me in a whole new light: "I wouldn't join any club that would have ME as a member!"

    • @mummyjohn
      @mummyjohn ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ChannelMath not to take away from the comparison, but that comes from the contradiction that the reason you'd want to join a club is because membership elevates you, but at the same time the reason a club would want you as a member is because your membership elevates the club.

    • @jayinjazzin
      @jayinjazzin ปีที่แล้ว

  • @MaggiDaC
    @MaggiDaC 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +261

    Oh, so that's exactly the feeling I get of "I cannot be around other people right now" because I'm in a bad mood and know I dont have the emotional energy to rally and Act Normal.

    • @Ashlee-hh6di
      @Ashlee-hh6di 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Wow, YES.

    • @crowekirstin1
      @crowekirstin1 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      Me tonight. I just had a conversation with my flatmate where I was very heavy because I'm in a bad mood and i used an impatient tone. He actually biked away mid conversation and I said in a passive aggressive tone, "see you at home, then." Now I'm trying to work out how to cook dinner without running into anyone (I live with 6 people 🙃)

    • @lisacarnahan9881
      @lisacarnahan9881 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Hearing this so hard. I really struggled with this the most in high school, couldn't tell people the reason because I didn't want them to think I was bad. Hopefully, people can be more honest in the future despite their struggles.

  • @missit507
    @missit507 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +63

    The anxiety I feel due to the shame is so intense.

  • @Beannqueen
    @Beannqueen 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    I'm ashamed of being ashamed. I'm still learning.

    • @matimoi
      @matimoi 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This!

  • @the.emc33
    @the.emc33 ปีที่แล้ว +235

    "All of us kind of suck sometimes." Such simple and honest truths like this make these heady, heavy topics so approachable. Heidi is the best!

    • @closethockeyfan5284
      @closethockeyfan5284 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      True. The problem in my experience is more that I see people who suck a lot getting more than people who suck very little

    • @themindbenderr
      @themindbenderr 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@closethockeyfan5284 it is usually because people who suck a lot know how to manipulate others to get what they want. on the other hand, good people give too much cuz deep down they crave for love/attention but it causes them to be used by others, so they don't get what they want.

  • @andrewrobertson3894
    @andrewrobertson3894 ปีที่แล้ว +32

    Do any of you ever feel like there's some kind of psychological road block/barrier that keeps bouncing you back to the same spot whenever you try to make a major improvement or upgrade to your life?

    • @AlisonChristian-bq4ws
      @AlisonChristian-bq4ws 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes its called the devil. Sorry he is actually real.

    • @GIGIFREELIFE
      @GIGIFREELIFE 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Did you collect some more info about this? I would appreciate if you want to share. It could be a limiting believe that manifests like: I’m not worthy of this thing

  • @ewuraamaackah8219
    @ewuraamaackah8219 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +252

    My toxic shame comes from my dad. Growing up, he used sometimes watch my siblings and I, saying nothing, with a look of disappointment, angry, and/or annoyance. It made us uncomfortable and guilty for no reason and made it hard for us to feel free at home. I sometimes felt he hated us or just really didn’t know how to be kind to his own kids but was super friendly with strangers

    • @nanaamaachaaackah8070
      @nanaamaachaaackah8070 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    • @ZebrasAreAwesome011
      @ZebrasAreAwesome011 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

      HOLY FUCKING SHIT ME TOO!!!! I have NEVER encountered another person who has spoken of this sort of issue before. It was so weird and made it difficult to have friends over. I spent a lot of time finding ways to just be out of the house and always had some excuse as to why I couldn't have people over. It was a dismal and lonely way to grow up. Still to this day I am almost 25 and cannot even make a full meal in the kitchen while he is in there. We've found other ways to bond as of late, but that one piece I don't know that I'll ever fully overcome.

    • @Healingflower313_
      @Healingflower313_ 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

      @@ZebrasAreAwesome011 Damn same boat. My mother and father were both narcs who tag teamed took turns in instilling deep shame in me, just for merely existing as a innocent child. No attentive care yet always there watching me uncomfortably this dooming creepy feeling like im stalked in my own home. This trauma has taken away from me the safety to clearly see and judge hence being a magnet for predators all my life. Caregivers facial expressions help a child develop. I have an autistic toddler now and we sit every day bonding through different facial expressions and make silly faces. I have a facial expressions/feelings chart on fridge. My inner child is healing through loving him. You’re not alone

    • @MamaLinz123
      @MamaLinz123 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      He sounds like my father.
      He made it clear that he didn’t like us or particularly want us around.
      We couldn’t be ‘normal’ children because us being ‘normal’ would mean him being in a foul mood/angry.

    • @Kynyyybabyyy
      @Kynyyybabyyy 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Healingflower313_i couldn’t relate more. Happy to hear you’re thriving and giving your little one a safe home. ❤

  • @shimmeringchimps3842
    @shimmeringchimps3842 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +111

    Addiction to self-help books, addiction to fantasy, and addiction to travel. I've never heard myself so accurately described. I feel so naked. 😳

    • @MissBluebirddays
      @MissBluebirddays 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Same 😂❤

    • @alexandrac.macarthur4785
      @alexandrac.macarthur4785 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      It’s like your my best friend

    • @alexandrac.macarthur4785
      @alexandrac.macarthur4785 27 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Wow travel addiction. I didn’t realize that was a thing. In the back of my mind I knew this was unhealthy but seeing someone I admire like you admit it has helped. I struggle to connect with other people as a neurodiverse person. Travel has distracted me from how empty I feel, but it’s served its purpose and I see this now.

  • @VivianGray88
    @VivianGray88 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +57

    My mother was/is still deeply disapproving of my joy and desire for connection. From toddlerhood, if I was playing and having fun, being joyful with friends, she had this hateful look of disapproval that is all I ever saw of her face. It made me fear having friends visit. It made me isolate and alienate myself to keep on her right side. I have come to realise as an adult that she deliberately isolated me by disapproving of my joy, my need for connection so I could tend only to her and her needs. Her narcissism is so deliberate and destructive, it beggars belief. To this day, I’m still soothing myself the morning after -whenever I go out with friends, especially to nights of music, food, dancing - any kind of enjoyable night - and wake up with that hateful feeling of dread and anxiety. Even though I live a million miles from her, pay my own bills and live on my own, have a job. Still, a night of joy and connection is something to be fearful of.
    To all of us on this journey, may we go free of this shame. Remember others in your prayers. If we are parts of one whole, our sustained prayers for each other will and must free us all faster than we can dare to dream. All is not lost.
    For those who cannot afford therapy, I share this tip that has made the most powerful difference to my healing journey from the best therapist I’ve had: find photos of your baby self up until 7 years of age. Frame them and bring them out in the open, talk to your children. Become their parent. Kiss them, soothe them, take them with you to your bed. Get your teddies and surround them with them, buy new teddy bears if you have to. Become the parent you needed and never got.
    Soothe and nurture your inner child. It is a profoundly healing act of self-love. Even if it is only one photo, get it and speak to that little girl or boy. May the Divine free us all.

    • @northstar4851
      @northstar4851 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank you for sharing with beautiful and poignant words

    • @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order
      @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you. Be blessed💖🙏😘✨🧙‍♂🥰

    • @doomnoises
      @doomnoises 27 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Thinking back, in my first infant photos I was a happy baby with clear big eyes, hungry for experience and connection. In later photos I was often crying or spaced out.

    • @iceland110
      @iceland110 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thank you for sharing this. I started to cry as I read the suggestion about baby pictures so I guess that's an evident thing for me now to apply this into my life.Thank you 🙏🏻🥹💞

  • @Snowfoxie1
    @Snowfoxie1 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +75

    My grandma used to have “midnight chats” with me when I would visit her over summer break. These chats were about how sinful the world is, how my parents were too lenient, and how all my friends and roughly 99.9% of the world were going to Hell. She’d discuss sins I’d committed that day, like dancing to my A-Teens CD or wearing a “revealing” bathing suit (for context, I was in elementary school at this time 🙃). She said it all with such conviction that I believed her and internalized it all and existed in a state of constant guilt. Now I’m in my 30s and have only just begun to shed that toxic shame. It’s been scary but so good. It feels like I can breathe again for the first time since I was like 5.

  • @enlightndark6671
    @enlightndark6671 ปีที่แล้ว +232

    When we are in the dark, we CANNOT think our way out, we must FEEL our way out! ( I went to 5 therapists for 10 yrs) it is NOT enough to debate the shadow/unconscious wounds within our mind/psyche- We still get pushed around by our toxic inner voice because WE NEED TO RECOVER THE EMOTIONAL ENERGY activating these toxic thoughts- IT IS THE EMOTIONAL WOUND that keeps triggering the toxic shame. If we can become aware of our EMOTIONAL NEEDS by focusing on OUR DEEPEST feelings, putting ALLL OUR ATTENTION on our PHYSICAL BODY, we can practice releasing & soothing this ENERGY & the toxic shame will diminish. (Even counting our breath can help break the mental shame loop) BUT only if we work to EMBRACE & EXPAND OUR EMOTIONAL SELF AWARENESS! Otherwise we will keep acting out our childhood shame program. Thoughts DONT SOLVE PAIN, FEELING OUR FEELINGS resolves pain. And this requires digging really deeply & being very very honest with ourselves & learning WHAT we are really feeling. (BUT most of us will run away from our difficult feelings into distractions or blame others or GET STUCK IN OUR THOUGHT LOOPS.) Debating in our head is useless & leaves us exhausted & broken because no one can put out a painful fire with words! DEEP work into the core of body's feelings requires time alone EVERY DAY without alcohol/drugs/media. (I found ASMR video's & meditation outdoors very helpful to RESET MY BODY turning off my trauma mind LOOP). It also requires life changes. We cannot remain around abusive family or addictions because THE SHAME MONSTER WILL KEEP RETURNING until we rebuild our life in a safe & quiet place. (Sitting in my car/park/bedroom/office/bathroom for 5 minutes a day silently paying attention to my feelings in my body & letting them out-CHANGED MY LIFE I cried/raged & felt terrified, but eventually I got use to my core child-like feelings INSTEAD of TRYING TO MASK/REPRESSED or CONTROL MY THOUGTS) At first it is like a tidal wave of feelings knocking our mind & body downwards & we can even get very sick (because our feelings unexpressed build up TENSION IN OUR BODIES over years) but eventually, we can get USE TO OUR TRUTHFUL FEELINGS. After practicing my feelings, and getting to know the truth about my inner needs, I can now FIND MY BALANCE quicker after getting upset and MY BOUNDARIES are way STRONGER! Shame removes our inner truth by cutting us off from our true feelings, so we become lost. BY DIRECTLY FEELING our true feelings IN ANY SITUATION we can bypass our toxic thoughts & go to the core of the matter putting out the fire before the SHAME LOOP gets activated. Before we just ignored our feelings TO PROTECT OURSELVES & ended up in shitty situations. I got to know what I felt rather than performing for others & losing my sense of self. Now when I feel uncomfortable around someone, I realize my BODY & FEELINGS are WARNING me to take CARE of my needs & disabilities. So I can now protect myself. TOXIC shame blinds us to our true self. But healthy powerful shame warns us & protects us, shifting us back onto our true pathI

    • @kendranieskens1555
      @kendranieskens1555 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Thank you for this ❤

    • @rando9574
      @rando9574 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      hi ! thank you ! can you share your contact info ? what you say here really hits me

    • @nancybiscello7949
      @nancybiscello7949 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Thank you so much

    • @MsRajmi
      @MsRajmi ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Toçi shame blinds us to toxic people.. Thanks for your thoughts on this. Very helpful and well written 👍

    • @MCrystalMaidenn
      @MCrystalMaidenn ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Hi can you please tell more about how does one truly know what they feel and let it out? What are the exact steps to follow? What to do if something happened that made us feel uncomfortable or have negative feelings towards something that might happen in the future, how to stop those negative feelings and just let it go? thanks in advance.

  • @VontriceIyonn
    @VontriceIyonn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +79

    Most African Americans if not all, deal with toxic shame, sad to say I see both sides of the spectrum all the time in my community. For some reason these behaviors caused me to develop an INFJ-A personality type, so I tend to be very altruistic and purpose driven, my life’s goal is to integrate this information into my community because it’s most definitely needed, thank you for your amazing work! ❤🙏🏽🏆

    • @girliewapisskink
      @girliewapisskink 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Infj-t 4w5 here… is this like, a thing with us?

    • @wombat7961
      @wombat7961 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Infj checking in I thought I was burned out for a few years I just sort of gave up or gave in and stopped trying to be the gifted kid turned gifted adult because as black/aa man in the US ... I started to believe in my own rejection and start to believe in the lie, I let imposter syndrome and victimhood define me. I stopped trying to save myself and be my own hero, I started to believe I wasn't good enough but the feedback was overwhelming and suicide started to invade my waking thoughts for a few years... But like Heidi Preibe says who actually chooses this? Not black men

    • @shro_okee
      @shro_okee 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You don't develop a personality type, especially not infj, those guys are very weird people (not in a negative sense) it's entirely genetic, you are like this or you aren't since birth, what you're talking about is the way your environment changed you, which is normal

    • @girliewapisskink
      @girliewapisskink 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@shro_okee yes I agree, however most
      “Typologies” acknowledge this. The theory of cognitive functions themselves stem from the way a person grows and a adapts to their environment. I think it’s worth looking into and is loosely applicable, especially for those of us invested in self-discovery, but it relies on pretty loose theories without much research to back any of it up. However, I think it’s fun and harmless.

    • @jeanannedupratt7075
      @jeanannedupratt7075 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@wombat7961 surrender or all up + trust your gut. Sending you Love ❤

  • @JerrTheHooman
    @JerrTheHooman 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

    Something small triggered the shame reflex today and I'm desperately fighting my previous tendencies to withdraw from all my friends and hide under a rock. I was doing so well, but this little thing brought me back to the "you thought you were better? You're just acting. You're not healed, it's just another mask. You're still the same damaged person you've always been. You're just ACTING healed". Fortunately...because I AM HEALED...I can identify that it's Just a temporary backslide. I came to this video for reassurance 😅 shame is tough

    • @janiececooper6758
      @janiececooper6758 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Thank you for sharing this, this happened to me this week and Its still looming around, I am fighting the urge to sabotage my healing. This video is helpful

    • @minxxoxo
      @minxxoxo 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I feel like it’s helped me to think of healing as a continuous progress. I’ll never be “healed” or get over all of my traumas and that’s…. Okay. There’s not something wrong with me that needs to be overcome. I’m a human being and I’ll continue to get over things.

    • @WrynnCZ
      @WrynnCZ 21 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thank you for sharing this. Helped me to understand my situation. 💚✌

    • @dylangeorgefield
      @dylangeorgefield 14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Great job!

  • @brah04X
    @brah04X ปีที่แล้ว +572

    I have to push myself to write this, as I'm afraid to reveal what an asshole I am lol, but I just want to say thank you so much for taking the time to validate such a big part of my life experience. I have felt such deep shame over every aspect of my being, including my drug issues that I've obviously developed to soothe the original shame, loneliness, and emptiness that I've experienced for so long.
    Great work! I'm really glad I found your channel.

    • @lareal5929
      @lareal5929 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      I felt this in my soul. You are not alone ❤

    • @acaudill06
      @acaudill06 ปีที่แล้ว +26

      Same here. Shame about self medicating, which I developed from having shame from other mistakes I've made.

    • @katherinemoss857
      @katherinemoss857 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      Same! It's hard to admit even to strangers! But this is part of the healing process. It's about what happened to us not what's wrong with us.

    • @noahspurs125
      @noahspurs125 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      🤗

    • @shainamadai
      @shainamadai ปีที่แล้ว +12

      You had me at asshole lol

  • @eonjustingeneral7073
    @eonjustingeneral7073 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +137

    **Steps towards Authenticity**
    21:30 - Entertain the idea of a neutral self
    23:27 - Seek out mirrors for yourself within solitude
    26:24 - The Stripping Down Process
    30:06 - Abstain from addictions

    • @elsasolen3752
      @elsasolen3752 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Thank you!

    • @sahansalem4352
      @sahansalem4352 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Thank you so much

  • @chelsealish7049
    @chelsealish7049 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    One thing I will add: it is possible to present your authentic self and not get validation over and over again and it can put you into the shame/anxiety/depression loop. In my personal experience, the lack of validation and shame/anxiety/depression loop when I was authentic was showing me that I was still too reliant on external validation as a means for self-compassion. 🚫 when my self-compassion/nurturing/comfort should never be contingent on validation from others because I should be safe and secure within self. This is especially important for those who are here to “shake things up” and be a pillar of change for evolution. I call these people the sacred rebels who are not afraid to speak up to trigger healing in others. 🙏🏻

  • @gabbsis
    @gabbsis 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    I’m only 17 and I struggle with the depressive episodes so bad that I fail to function at times. All my life I tried and failed to explain to people around me that I pretend to be someone I’m not, but I can’t control it and I don’t know what to do. No one ever understood what this “feeling like I’m not myself” meant. This video pretty much changed my life. I genuinely thought I was alone in this and the whole idea of “lying” to therapists, being a part of pretending to be someone you’re not unintentionally, was so relatable that it hit me like a ton of bricks. I want to try to get better and to love life again. It seems so hard now but I hope one day I can look back and thank myself for starting my healing journey early in life.

    • @KarizmaJones-oi9er
      @KarizmaJones-oi9er 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      🥹🙏🏾

    • @michelleW007
      @michelleW007 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      start and never give up or stop.

    • @everythingandmore5871
      @everythingandmore5871 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Hey. You won't believe me, but I'm also 17 years old and I'm going through EXACTLY the same problem you described. Don't feel alone in this. I swear I was so happy reading your comment because I felt so understood...

    • @caitlyn1983
      @caitlyn1983 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      coming from someone only a couple of years older and in almost the same place at your age, there is so much hope and time to develop your Self. good luck

    • @Elijah560
      @Elijah560 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I hear you man I’m 18, praying for you bro🙏🏾 we got this.

  • @DefenderOfAzeroth
    @DefenderOfAzeroth 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

    if only every single person could honestly and effortfully absorb this type of content, who knows what humanity would look like

  • @saraschweiger7891
    @saraschweiger7891 ปีที่แล้ว +29

    “Governed by a feeling of being contaminated.” Well put!

  • @fourshore502
    @fourshore502 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    this is relatable im always thinking in the back of my head "im sorry for existing."

  • @sharonrose3871
    @sharonrose3871 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    While I have spent my whole life trying to prove that I am a good person the result was proof that I am horrid/shameful. The struggle has been a real for 50+ years. Recently it has become so in my face I struggle to breathe. I just grabbed hope by the hand. Thank you Heidi and to everyone who has commented.

  • @alid3424
    @alid3424 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    I love Brene Brown's extensive research and work on shame. I think she sums it up beautifully with 'Guilt can be healthy, shame is always destructive. Guilt is: what I did was wrong/bad. Shame is: what I AM is wrong/bad.'
    Some may say it's semantics, but language has power. Beautiful video, Heidi.

  • @longlostike
    @longlostike 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    Holy. Moly. I've watched so many videos. Trying figure myself out. I've looked at personality disorders, BPD, autism. While I can say, "oh. Maybe. Maybe not", But this video has opened a whole new level of self realization. Wow.

  • @kyliessave8454
    @kyliessave8454 ปีที่แล้ว +528

    Heidi, you're literally so underrated. You've helped me understand myself so much and I couldn't be more thankful. 🥺

    • @rlud304
      @rlud304 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Literally?

    • @scottsmith7521
      @scottsmith7521 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@rlud304really?

    • @The_Vanished
      @The_Vanished ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yeah, for sure! When Heidi tells me something new that’s amazing. I was stuck in the disorganized anxious avoidant attachment style for like 40 years. I had zero friends and almost all family members disowned me. They all had the same attachment style though 😂
      Oh, and I don’t have debilitating and complete CPTSD. That was so bad, omg!

  • @bigradio9396
    @bigradio9396 ปีที่แล้ว +350

    I am literally jumping out of my skin to share this with my partner. This has been one of the most important videos I have seen in a long time, and I’ve been binging. I so appreciate your intelligence, humanity, perspective and clarity of thought.

    • @rlud304
      @rlud304 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Nope. You’re not LITERALLY jumping out of your skin. That’s the complete opposite of what literally means. It means “actually.” Are you actually jumping out of your skin? No, you’re not.

    • @bigradio9396
      @bigradio9396 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      @@rlud304 Grammarian! Touché. I was figuratively jumping.

    • @maryroseart
      @maryroseart ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@bigradio9396 Congrats!!! Wishing you and your partner much joy along your journey!

    • @djhardcorehengst6356
      @djhardcorehengst6356 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      ​@@rlud304 the usage of language keeps changing, this is how lots of people talk nowadays

    • @SvayaG
      @SvayaG ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@rlud304 chill out, dude. She's excited that she's finally feeling understood etc and you need to examine why you needed to be a Grammar Nazi and put her down. Asshole move.

  • @StressRUs
    @StressRUs ปีที่แล้ว +31

    "This is simply the way you adapted to the way you were raised", says it all. Time for me to re-read Bradshaw.

  • @lazmotron
    @lazmotron ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Thank you. I just found out about chronic / toxic shame and I am starting my search into healing. My father was a good man, but b/c of his dysfunction he newer validated me my entire life. I can't understands or rationalize how a father can have this behavior towards his child, wife, mother, etc. This behavior is called emotional denial. My father studied to be an artist. He did oil paintings, pottery, wood carvings, stone and marble carvings, with a talent rivaling DaVinci. You would think that a man that was so emotionally dead inside could not be so creative. I have picture of him playing with me when I was about 2 and 3 years old. Then at about 5 years old he became emotionally dead. He never validated me from then on and I was plagued with Chronic / Toxic shame my entire life. I didn't think I made a mistake, I thought I was a mistake. Not until came across John Bradshaw's work was I able to start to heal.

  • @shmidnightapple
    @shmidnightapple 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    Sometimes when I join group settings I just be super polite, cagy and sometimes I feel like every single person have a “real personality” and they have huge presence and this is me I feel bland, smaller than them and super inferior!

  • @Locut0s
    @Locut0s ปีที่แล้ว +141

    I’m 41 and I’ve kept myself out of romantic relationships with other people my entire life. The story you told about seeing yourself needing to be on that raft furiously paddling, as well as needing to avoid emotional mirrors speaks so much to me. I’ve made so much progress over the last 10 years. I feel increasing less shame and just a deep well of sadness and grief often for myself now. I remember hearing a quote I saw somewhere a long time back in which a psychiatrist recounts something a alcoholic patient of theirs told them. This person had said that they felt like they walked through life being like a movie extra, a background character in the lives of other people. That quote struck me to my core when I heard it and is very much how I’ve kept myself in the lives of other people. I can see it’s a role I play to keep myself safe. The price is so incredibly high though. Thank you for all the invaluable work you do with your videos!

    • @cherylpa527
      @cherylpa527 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      You are worthy of love, just like every person is, just try and get out there, even in tiny increments, talk to people, elderly people, friends, a neighbor, whoever, practice. I've had an underlying feeling that I was unworthy of love romantically and would choose toxic partners who would confirm that to be true, so I set myself up. I am finally realizing how that belief has just kept me alone Sending you a big hug ❤️

    • @Locut0s
      @Locut0s ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@cherylpa527 thank you so much for this. This is wonderfully kind and I really needed to hear this today!

    • @cherylpa527
      @cherylpa527 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Locut0s ❤️ ❤️❤️

    • @misss827
      @misss827 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      ​@@Locut0s Your post or your believe about yourself made me cry. You are the number one! In your life but also in other peoples life. You are my number one in this very moment. May you feel and know you are love(d)❤. May you know and feel blessed. May you know you matter . May you be forgiven.

    • @june29378
      @june29378 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      27 here and right here with you

  • @homerkenobi1914
    @homerkenobi1914 ปีที่แล้ว +121

    She mentions John Bradshaw and massively recommends it. That’s like underselling it, omg, sentence by sentence you’ll read it and get blown away, it’s that powerful. Amazing book.

    • @hgcalben8241
      @hgcalben8241 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I have the book on hold at my library because of this video. I can't wait to pick it up and read it.

    • @pendafen7405
      @pendafen7405 ปีที่แล้ว

      As a wrestling fan of long years I just cannot get over the author name lmao

    • @aicerg
      @aicerg ปีที่แล้ว

      I don't know if it's because English is not my first language, but I got bored after the first couple of pages 😪 oh well

  • @stevensawyer5924
    @stevensawyer5924 ปีที่แล้ว +177

    OMG! The only thing you left out was stating my name in this story of me and my life.😢
    This is so incredible, I'm shaking in my skin!💔😢
    I've never heard me, explained so clearly and concisely!

  • @loose2550
    @loose2550 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

    I've been absolutely alone and absolutely valueless my whole life - mother just passing down her own trauma. It's so painful but so helpful to listen to this woman

  • @AdamFlint-1
    @AdamFlint-1 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    I always said dad broke my spirit but as you described it, dad broke my “will” is a good description.

  • @itsspringtime
    @itsspringtime ปีที่แล้ว +41

    Toxic shame attack. Definitely have those. Never thought to call them that. I am FINALLY at the noticing stage. I didn't feel the toxic shame attacks or really any feelings for so long. The noticing my feelings stage is actually so much more painful than I expected. Sheesh.

  • @kirstieperez2704
    @kirstieperez2704 ปีที่แล้ว +89

    I'm just gonna throw this out there out of my own sheer frustration of a possible link to all of this as well.
    A majority of us were taught- from birth- that we are born "bad" and literally undeserving...from organized religion
    Like..???🤦🏽‍♀️
    This will automatically bleed into other areas of life. We aren't only healing parenting but ideologies as well. This is massive WORK. I'm so tired.
    I know yall are, too, though.
    So ignore my fussing and keep going. Xo
    I adore this channel. Thank you for sharing all these videos. They're changing my life. ❤

    •  ปีที่แล้ว +5

      You're not fussing at all! You're absolutely right!

    • @blackjay5338
      @blackjay5338 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      This is fantastic stuff. I relate to so many of the comments from people who are overjoyed at hearing this concept. It gives us hope for healing.
      I only had to reply to this comment because I'm a religious person who, when hearing this video, and reading part of Bradshaw's book about healing toxic shame, can TOTALLY understand why people would associate their toxic shame with their "religion" experience. But I also know that churches are just organizations with people running them, though trying their best to follow what they understand their God to be. Those people can so easily be people carrying their own toxic shame and passing it on with unintentionally abusive behaviors. As a devout follower I can only say I know there are those religious people who are like that, but they are not the embodiment of the church. They are only imperfect members. But for so many people their church and religion are sources of peace and understanding and a supportive community. I just fear that "religion" will be criticized, when in fact it's actually just toxic people who should be recognized as the source of pain or abuse. These things should be separated. Devout folks are most often very kind, generous, forgiving people because that's what religion teaches.

    • @blackjay5338
      @blackjay5338 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Or maybe your church got the doctrine wrong about "original sin," or maybe it was just taught wrong. ???

    • @kirstieperez2704
      @kirstieperez2704 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@blackjay5338 highly, if not more than likely possible. ♡

    • @aliveslice
      @aliveslice ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@blackjay5338 what is the "right" way to describe "original sin"

  • @anamaria-db7pq
    @anamaria-db7pq ปีที่แล้ว +46

    Yeah that’s me. A good example for that is that I have extreme anxiety over celebrating my birthday … being in the Center of attention, having to “fake” good mood for a few hours. Also I am very adaptable and act with different friends all differently. So I am afraid what they will think of me seeing me in “another role”. Fear of disappointing the expectations of my friends and them thinking of me as a loser … when actually it’s all about spending the days with beloved people …

    • @ChelsIsChosen
      @ChelsIsChosen 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Wow Ive never resonated with a statement more especially the one about friends

    • @anamaria-db7pq
      @anamaria-db7pq 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@ChelsIsChosen I am sorry to hear that, on the other side I am glad that I am not the only one feeling like that ^^

    • @jotaech
      @jotaech 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Same here! I didnt celebrate a single birthday from ages 9 to 20. Also relate to morphing my personality depending on who was around and had trouble with the notion of mixing friend groups. Crazy how similar the things we experience can be

  • @rebecagarcia3335
    @rebecagarcia3335 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    I started crying after hearing the words that I haven't allowed myself to say out loud, what a great video

  • @coledenton5414
    @coledenton5414 18 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I suffered abuse when I tried to do the right thing growing up. It taught me to hide the person who wants to do good inside me, and it’s manifested into me hating my true self. Thank you for this video.

  • @MakeDemocracyMagnificientAgain
    @MakeDemocracyMagnificientAgain ปีที่แล้ว +62

    God damn it. My whole personality is built around toxic shame :(
    There's so much toxic shame in me that it's easily overlooked. It's beyond comprehension how omnipresent this feeling can actually be!

    • @larrywatts2517
      @larrywatts2517 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I feel the same as you .

    • @gothboschincarnate3931
      @gothboschincarnate3931 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Meditation and a yearbook might help.... a chaneller told me that.

    • @girliewapisskink
      @girliewapisskink 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I definitely feel u. I’ve been walking around my whole life pretending to be someone I’m not, just to avoid being seen as less by others. I never knew this was such a universal experience until now.

    • @tamiespe4164
      @tamiespe4164 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Same!!! 😭

  • @undeaniabletruths5551
    @undeaniabletruths5551 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Thank you, I've spent a lifetime feeling like I am a mistake and that I never should have existed.

  • @amadahyrose
    @amadahyrose ปีที่แล้ว +77

    Goodness. I have a whole new level of compassion for my limerent, food-indulgent self. I almost let myself fully exist publicly in 2004, but I totally retreated when I let my abuser get in my head and I've struggled since -- even in a beautiful romantic relationship, earning an advanced degree, and other seemingly successful ventures. Thank you for sharing. I am simultaneously terrified and hopeful.

  • @ma-qt6me
    @ma-qt6me 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I am highly extroverted. I love making people laugh. I crave human connection. But then I have these low points where I believe I need to be alone and self improve or else I can’t be around anyone else, until I’m perfect. I have always said to my friends “I feel like I’m missing a key part of what makes someone human.” Because I lack the ability to form real connections that last. But I’m realizing that I am loveable, I am limiting myself because I believe I am inherently unworthy. I have even previously thought I might have some kind of personality disorder.
    When you started talking about how toxic shame makes us believe there is something wrong with us at our core, I burst out crying. Finally someone put into words what I feel. I’m not the only one who feels this way!

  • @Jennifer-bw7ku
    @Jennifer-bw7ku 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +221

    Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.

    • @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU
      @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!

    • @elizabethwilliams6651
      @elizabethwilliams6651 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yes, dr.sporesss. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.

    • @steceymorgan814
      @steceymorgan814 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I wish they were readily available in my place.
      Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He is 59 & has so many mental health issues plus probable CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac.
      He's constantly talking about killing someone.
      He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD know if it is common for an obsession with violence.

    • @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU
      @APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Is he on instagram?

    • @elizabethwilliams6651
      @elizabethwilliams6651 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes he is. dr.sporesss

  • @oblivion2967
    @oblivion2967 ปีที่แล้ว +59

    You're take on this subject of mental health and the attachment theory is unlike anyone else's online - I thank you!

  • @stevieB464
    @stevieB464 ปีที่แล้ว +52

    Heidi, I found this video yesterday and watched it three times, rewinding parts even more to take in what you shared. My world collapsed around me a couple of years ago, sending me into a death spiral. I wanted to die. I prayed to die. I am better, but still I find myself in dark places.
    I was shamed, humiliated, and abused from an early age. My childhood was one traumatic event after another. Absent father, divorce, mother forced to work two and three jobs, csa beginning at 5, foster care, abusive dad, bullied, etc.
    I feel unworthy of love. I always have. It feels as though I have layer upon layer of shame. In fact, the layers are so thick that I am nothing without them. I mastered the art of adapting. I learned how to thrive in any circumstance. I was a chameleon.
    Now, I have no idea who I am. It always felt like I liked the things I was doing, but now I question everything. I feel lost in space.
    I began my current journey last year. I have been journaling, meditating, working with self-hypnosis, working on healing my shadow self. Thank you for sharing resources. I have no insurance, so I am dependent on myself for healing. Your videos and references are truly helpful. Thank you.

    • @WillArtigues
      @WillArtigues ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I am going through the same thing. Its been so fucking hard, i keeo raging out on coworkers for literally no reason at all, ready to do somdthing horrible, and acting in highly dangerous selfish ways in my anger. Its caused me to lash out at the only person who i would consider to be a friend or someone i feel close to. Today is my 26th birthday and I spent it working and sitting in my room getting high alone. This video had me bawling almost instantly. Its just so accurate that its jarring and painful to hear. Very helpful though. I find my biggest "triggers" or sources of shame are:
      Lack of any romantic relationships despite being handsome, charming, fit capable etc. (Aka im broken somehow and not worthy of love, will die alone not knowing what love feels like, or even having a consistent sexual outlet.)
      My addictions, current and in the past. (Heroin from ages 15-22, relapsed on IV Meth about 8 months ago now)
      Outward appearance coming off as gay or feminine (was raised to be a mans man, not to have emotions. I will openly tell people i may be bi curious at best, but im largely straight but get triggered when im teased for anything sexuality related, was bullied as a kid for being "pretty" and "acting like a faggot"
      I have been on my own for so long now, its just so painful ti try and socialize. I just feel bitterness and resentment for people in general. I feel like my ability to live and feel happiness was taken from me when i was just a vulnerable sweet little person. Now i teeter the line of sociopathy and other anti social character profiles. For almost 20 years I have felt nothing much more than isolated, hatred/rage, self loathing and pity, resentment, and the occasional bout of mania which is where i feel the best, in spite the many ways I always end up humiliating myself in those episodes.
      Idk why i even wrote this tbh. Just emotional as fuck, no one to talk to or no one i trust even remotely enough to listen

    • @stevieB464
      @stevieB464 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@WillArtigues, I feel you brother. I really feel you. Our patterns differ some, but the pain and torment appears similar.
      I’ve been soaking up everything I can get my hands on. I find Heidi’s materials especially helpful.
      I am struggling deeply at times, but I do more hopeful than I did. I still have much on which to work, and I honestly still struggle with knowing who my true authentic self is.
      I just listened to this post for the first time since the day I last commented, and am reminded to identify who I am not in order to discover who I am at my core. I don’t know if this will work or not, but I am willing to try.
      I hope you are finding peace and comfort in your journey. I look forward to seeing an update from you.
      Best wishes,

    • @mir6598
      @mir6598 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@WillArtigues you’re on this channel for a reason… you still have the light in you. Dont let it go out, it’s still there. Just keep working on things as you have and entertaining yourself as you improve and try new things and eventually you’ll look around and see yourself where you want to be. Proud of you! Keep going ^_^

    • @mir6598
      @mir6598 ปีที่แล้ว

      I can understand having been there myself. I’m sorry for what you went through. Keep investing in yourself and you ll find your world becoming spectacular.. it takes time but have fun in the meantime and soon enough things start to turn around. ^_^

  • @victtayl
    @victtayl ปีที่แล้ว +90

    This is so interesting. Sounds like IFS would be helpful here too, potentially. The shame is a part of us, not the whole. And to talk to that part: “hi Shame, I know you’re trying to protect me. Thank you for doing this over the years, but I don’t need that any more. I can survive this. I’m not a kid anymore and I know now that it’s safe to make mistakes” or similar…
    Will def be rewatching this video many times I think. Thank you!

    • @mariacliment2767
      @mariacliment2767 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Yes, I have tried to do that soooo many times....but the shame part will get away with shaming me and in the end, I would listen to it and would isolate from everybody. It is so deep inside of me for so many years, I dont know how to get rid of it

    • @Somun-a
      @Somun-a ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@mariacliment2767 Even if you feel like it takes over in the end, the fact that you are noticing it is the sign that you are making progress. I am betting that there have been times that you felt it coming and that in turn made the shame attack smaller. You are on your journey to recovery.

    • @mariacliment2767
      @mariacliment2767 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@Somun-a Yeah, this is true. I have never seen it this way. Thanks for sharing🥰🙏

    • @enlightndark6671
      @enlightndark6671 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@mariacliment2767When we are in the dark, we CANNOT think our way out, we must FEEL our way out! I went to 5 therapists for 10 yrs, without help. it is NOT enough to debate the shadow/unconscious wounds within our mind/psyche- that is why talk therapy does not work! We all know we have problems but we still get pushed around by our toxic inner voice because WE NEED TO RECOVER THE EMOTIONAL ENERGY activating these toxic thoughts- IT IS THE EMOTIONAL WOUND that keeps triggering the toxic shame. If we can become aware of our EMOTIONAL NEEDS by focusing on OUR DEEPEST feelings, putting ALLL OUR ATTENTION on our PHYSICAL BODY, we can practice releasing & soothing this ENERGY & the toxic shame will diminish. (Even counting our breath can help break the mental shame loop) BUT only if we work to EMBRACE & EXPAND OUR EMOTIONAL AWARENESS! Otherwise we will keep acting out our childhood shame program. Thoughts DONT SOLVE PAIN, FEELING OUR FEELINGS resolves pain. And this requires digging really deeply & being very very honest with ourselves & learning WHAT we are really feeling. (BUT most of us will run away from our difficult feelings into distractions or blame others or GET STUCK IN OUR THOUGHT LOOPS.) Debating in our head is useless & leaves us exhausted & broken because no one can put out a painful fire with words! DEEP work into the core of body's feelings requires time alone EVERY DAY without alcohol/drugs/media. (I found ASMR video's & meditation outdoors very helpful to RESET MY BODY turning off my trauma mind LOOP). It also requires life changes. We cannot remain around abusive family or addictions because THE SHAME MONSTER WILL KEEP RETURNING until we rebuild our life in a safe & quiet place. (Sitting in my car/park/bedroom/office/bathroom for 5 minutes a day silently paying attention to my feelings in my body & letting them out-CHANGED MY LIFE I cried/raged & felt terrified, but eventually I got use to my core child-like feelings INSTEAD of TRYING TO MASK/REPRESSED or CONTROL MY THOUGTS) At first it is like a tidal wave of feelings knocking our mind & body downwards & we can even get very sick (because our feelings unexpressed build up TENSION IN OUR BODIES over years) but eventually, we can get USE TO OUR TRUTHFUL FEELINGS. After practicing my feelings, and getting to know the truth about my inner needs, I can now FIND MY BALANCE quicker after getting upset and MY BOUNDARIES are way STRONGER! Shame removes our inner truth by cutting us off from our true feelings, so we become lost. BY DIRECTLY FEELING our true feelings IN ANY SITUATION we can bypass our toxic thoughts & go to the core of the matter putting out the fire before the SHAME LOOP gets activated. Before we just ignored our feelings TO PROTECT OURSELVES & ended up in shitty situations. I got to know what I felt rather than performing for others & losing my sense of self. Now when I feel uncomfortable around someone, I realize my BODY & FEELINGS are WARNING me to take CARE of my needs & disabilities. So I can now protect myself. TOXIC shame blinds us to our true self. But healthy powerful shame warns us & protects us, shifting us back onto our true pathI

    • @naturelover-f6h
      @naturelover-f6h 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      yes that and schema therapy helped me.

  • @ytpah9823
    @ytpah9823 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +67

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:14 🌱 *Discusses the importance of understanding and healing from toxic shame for recovery from attachment wounds and trauma.*
    00:27 🛑 *Defines toxic shame as a feeling of being fundamentally flawed or corrupt at the core.*
    01:52 🔄 *Distinguishes between healthy shame, which helps maintain boundaries, and toxic shame, which is a deep-seated belief in one's inherent worthlessness.*
    03:55 🔗 *Links toxic shame to insecure attachment styles and complex PTSD.*
    04:24 💔 *Explains that toxic shame often originates from early core wounds that break a child's will and self-worth.*
    07:17 🎭 *Reveals that people with toxic shame tend to create a false persona and feel unable to be authentic in social settings.*
    09:07 🪞 *Highlights the disconnection between one's real and fake self, leading to emotional turmoil.*
    11:11 🚫 *Discusses the avoidance of psychological mirrors and intimacy due to the fear of being truly seen.*
    14:07 🧭 *Talks about losing touch with inner wisdom and relying on fantasy or logic to avoid real feelings.*
    17:03 🔄 *Mentions the development of addictive behaviors as a replacement for true human connection.*
    19:22 🛣️ *Describes the healing process from toxic shame as a journey towards embracing one's true self.*
    21:30 🤔 *Introduces the concept of developing a 'neutral self' to counter extreme views of oneself.*
    23:36 📚 *Suggests seeking mirrors in solitude through books and resources to understand and overcome toxic shame.*
    26:06 🕵️‍♂️ *Encourages revisiting one's life story to understand and dismantle negative beliefs about oneself.*
    31:09 🚫 *Recommends abstaining from addictive behaviors to confront underlying shame.*
    35:09 💬 *Emphasizes the importance of facing, sitting with, and being present with the feeling of shame.*
    37:00 🔍 *Encourages discovering one's true self beneath the layers of toxic shame.*
    38:25 🌟 *Discusses the final step of healing: reintegrating the authentic self into the world.*
    Made with HARPA AI

    • @banglittlechan
      @banglittlechan 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you for this 💝

    • @Ciskuss
      @Ciskuss 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nice

  • @Smichelle00
    @Smichelle00 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    I had to pause every few minutes because my mind is just blown. I can't believe this is a thing. My toxic shame shaped me. It shaped my shallow life. It's a mask. This video is life changing... and I think the start of something different. Hopefully.. because Even writing this I hear myself saying "don't be so extra.." the struggles are all mentioned in this video.. i have an image so very time i make plans i need enough time to rest enough and be 'perfect' i wear a lot of make up too. Even when i just wake up at some one else's house i make sure to present myself fun en 'perfect' .

  • @kimbers1238
    @kimbers1238 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    So good. My therapist and i are working on this right now. I define my toxic shame as something that in my mind is unforgivable. I cannot stop beating myself up over small things that in a heartbeat i would forgive others. Its a long long process but im 61 and have dealt with this for decades. Ex i brought my sons to Disney when they were young. Dancing was going on and he asked me to dance. And i said no. Of course ive apologized to him but 3 decades later i feel so much shame for not doing it.

    • @kimbers1238
      @kimbers1238 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Protegida4 you sound so much like me. My other son I have apologized for a million little things. All of which he has no memory of. I finally told him that me apologizing was for me so just let me. Lol

    • @gothboschincarnate3931
      @gothboschincarnate3931 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      go get a yearbook....

  • @lauraschleifer4721
    @lauraschleifer4721 ปีที่แล้ว +135

    Absolutely brilliant video, and so spot on. I'd say the "more than human" identity isn't necessarily so grandiose, though. I think it can manifest in the overgiving/under receiving way as well. And the "less than human" identity isn't necessarily manifested through embracing "badness", but can also be manifested through things like learned helplessness and seeking help from others because you feel incapable within yourself, or, conversely, pushing help away because you feel unworthy of it.
    That said, this video was profoundly helpful, and I related to pretty much every word of it. I also thought it was super interesting how your shame wound propelled you into a constant state of compulsive motion for fear of slowing down and having to face becoming conscious of it, whereas another person's shame wound pushed them into a chronic freeze state for fear of making a false move. I feel like I vacillate between these two poles a lot. I also often have the sense of walking on a tightrope, where I have to keep moving, but if I make one false step, I fall off and die.
    Your videos have been exceptionally fantastic lately. Keep up the amazing work, and thank you for being one of those rare, trustworthy, kind, empathetic adults you referenced in the video! ❤

    • @maddyolive5985
      @maddyolive5985 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I appreciate your comment! I very much relate to the examples of "more than" and "less than" human that you've given, infact spot on. I was beginning to experience a little imposter syndrome, which probably comes from years of being told that I don't know what real pain is by my mother 😅

    • @purusaaligned3426
      @purusaaligned3426 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I appreciate you reframing this. It helped me get to the root of my own shame fear which is that if I make any move at all it’ll be the wrong move, & it’ll reflect on me badly creating more shame

    • @carissarea6442
      @carissarea6442 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Exactly

    • @joyhopelove
      @joyhopelove 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Your comment was just what I needed to help me see more clearly how toxic shame manifests for me. I so, so appreciate your contribution here. Thank you. ❤

    • @joyhopelove
      @joyhopelove 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      (I also vacillate between the poles.)

  • @primerdimers
    @primerdimers ปีที่แล้ว +35

    You deserve a standing ovation for this one

  • @NestPavel
    @NestPavel 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Was re-watching the video and it made me realize one thing. I entered university 3 times and each time I dropped out after one term due to depressive episode. Now I see, that the catalyst for this depression was toxic shame.
    Thank you so much for this and other videos, they help a lot.

  • @petersantospago1966
    @petersantospago1966 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Ty. I've been shamefully toxified since 5 years old... But this never occurred to me... There was lots of fear, anger, rage... But never the thought of being ashamed... Think of it... I'm ashamed since a child because of what bad things the people in my life have done to me!! It's like I took their guilt unconsciously, and built up a personality around that guilt.... And I've been slogging it around ever since.... Over 50 years!!! What a world!! And I like you because you get it and you're able to make sense of it👍

  • @Yourhighnessnona
    @Yourhighnessnona ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Oh my God, this woman was killing me softly, telling my whole life with her song 😭❤

    • @gothboschincarnate3931
      @gothboschincarnate3931 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I want to know the location of the secret rebel base...

    • @sheiladuke3289
      @sheiladuke3289 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ❤ God Bless ❤❤

  • @heathernelson8141
    @heathernelson8141 ปีที่แล้ว +56

    Heidi, Wow! I have never been able to put words to what is “wrong” with me or what I actually experience. Years of therapy, sobriety, treatment centers 12 step programs, church groups ect…But you have described almost perfectly my feelings, my fears, my patterns etc.. I have been watching your videos for over a week or so and I am just amazed. The clarity, compassion, and understanding. With concise steps to recovery. I am incredibly grateful for all you offer us, YOU are Truly Gifted! Thank you for sharing your gifts with us. I feel it will be Life Changing for me. 🥰

  • @aine8354
    @aine8354 ปีที่แล้ว +84

    Thank you so much Heidi, all I can say is that the work you do is just simply transformational. You are making such an enormous contribution in this world. So many of us can not afford therapy, but the door to healing is being opened by you. Such kindness and compassion.

  • @divyanshshukla8009
    @divyanshshukla8009 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    You also talked about isolating myself till I get the energy back to put on my fake persona again, this hit home

  • @AdamFlint-1
    @AdamFlint-1 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    My father was a monster who ruined and stole my life. I never got married because I always felt not good enough for anyone. He’s gone now and left me in a state of shame. I have one sibling who received the entire 120 acre family farm and all its belongings. I received absolutely nothing and I’ve had type 1 diabetes for over 50 yrs, since age 10. He’s left my relationship with my brother in complete ruin.

  • @kristinekarlson113
    @kristinekarlson113 ปีที่แล้ว +53

    You are one of my favorite psychology TH-camrs. Wow. I needed this video so much tonight. My ex often responds to my setting boundaries by viciously attacking me at my core. Last night, they asked me to watch their pets while they were going camping with our kids over a long weekend. This was asked at the last moment, and it was despite my ex having immediately shut me down when I had asked for the same thing a year before. In response to my saying “No.” My ex literally texted “You have a very self serving way of looking at things. You are selfish to the core.” I was gutted temporally but I have been absorbing lots of input on trauma and shame and codependency since we broke up, including your videos. I found that instead of being paralyzed by this toxic shame attack, I was able to set it aside and function today. Your video is so affirming. I won’t indeed die if my a-hole ex tries to emotionally abuse me over my setting boundaries. I can observe the attempt and still function. Ahhh.

    • @ht7cs
      @ht7cs ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Your ex sounds like a real knot hole. "Yay you!" for recognizing it.

  • @andrewpowers2249
    @andrewpowers2249 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    "Then underneath you'll find your SOUL and find out who you really are." Dang it! I'm a ginger, there won't be anything under my toxic shame....

  • @chilloften
    @chilloften ปีที่แล้ว +30

    I get it mostly at work these days. All sorts of shaming coming at me, from all different levels, it’s immense. At times I cannot even focus on my work at hand, and it’s very dangerous.

  • @katmelvin3008
    @katmelvin3008 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    24:43 “-I subliminally realized that there were a number of good, safe, wise and helpful adults out there who could be trusted”
    I’ve always wondered why I wasn’t as jaded as I thought I should’ve been. This resonates in an almost bittersweet sense 💚 Bitter in that I’d applied it incorrectly and got myself hurt further, but sweet in that it’s kept me from truly mistrusting the world and secluding. I’d found two or three truly trustworthy adults through my childhood that proved, subconsciously, there was stability and security in the world. For a long time though, I thought I didn’t deserve it. Thank you 💚

  • @bryceneuberger3460
    @bryceneuberger3460 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'm up early, my type 1 diabetic had issues with his insulin pump so I was taking care of him then just started tackling the day, workout, run, shower, kids lunches for school, my own breakfast.
    I put this video on just to get some light learning in before the busy day. I'm a new young counselor so I've just finished reading Atlas of the Heart (Brine Brown), No bad parts (Richard Schultz), the body keeps score (Van der kolk), and just yesterday I finished "cognitive behavioral therapy" (Judith Beck).
    I was not expecting this quick Internet video to be so impactful.
    You got me.

  • @maripi1536
    @maripi1536 ปีที่แล้ว +36

    Wow, Heidi. Thank you. After seeing this video, I think this is the main problem behind my depression and no therapist has pointed it out that clearly to me in 15 years!

    • @Franziska.Meyer.
      @Franziska.Meyer. ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Yeah same. The word „shame“ never came up in any session or anywhere. Like what if I knew 20 years ago? But maybe that’s part of the journey, that we just find out now. ❤

    • @miuthub7954
      @miuthub7954 ปีที่แล้ว

      Same for me.
      No healthy mirroring!

  • @mmcuser
    @mmcuser ปีที่แล้ว +22

    This is so good. I remember that I knew for sure that there was something wrong with me and that no one could ever love me if they found the hidden side of me. That this wrongness was in my genes, so I couldn't scape. That I was weird, different, unlovable in my true self. This has been my whole life, until one year ago. One day, after reading maany books, something clicked and I thought that, maybe, there wasn't anything wrong with me. That was a HUGE step that allowed me to start being vulnerable and, very slowly, talking to other human beings about my mental health. And to my surprise, nothing bad happened. They didn't run away when I showed my true self. I know I still have to work on many things, but I don't feel this huge shame of being myself anymore. And I am so grateful to people like you for helping me discover that. For a year and a half, I've been in my first honest relationship, and I know I could never have something like that without seeking for help. I am fearful avoidant, or I've been all my life, but I feel my brain is actually changing and I feel more secure every day. There is hope after the pain!!!❤
    I've read Pete walker and was so helpful, but for sure I'll read your other recommendation. Thank you!!!

  • @mgregory22
    @mgregory22 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    This is exhausting to listen to. It hits too close to home. I really like your channel. You're an insightful young lady.

  • @zebracornking
    @zebracornking 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I've watched a lot of videos about mental health and improvement and identity, and never have I felt more completely seen than in this one

  • @allysinlombard
    @allysinlombard 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Shame has physical, emotional, and energetic levels. Meeting unmet needs is a great way to detach from toxic shame on emotional and energetic levels.

  • @kevinford8682
    @kevinford8682 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    This is by far one of the biggest gems that could ever be found on TH-cam. Even if we believe we don't particularly suffer from toxic shame, at least for me, there were many things she discussed here that I can easily see in myself and the way I view myself. This video I'm sure has helped so many ppl in way which are impossible to measure. Thank god there are ppl out there who truly want to help others in the way Heidi clearly wants to. 10/10! ❤

    • @LareinaP
      @LareinaP 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I really agree. Just stumbled on it today and I am bringing this into therapy because the way she has spoken on this topic is what I've been trying to get to know about myself. And now here it is. 🎉

  • @TKBreaksTheRules
    @TKBreaksTheRules 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    im 32 years old and it has taken me this long to realize that my suffering comes from shame. it was never obvious that what i was experiencing was shame or guilt, i just 'felt bad about it'. i am only just now sorting these issues out within myself and i am experience a lot of inner battling. i ignored the fact that i needed help for a long long time. i think that even my guilt and shame kept me from seeking help. im just glad that i finally recognized that this is the emotion that has been crippling me for so many years and now i can finally work on it.
    just because you are made to feel a certain way, doesnt mean that you are in fact that way. don't let others tell you what you are. you are the master of your thoughts, and as its master, tend your thoughts as a garden. dont let your garden grow with weeds like i did, but if the weeds grow, rip those fuckers out!

  • @Marijana0001
    @Marijana0001 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    This video is gold. Litterally, this would cure half the world.

  • @MerryCarrie
    @MerryCarrie 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    In personality tests, I am often an extrovert...but it takes a TON of energy to be in a social situation.. just like she said. I have always craved alone time, even as a child.
    This makes so much sense now.

  • @user-or6qv8kc1u
    @user-or6qv8kc1u ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I literally choked up listening to this. It amazes me how little my fears actually mattered. When I came to terms with myself regarding the false stories and narratives I Needed to Believe-- My life became immediately more manageable.
    I came to many of the same conclusions presented here through a 12 Step program. Heidi's input and explanations are articulated much more clearly than I could have. However, I doubt I would have let myself believe in these theories of Attachment if I had not arrived at some of the same conclusions independently (at least in part). My insecurities (and ego) prevented me from accepting this type of "Psyo-Babble" for many, many years. When Hedi talks about how some men have no idea how to express themselves emotionaly, I just shake my head and laugh. It is so true, Ive been asked by caring friends or even therapist to "get vulnerable" or "allow myself to be vulnerable" so many times. I Never Knew What the Hell they were talking about. I was Literary not even aware of how to do these basic kindergarten level techniques to regulate myself.
    It's like one of those pictures that, if you stare at it longe enough, a new image will emerge. Once it's seen, it can't be unseen. However, some of us have to spend a little more time staring at the picture more than others. 🤷
    I love this content you create, and thank you for all the good you do.

  • @jonber9411
    @jonber9411 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    As clear and explicit as crystal waters. You are a gem to me. For me computer games was my addiction, they served a vivid imagery and i could also build fantasies and they inspired my ideological beliefs. Also when you have a highly active mind, the fast paced games extinguish intrusive thougths and worries. A long day of only playing games made me rested as not even sleep could. Today i get bored after about an hour of playing. But i do not want to quit it. I have always been ashamed to admit i play. My father gave me the games as young, took them from his job, and then he said things that made me feel useless while indulging in his gifts. Unkind reciprocity.
    Thanks for sharing your story about paddling a boat in the see. That was highly relatable. I was very into black metal and martial arts. I used to have and nurture this vision of me being tied to a chariot and there was a demon who held the reins. The lash of the whip would never stop, and neither would i, cause then i was weak and not deservant of the praise or position. In that vision i was stronger than the rest of the wimpy lot. I actually found that inspiring, not realizing i was completely ruthless and insensitive to my being. Always move, never stop.
    I worked around much of this, but i could never find that naked honesty with my therapist. My intellect and charisma often affects people, and very few people give me the benefit of the doubt. Watching you is this distant but at the same time highly mirroring and healing gift. I have decided to find and try ACA and also try therapy again. Part of me says i do not need it(naturally), but i see it also as a step for me to break my habits, my comforts and my self isolation. I also want to be able to record youtube or hold a speech about my beliefs.
    In Sweden we have a saying from the 1600-century: 'När skammen går på torra land' It translates as, 'When shame itself walks the dry ground' I guess i reflects this very real feeling that, when it runs your life, you are not the one walking your feet and body, the shame does. There is also this thing in northern mythology about trolls, if the sunlight hits them, they turn to stone and die. Admitting shame, to someone, can be very effective and alleviating. It is not very resistant to compassion and sunlight
    Thank you!

  • @christieprescott5450
    @christieprescott5450 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    “I can be the same person everywhere I go” 🔥🔥🔥 so freeing! God bless you!!

  • @anthonyw1499
    @anthonyw1499 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    Thanks so much. I never thought my fantasy world was the escape that you so clearly described. This is my main addiction that I never realized i has. So accurate and so clear. I appreciate you for being you 😊

  • @soundcuts
    @soundcuts 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I am an older man… I have tried to find somebody to help me see what you are showing me. I really have tried as hard as I know how. It is only now that I am beginning to see. It’s late in my life and I’m very sad about that. Be grateful that you learned this and made yourself into the beautiful person You are so early in life. I assure you… Life goes by quickly. I wish I knew what I know now 40 years ago.

  • @Arven8
    @Arven8 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    Really fine presentation on a difficult subject, thank you. I loved the mention of John Bradshaw (rest his soul) and ACA -- both of which turned my life around in the late 1980s, when I was about your age. I remember how enormously helpful it was to finally have a *word* for what I had been experiencing all my life. People today do not understand -- "shame" is common venacular now, but in the 1980s, prior to Gershen Kaufman and John Bradshaw, there was no language to describe this emotional state. It left people feeling alone and misunderstood, even to themselves. ... Also, I teared up when you gave a shout-out to ACA groups. They were pivotal to me. They allowed me, for the first time in my life (I was about 27), to open up to other people about the pain and shame I had carried so long. Those experiences became a touchstone for what healthy relating felt like (I had very little experience of this in my family). .... I'm 61 now, and I still get whacked by shame every now and then (that's why I clicked on the video), but most of the time it is self-induced and temporary, rather than just something I carry around with me all the time -- which makes all the difference in the world. Had I not discovered Bradshaw and ACA, I hate to think what would have happened to me. I suspect I would have self-deleted. There is no more painful emotion than toxic, internalized shame.

  • @Love-eg2vf
    @Love-eg2vf ปีที่แล้ว +25

    I’ve been reading books about psychology, self-help, spirituality etc for 15 years. Ive come a very long way, but every so often I feel stuck or like I’ve regressed. I’ve even read Bradshaw’s book around 10 years ago, and I didn’t really like it.
    I have to say, this is the most articulate and crystal clear explanation I can think of. I tend to have to skip through videos or just quit them entirely because I find that the person is either not getting to the point, or not giving any practical information. This one captivated me throughout and I didn’t even want to watch it at 1.5x speed like I normally do. Very good
    👏

    • @julioalberto2794
      @julioalberto2794 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      15 years?! Proof that self help is a scam. Seek Jesus

    • @Love-eg2vf
      @Love-eg2vf 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@julioalberto2794 You must have misunderstood what I meant. But anyway, I don’t have to seek…

  • @user-vf3fz7qv6v
    @user-vf3fz7qv6v ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Thank you so much. Besides Pete Walker, I never felt more seen and less alone. You described so many of my feelings and behaviors and provided a framework and language to understand it. This has helped me deeply. Instead of just feeling frustrated and defective, I understand myself more. Thank you so much. You are spreading healing and light

  • @mining4goldmeister420
    @mining4goldmeister420 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I went to a John Bradshaw seminar in Manhattan back in the 80s. It was INTENSE! He was so instrumental in bringing awareness to people about complex trauma (CPTSD) before it had a name.

  • @TheRugghead
    @TheRugghead หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I'm going through the dark night of my soul rn. This lady gives me hope

  • @alicemccabe9855
    @alicemccabe9855 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I've been in therapy with an amazing therapist for the past year. I've had a lot of therapy experiences that were just bad but this experience has been pulling out all of these deep shameful feelings and laying them out for me to see, to finally understand why I feel so deeply unlovable. I'm finally starting to heal, even though overall I'm not that far into the process. things get better. it's a difficult journey but it's worthwhile. If anyone here likes TED Talks I recommend Brene Brown's talk on vulnerability - being vulnerable with the people you trust, baring your emotions, is a big step, but it's so freeing.

  • @m.o.t.h.studios
    @m.o.t.h.studios ปีที่แล้ว +17

    Ive never heard such a perfectly articulated way to express the shame ive felt at my core since i can remember. Ive healed quite a bit, but some still resurfaces with certain triggers. Thank you for helping people like myself become aware, so that they too can begin on the healing journey. ❤

  • @Veromoi4
    @Veromoi4 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I’ve done a lot of healing but I want to read this book because I’m not totally rid of my shame. (But as I listen I realize it doesn’t go away totally to zero but can be dealt with when it hits) My therapist points it out to me when I’m in shame and I believe it’s something to do more work on.
    Really makes me cry thinking my will was broken as a child and I just try to comfort that child within and remind them how loved they are and worthy most of all.
    And I’m not even upset with my parents anymore but filled with compassion upon realizing they weren’t perfect, they were young and they may not have been shown that curious, compassionate caregiver when they were little 😢
    I’m not perfect but I am working day in and day out to be the most gentle and yet confident leader my son has ever known. One that he can trust and seek comfort in while he navigates adolescence. I’m so teary writing this and I think it’s because this video found me at the perfect time when I needed it most.
    Just purchased the book on online.
    I’m also a recovering alcoholic 2.5 years and I attend meetings. I’m very interested in ACA you mentioned. I think there was dysfunction in my household and I don’t really know what caused my feeling of worthlessness
    I meditate nearly daily and do yoga, that has been helping me with connecting to myself. But more work needs to be done as I’m listening to your video. I’ve done a lot of work and healthy self speak but it’s not always my first instinct and even then I try to be kind to myself but more is to be done. I really appreciate this video finding me. I felt overwhelmingly sad today and here I am watching this. 🙏🩵
    I really liked toward the end of your video you explained the feeling of shame and naming it out loud and then observing it 🙏 this is exactly what I’m trying to do and sometimes it’s hard to identify. This is all very helpful.
    I hope this comment helps someone because I’ve edited it like 10x with more thoughts. But I realized something. About 2 months ago I made a decision to stop over exercising and I have kept that promise. It felt like surrender and freedom. I’ve had these beautiful moments where I’ve said “i am worthy just as I am right now, I don’t have to do anything at all to be worthy.” I believe that is a direct result of the ending of betraying my inner voice that was saying to me “stop over exercising, you no longer need to, you are safe now.” I just wanted to share that. I don’t know who might read this but you are worthy and you can heal. I never thought I was worthy of healing and in fact self sabotaged all the time. If I can be on this journey, so can you.

    • @phoenixaz8431
      @phoenixaz8431 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Congratulations on your sobriety! I read a book recently titled ''Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents'', you'll be able to figure out if there was neglect in your childhood, which may have led to feelings of worthlessness. I also partially read the book ''Adult Children of Alcoholics'' and I could relate to most of the 14 traits of ACA. Best wishes to you, Olivia.

    • @ngoc.dakota
      @ngoc.dakota ปีที่แล้ว +1

      🤗🤗🤗

  • @tessarnold7597
    @tessarnold7597 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Thank you for the video. I've been exploring this and I keep hearing/ reading that it takes a long time to heal from. I've even heard it can take a lifetime. And, just thinking about that shoves me down into a pit of despair so fucking deep that I have difficulty breathing. I'm not looking for a quick fix. I'm not looking for a shortcut. I accept that this will take a long time - even though I've been working on my issues for a long time now. I'm looking for a perspective that doesn't make me think that this will be a nigh-eternal slog; a perspective that doesn't make me feel like giving up. I'm middle-aged. I spent most of the first half of my life just trying to survive. Now I'm on the downhill side, and the thought of spending the rest of my life trying to heal, and, if I'm lucky, having a tiny sliver of life left at the end where I don't feel this pain all the time, well, it makes me want to burn the whole damn world to the ground. And so, my question is: How does one look at this process in a way that is anything like hopeful - in any way that doesn't lead to despair?

  • @LAURIESMITH-u3r
    @LAURIESMITH-u3r 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    After holding a secret my entire life, of 50 years from my childhood, I am now realizing how much of my life I have shamed myself, toxically shamed. myself!! The toxic shame is now so present in my life, it has now come to a head that I can no longer suppress and hide. Watching this was so eye opening on what I have been feeling most of my life & has helped me understand what it is. Thank you!

  • @sarahc.5160
    @sarahc.5160 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I am not exaggerating when I say I think that this video just changed my life. I have never felt so seen and encouraged by another human being. I have been putting in the work for years to heal CPTSD due to childhood emotional neglect, verbal abuse and religious abuse. I knew that shame was a major part of that, but this just clicked for me in a way I have not felt before. I am so grateful I found your channel!