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Martin J Dorahy 
Department of Psychology 
University of Canterbury 
New Zealand “I did not fear punishment, but I 
dreaded shame. I felt no dread but 
that of being detected” 
(J. J. Rousseau, 1782 )
Shame 
 “In the gaps and clumsy steps in human intercourse, in the 
misunderstandings, the misperceptions, and misjudgements, in the blank 
mocking eyes where empathy should be, in the look of disgust where a 
smile was anticipated, in the loneliness and disappointment of 
inarticulate desire that cannot be communicated because the words 
cannot be found, in the terrible hopeless absence when human 
connection fails, and in the empty yet rage-filled desolation of abuse-there 
in these holes and missing bits lies shame. Shame is where we fail. 
And the most fundamental failure is the failure to connect with other 
human beings—originally the mother” (Mollon, 2006, p. xi).
Primary and secondary Emotions 
Self-awareness; self-rep. 
Facilitate social goals 
Emerge later 
No universal 
facial expressions 
More cog. complex 
Primary emotions Secondary (self 
conscious) emotions 
Very early 
(0-9 m), 
require no SC 
Present later 
(18-24 m), 
require SC 
Joy 
Distress 
Anger 
Fear 
Disgust 
Surprise 
Shame 
Guilt 
Pride 
Embarrassment 
Lewis, 1992; Tracy & Robins, 2007
Shame 
(affect) 
Restore 
positive self-view 
Motive 
Protect 
Injured self-view 
(from 
further 
harm) 
high 
Competence 
restoring positive 
self view 
Low 
Approach/repair/r 
epeat 
(behaviour) 
Avoid/withdraw/h 
ide 
(behaviour) 
De Hooge et al, 2010
Adaptive aspects 
 Efforts to avoid shame activation can: 
 Increase pro-social behaviour (e.g., Scheff, 1997) 
 Reduce damage to social status (e.g., Gilbert, 1998)
Effects of shame on the person 
 Shame 
 influences vulnerability to mental health problems 
 Affects expression of symptoms, 
 Affects abilities to reveal painful information, 
 Associated with various forms of avoidance (e.g., 
dissociation and denial) 
 Creates problems in help seeking 
• (Gilbert & Procter, 2006, p. 353; Hook & Andrews, 2005)
“Shame operates everywhere in therapy 
cause clients are constantly concerned 
about what part of their inner experience 
can be revealed and what parts must be 
hidden” 
Greenberg & Paivio, 1997, p. 235
Why focus on shame in therapy 
 “Overwhelming feelings of shame may contribute to 
early treatment drop-out or indeed may be the 
reason why some individuals never present for 
treatment in spite of suffering from debilitating 
symptoms…” (Lee et al., 2001, p. 464) 
 Has implications for all stages of treatment 
(Herman, 2011), including the therapeutic alliance
Risks for therapy in overlooking 
shame 
 Shame impedes social connection (‘severs interpersonal 
connection’ – Kluft, 2007), and therefore impedes the 
soothing and emotional regulation that comes from 
others (Hahn, 2009). Thus, the presence of shame will 
strongly influence the degree to which the therapeutic 
relationship can be seen as safe and be utilized to bring 
about progress.
Impact of shame therapeutically 
 Shame will undermine exposure work/trauma 
processing (e.g., narrative work, CBT, EMDR, 
rescripting) (Blum, 2008, Kluft, 2007; Lee et al., 2001). 
 Will have likely implications for relapse if not 
addressed
Why focus on shame and guilt in 
trauma? (cont.) 
 Is linked to more overt symptomatology such as 
depression, PTSD avoidance, dissociation, 
stigmatisation
Shame defined 
 “Shame can be defined simply as the feeling we have 
when we evaluate our actions, feelings, or behavior, 
and conclude that we have done wrong. It 
encompasses the whole of ourselves; it generates a 
wish to hide, to disappear or even to die” (Lewis, 1992, 
p. 2) 
 Shame is the affect of inferiority (Kaufman, 1989) 
 SHAME IS RELATED TO THE SELF 
 Repair behaviours designed to repair self-view
What is shame? 
 “A complex and disorganizing experience dominated 
by painful emotions, obsessive rumination, and 
condemning imagery. Feelings of inadequacy and 
worthlessness are accompanied by tormenting and 
accusatory thoughts and an excruciating sense of 
aloneness” (Hahn, 2009, p. 303)
Shame and relationships 
 Shame is inextricably linked to emotional 
relationships. 
 Emotionally significant relationships play a central 
role in the etiology, development, and expression of 
shame 
 Hahn, 2009
4 shame phases: Nathanson (1992) 
 Four phases of shame: 
 Trigger 
 Physiological/affective reactions 
 Cognitive reactions 
 Behavioural/defensive responses
Causes of shame - triggers 
 Shame is a pan-human defensive emotion evoked by 
two different types of relational events: 
 1. The recognition of one’s own inferior status and 
resultant aversive feelings. 
 2. The recognition of the self ’s failure to conform to 
social norms and expectations. 
 Fessler, 2007; see also Budden, 2009
Shame - affect 
 Shame is typically a blend of other (basic) emotions 
like anger, anxiety and disgust (Gilbert, 1998, 2010)
Shame & attributions (cognitive) 
Internal Stable Uncontrollable Global 
Shame 
Tracy & Robins, 2008
Shame – behavioural responses 
Compass of shame 
(Nathanson, 1992) 
Attack self 
Avoid Withdraw 
Attack other
One typology of shame 
 External shame: thoughts and feelings about how 
one is believed to exist in the minds of others 
 Internal shame: self-directed evaluations, 
thoughts and feelings about inadequacies and 
flaws.
Trauma and shame (cont.) 
 People feel ashamed for: 
 1) what happened 
 2) how they (e.g., their body) responded 
 3) who they are 
Boon, Steele, & Van der Hart, 2011; Dorahy & Clearwater, 
2012, Herman, 2011; Talbot, 1996
Shame 
Embarrassment 
Violation of values 
guilt 
Hi self crit. 
Relational trauma/victimisation 
narcissism 
Anger/disgust 
directed 
at self 
Other’s appraisals 
of self 
Dep, low SE 
Suicide 
humiliation 
Exposure + neg action 
Exposure + pos action 
Incompetence 
Inferiority 
Defective 
Exposure but self not to blame 
Defense against 
shame 
Empathy 
absent 
Empathy 
present
Differentiating guilt and shame 
Emotion of social sanction Emotion of internal sanction 
S 
h 
a 
m 
e 
G 
u 
i 
l 
t 
Related to entire self Related to specific behaviour 
Concerned with ideals Concerned with prohibitions 
Self-oriented Other/communal-oriented 
Teroni & Deonna, 2008
Differentiating guilt and shame 
Sh 
a 
m 
e 
G 
ui 
l 
t 
Fear of intimacy 
No intimacy fear 
Behavioural and 
characterolog. self-blame 
No blame of others 
Blame of others 
Self-derogation 
Lutwak, Panish, & Ferrari, 2003
Shame: Behavioural markers and 
actions 
Shame 
Blushing 
Diverting eye 
Gaze/breaking eye 
contact 
Hunching of 
Shoulder/shrinking/compression 
of body 
Dropping of the head/ 
turning away 
concealment 
No/reduced 
self relev. 
Momentary 
Blank 
mind/inability 
to speak 
Movement 
from others
Shame, Schizophrenia and EE 
(Wasserman et al., 2012) 
 EE evidence by criticism/hostility or emotional 
overinvolvement. 
 Predicts relapse and poor prognosis in schizophrenia 
(Weardon et al., 2000) 
 Does shame for having a family with schizophrenia 
increase criticism and hostility toward that person? 
 Does guilt/self blame lead to more emotional 
overinvolvement (as an overcompensatory repair 
strategy? 
 68 family members of patients with schizophrenia or 
schizoaffective disorder 
Wasserman, Weismna de Mamani & Suro, 2012
Tools 
 SCID-I diagnosis of patient; family member given: 
 Five Minute Speech Sample (Magana et al., 1986) to 
assess EE 
 Shame and Guilt/self blame Qs for Self-directed 
Emotions for Schizophrenia Scale 
 “Having a relative with schizophrenia is a great source of 
shame” 
 “Having a relative with schizophrenia is something for 
which I feel blameworthy” 
 1 (not at all) - 7 (very true)
Do Shame, guilt predict high EE? 
Shame 
Guilt/Self 
blame 
Criticism/Host. 
High EE 
EOI 
Exp (B) =1.55 
Exp (B) = 2.09 
 Shame and guilt predict high EE 
 But shame does not predict hostility/criticism uniquely 
 And Guilt/self blame does not predict emotional 
overinvolvement uniquely
Shame, social anxiety, psychosis 
 Shame of having the diagnosis may heighten in 
schizophrenia due to stigmatisation (social rejection) 
or social threat 
 This may be partly associated with high social anxiety 
evident in schizophrenia (+30%) 
 Therefore: 
 Hieghtened anxiety after first episode of schizophrenia 
as stigmatisation/social threat increased 
 Heightened shame in those who feel more stigmatised 
by diagnosis. 
Birchwood et al., 2006
Shame, psychosis and social anxiety 
 79 individuals assessed 6 months after first episode 
psychosis (mean age 23; 61 males, 18 females). 52 
schizophrenia. 
 23 social anxiety vs 56 no SA 
 Shame measures 
 Personal Beliefs about Illness Q (Birchwood et al., 1993) 
– shame subscale (appraising psychosis as shameful) 
 Others as Shamer Scale (Goss et al., 1994) – perceiving 
as shaming because of diagnosis
Shame, psychosis and social anxiety 
Measures Social anxiety No social anxiety 
PBIQ Shame 16.5 (3.2) 12.9 (2.5) 
OAS 38.3 (14.9) 18.1 (13.4) 
• Social anxiety group higher shame 
• Having diagnosis is shameful 
• Others will shame as a result of having diagnosis 
• Unfortunately no correlations provided by shame and psychotic 
symptoms (i.e., is shame associated with having psychotic 
symptoms). 
• They would argue this relationship mediated through beliefs 
about being social threatened/ostracized, rather than direct link 
between psychosis and shame
Shame & Psychosis: Discussion 
 Shame in family members regarding a person 
schizophrenia increase EE environment 
 Shame heightened in psychosis, especially those with 
increased social anxiety (stigmatisation/fear of social 
rejection)
Shame & DID: Starting point 
 Shame discussed increasingly in complex trauma and 
DID literatures (e.g., Chu, 2011; Dorahy, 2010; Dorahy 
et al., 2013; Dyer et al., 2009; Kluft, 2007 
 Yet, very little work has empirically examined shame in 
dissociative disorders. 
 Is shame elevated in DID compared to psychiatric 
comparison groups? 
 Is there an association between shame and 
dissociation (e.g., Talbot et al., 2004)
Shame & DID: Method 
 N = 66 psychiatric patients 
 DID: n = 35; 
 M= 2; age = 44.88 (sd=10.45) 
 Vs 
 Non-DID (e.g., DDNOS [3], PTSD [10], complex dep/anxiety[16], 
BPAD[2]): n = 31; 
 M=7; age = 39.51 (sd=9.73) 
 Sig for age [F(1,64) = 4.62, p<.05] 
 All had child abuse and/or neglect
Shame & DID: Scales 
 Completed: 
 Multidimensional Relationship Questionnaire (MRQ; Snell et al., 
1996): Rel preoccupation, Rel. anxiety, Rel. Dep. Fear of rels.; Rel. esteem, 
motivation, satisfaction. 
 Personal Feelings Questionnaire-2 (PFQ-2; Harder & Lewis, 1987) 
 The Compass of Shame Scale (CoSS; Elison et al., 2006) 
 Avoidance, withdrawal, attack self, attack other 
 The State Shame and Guilt Scale (SSGS; Marschall et al., 1994) 
 Stress Reactions Checklist for Disorders of Extreme Stress 
(SRC; Ford et al., 2007) 
 The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ; Bernstein & Fink, 1998) 
 Dissociative Disorders Interview Schedule: BPD, DID (DDIS; Ross 
et al., 1989). 
 Dissociative Experiences Scale (Carlson & Putnam, 1993
Shame& DID Results: Difference 
Variable DID Non-DID F p 
Abuse-Negl 86.35 (22.9) 64.13 (23.7) 19.01 .000 
DESNOS 32.51 (10.4) 22.67 (9.4) 16.12 .000 
DES-tot. 55.14 (18.6) 22.03 (14.1) 63.77 .000 
DES-Tax. 53.14 (27.5) 14.83 (15.0) 69.24 .000 
PFQ-Shame 25.71 (6.6) 19.42 (6.7) 14.95 .000 
PFQ-Guilt 15.54 (4.9) 13.41 (3.7) 3.81 .055 
CoSS Avoid 32.00 (6.7) 33.7 (6.8) 1.06 .131 
CoSS Attself. 48.63 (9.6) 45.9 (10.4) 1.23 .27 
CoSS Withd. 49.66 (6.3) 45.7 (8.4) 4.65 .035 
CoSS AttOth. 23.08 (8.4) 27.29 (8.6) 3.89 .053 
Rel. Preocc. 1.68 (2.7) 1.96 (4.1) .15 .70 
Rel. Anx 15.25 (6.2) 10.71 (7.4) 7.47 .008 
Rel. Dep 13.71 (5.8) 8.35 (6.3) 13.03 .001 
Fear of Rel 14.57 (5.2) 11.4 (5.5) .6.14 .016
Study 2 Results: Correlations 
DES-T Shame 
DES-T 
Shame .61 (.000) 
Guilt .55 (.000) .59 (.000) 
DESNOS .67 (.000) .70 (.000) 
CoSSAvoid -.24 (.06) -.17 (.18) 
CoSSAttSelf .32 (.01) .66 (.000) 
CoSSWithd .54 (.000) .69 (.000) 
CoSSAttOther -.18 (.15) -.04 (.48) 
Rel.Preocc -.02 (.89) -.16 (.63) 
Rel. Anxiety .47 (.000) .52 (.000) 
Rel. Depression .46 (.000) .41 (.001) 
Fear of Relationships .34 (.006) .38 (.002)
Does dissociation or shame predict 
relationship problems? 
 hierarchical regression (except on Rel preoc-no 
Correl) 
Predictors: Shame (step 1); DES-T (step 1); 
Shame × DES-T (Step 2)
What predicts rel. difficulties? 
Shame 
DES-T 
Shame by 
DES-T 
Rel. Anxiety 
Rel. Depression 
Fear of Rels. 
UniqR2=8%, p <.05 
UniqR2=3%, p =.07 
UniqR2=7%, p <.05 
UniqR2=4%, p =.07 
 Relationship Anxiety: RsqAdj = 28.6%, F(3,61)=9.58, p<.05 
 Relationship Depression: RsqAdj=20.1%, F(3,61)=6.36, p<.05 
 Fear of Relationships: RsqAdj=11.8%, F(3,61)=3.85, p<.05.
Discussion 
 DID higher on dissociation and shame than tight non-DID 
comparison 
 Also higher on relationship anxiety, depression and fear of 
relationships 
 Dissociation and shame related to: 
 shame, withdrawal and attack-self (thus dissociation 
association with more awareness of shame) 
 Relationship anxiety and depression, & fear of rels. 
 Both shame and dissociation uniquely predict different 
aspects relationship difficulties 
 Both predict rel. anxiety (dissoc-trend). 
 Dissoc predicts rel depression 
 Shame predicts fear of relationships (trend)
Shame, psychosis & dissociation: 
the future 
 Both schizophrenia and DID relational disorder 
 Etiology: 
 DID, ?Schizophrenia 
 Content and nature: 
 DID 
 Other ‘selves’, ‘personified’ object relations (internal) 
 How other people relate to person (external) 
 Schizophrenia 
 Auditory verbal hallucinations, ego-dystonic objects 
relations (internal) 
 How other people relate to person (external) 
 All these areas ripe for investigation of shame, 
especially comparative work
Therapy as shaming 
 “Because of the power imbalance between patient and 
therapist, and because the patient exposes her most 
intimate thoughts and feelings without reciprocity, the 
individual therapy relationship is to some degree 
inherently shaming” (Herman, 2011, p. 271).
Why is shame so hard to access in 
clients? 
 Risks in telling shame narratives for client: 
 Being perceived as inferior (thus reinforcing shame). 
Feeling they may be perceived as even less than they 
were before narrative. 
 Evoking disgust in the other and therefore repelling 
them. 
 The connection, even if tentative and weak with 
therapist will be broken. 
 Having importance of this feeling dismissed, overlooked 
and ignored
Pacing shame in therapy 
 “In the same way that narratives of fear must be 
titrated so that the client experiences mastery over fear 
rather than a reinstatement of it, so too narratives of 
shame should be titrated so that the client experiences 
dignity rather than humiliation in the telling” (Cloitre, 
Cohen, & Koenen, 2006, p. 290)
Roadblocks - therapeutic 
relationship 
 “Transformation of shame is highly dependent on 
the therapeutic relationship” (Greenberg & Paivio, 1997, p. 235) 
 The quality of therapeutic relationship is highly 
dependent upon the client AND the therapist 
 “Shame triggered in either therapist or patient can 
be a source of therapeutic rapture” (Gilbert & Procter, 
2006, p. 353)
Roadblocks: the therapists 
 What is one of the biggest impediments to the 
clients overcoming shame? 
 The therapist!!!!
Shame in psychotherapy 
 “Despite its destructive toll, shame seldom is 
addressed in psychotherapy. Patients almost never 
disclose shame as a presenting complaint, and 
psychotherapists often do not address shame due 
to difficulties sifting through countertransference 
issues unique to shame (Hahn, 2000) and their 
own painful encounters with shame in childhood 
and psychotherapy supervision (Hahn, 2001)” 
 Hahn, 2009, p. 303

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Shame in Dissociative Disorders

  • 1. Martin J Dorahy Department of Psychology University of Canterbury New Zealand “I did not fear punishment, but I dreaded shame. I felt no dread but that of being detected” (J. J. Rousseau, 1782 )
  • 2. Shame  “In the gaps and clumsy steps in human intercourse, in the misunderstandings, the misperceptions, and misjudgements, in the blank mocking eyes where empathy should be, in the look of disgust where a smile was anticipated, in the loneliness and disappointment of inarticulate desire that cannot be communicated because the words cannot be found, in the terrible hopeless absence when human connection fails, and in the empty yet rage-filled desolation of abuse-there in these holes and missing bits lies shame. Shame is where we fail. And the most fundamental failure is the failure to connect with other human beings—originally the mother” (Mollon, 2006, p. xi).
  • 3. Primary and secondary Emotions Self-awareness; self-rep. Facilitate social goals Emerge later No universal facial expressions More cog. complex Primary emotions Secondary (self conscious) emotions Very early (0-9 m), require no SC Present later (18-24 m), require SC Joy Distress Anger Fear Disgust Surprise Shame Guilt Pride Embarrassment Lewis, 1992; Tracy & Robins, 2007
  • 4. Shame (affect) Restore positive self-view Motive Protect Injured self-view (from further harm) high Competence restoring positive self view Low Approach/repair/r epeat (behaviour) Avoid/withdraw/h ide (behaviour) De Hooge et al, 2010
  • 5. Adaptive aspects  Efforts to avoid shame activation can:  Increase pro-social behaviour (e.g., Scheff, 1997)  Reduce damage to social status (e.g., Gilbert, 1998)
  • 6.
  • 7. Effects of shame on the person  Shame  influences vulnerability to mental health problems  Affects expression of symptoms,  Affects abilities to reveal painful information,  Associated with various forms of avoidance (e.g., dissociation and denial)  Creates problems in help seeking • (Gilbert & Procter, 2006, p. 353; Hook & Andrews, 2005)
  • 8. “Shame operates everywhere in therapy cause clients are constantly concerned about what part of their inner experience can be revealed and what parts must be hidden” Greenberg & Paivio, 1997, p. 235
  • 9. Why focus on shame in therapy  “Overwhelming feelings of shame may contribute to early treatment drop-out or indeed may be the reason why some individuals never present for treatment in spite of suffering from debilitating symptoms…” (Lee et al., 2001, p. 464)  Has implications for all stages of treatment (Herman, 2011), including the therapeutic alliance
  • 10. Risks for therapy in overlooking shame  Shame impedes social connection (‘severs interpersonal connection’ – Kluft, 2007), and therefore impedes the soothing and emotional regulation that comes from others (Hahn, 2009). Thus, the presence of shame will strongly influence the degree to which the therapeutic relationship can be seen as safe and be utilized to bring about progress.
  • 11. Impact of shame therapeutically  Shame will undermine exposure work/trauma processing (e.g., narrative work, CBT, EMDR, rescripting) (Blum, 2008, Kluft, 2007; Lee et al., 2001).  Will have likely implications for relapse if not addressed
  • 12. Why focus on shame and guilt in trauma? (cont.)  Is linked to more overt symptomatology such as depression, PTSD avoidance, dissociation, stigmatisation
  • 13.
  • 14. Shame defined  “Shame can be defined simply as the feeling we have when we evaluate our actions, feelings, or behavior, and conclude that we have done wrong. It encompasses the whole of ourselves; it generates a wish to hide, to disappear or even to die” (Lewis, 1992, p. 2)  Shame is the affect of inferiority (Kaufman, 1989)  SHAME IS RELATED TO THE SELF  Repair behaviours designed to repair self-view
  • 15. What is shame?  “A complex and disorganizing experience dominated by painful emotions, obsessive rumination, and condemning imagery. Feelings of inadequacy and worthlessness are accompanied by tormenting and accusatory thoughts and an excruciating sense of aloneness” (Hahn, 2009, p. 303)
  • 16. Shame and relationships  Shame is inextricably linked to emotional relationships.  Emotionally significant relationships play a central role in the etiology, development, and expression of shame  Hahn, 2009
  • 17. 4 shame phases: Nathanson (1992)  Four phases of shame:  Trigger  Physiological/affective reactions  Cognitive reactions  Behavioural/defensive responses
  • 18. Causes of shame - triggers  Shame is a pan-human defensive emotion evoked by two different types of relational events:  1. The recognition of one’s own inferior status and resultant aversive feelings.  2. The recognition of the self ’s failure to conform to social norms and expectations.  Fessler, 2007; see also Budden, 2009
  • 19. Shame - affect  Shame is typically a blend of other (basic) emotions like anger, anxiety and disgust (Gilbert, 1998, 2010)
  • 20. Shame & attributions (cognitive) Internal Stable Uncontrollable Global Shame Tracy & Robins, 2008
  • 21. Shame – behavioural responses Compass of shame (Nathanson, 1992) Attack self Avoid Withdraw Attack other
  • 22. One typology of shame  External shame: thoughts and feelings about how one is believed to exist in the minds of others  Internal shame: self-directed evaluations, thoughts and feelings about inadequacies and flaws.
  • 23. Trauma and shame (cont.)  People feel ashamed for:  1) what happened  2) how they (e.g., their body) responded  3) who they are Boon, Steele, & Van der Hart, 2011; Dorahy & Clearwater, 2012, Herman, 2011; Talbot, 1996
  • 24. Shame Embarrassment Violation of values guilt Hi self crit. Relational trauma/victimisation narcissism Anger/disgust directed at self Other’s appraisals of self Dep, low SE Suicide humiliation Exposure + neg action Exposure + pos action Incompetence Inferiority Defective Exposure but self not to blame Defense against shame Empathy absent Empathy present
  • 25. Differentiating guilt and shame Emotion of social sanction Emotion of internal sanction S h a m e G u i l t Related to entire self Related to specific behaviour Concerned with ideals Concerned with prohibitions Self-oriented Other/communal-oriented Teroni & Deonna, 2008
  • 26. Differentiating guilt and shame Sh a m e G ui l t Fear of intimacy No intimacy fear Behavioural and characterolog. self-blame No blame of others Blame of others Self-derogation Lutwak, Panish, & Ferrari, 2003
  • 27. Shame: Behavioural markers and actions Shame Blushing Diverting eye Gaze/breaking eye contact Hunching of Shoulder/shrinking/compression of body Dropping of the head/ turning away concealment No/reduced self relev. Momentary Blank mind/inability to speak Movement from others
  • 28.
  • 29. Shame, Schizophrenia and EE (Wasserman et al., 2012)  EE evidence by criticism/hostility or emotional overinvolvement.  Predicts relapse and poor prognosis in schizophrenia (Weardon et al., 2000)  Does shame for having a family with schizophrenia increase criticism and hostility toward that person?  Does guilt/self blame lead to more emotional overinvolvement (as an overcompensatory repair strategy?  68 family members of patients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder Wasserman, Weismna de Mamani & Suro, 2012
  • 30. Tools  SCID-I diagnosis of patient; family member given:  Five Minute Speech Sample (Magana et al., 1986) to assess EE  Shame and Guilt/self blame Qs for Self-directed Emotions for Schizophrenia Scale  “Having a relative with schizophrenia is a great source of shame”  “Having a relative with schizophrenia is something for which I feel blameworthy”  1 (not at all) - 7 (very true)
  • 31. Do Shame, guilt predict high EE? Shame Guilt/Self blame Criticism/Host. High EE EOI Exp (B) =1.55 Exp (B) = 2.09  Shame and guilt predict high EE  But shame does not predict hostility/criticism uniquely  And Guilt/self blame does not predict emotional overinvolvement uniquely
  • 32. Shame, social anxiety, psychosis  Shame of having the diagnosis may heighten in schizophrenia due to stigmatisation (social rejection) or social threat  This may be partly associated with high social anxiety evident in schizophrenia (+30%)  Therefore:  Hieghtened anxiety after first episode of schizophrenia as stigmatisation/social threat increased  Heightened shame in those who feel more stigmatised by diagnosis. Birchwood et al., 2006
  • 33. Shame, psychosis and social anxiety  79 individuals assessed 6 months after first episode psychosis (mean age 23; 61 males, 18 females). 52 schizophrenia.  23 social anxiety vs 56 no SA  Shame measures  Personal Beliefs about Illness Q (Birchwood et al., 1993) – shame subscale (appraising psychosis as shameful)  Others as Shamer Scale (Goss et al., 1994) – perceiving as shaming because of diagnosis
  • 34. Shame, psychosis and social anxiety Measures Social anxiety No social anxiety PBIQ Shame 16.5 (3.2) 12.9 (2.5) OAS 38.3 (14.9) 18.1 (13.4) • Social anxiety group higher shame • Having diagnosis is shameful • Others will shame as a result of having diagnosis • Unfortunately no correlations provided by shame and psychotic symptoms (i.e., is shame associated with having psychotic symptoms). • They would argue this relationship mediated through beliefs about being social threatened/ostracized, rather than direct link between psychosis and shame
  • 35. Shame & Psychosis: Discussion  Shame in family members regarding a person schizophrenia increase EE environment  Shame heightened in psychosis, especially those with increased social anxiety (stigmatisation/fear of social rejection)
  • 36.
  • 37. Shame & DID: Starting point  Shame discussed increasingly in complex trauma and DID literatures (e.g., Chu, 2011; Dorahy, 2010; Dorahy et al., 2013; Dyer et al., 2009; Kluft, 2007  Yet, very little work has empirically examined shame in dissociative disorders.  Is shame elevated in DID compared to psychiatric comparison groups?  Is there an association between shame and dissociation (e.g., Talbot et al., 2004)
  • 38. Shame & DID: Method  N = 66 psychiatric patients  DID: n = 35;  M= 2; age = 44.88 (sd=10.45)  Vs  Non-DID (e.g., DDNOS [3], PTSD [10], complex dep/anxiety[16], BPAD[2]): n = 31;  M=7; age = 39.51 (sd=9.73)  Sig for age [F(1,64) = 4.62, p<.05]  All had child abuse and/or neglect
  • 39. Shame & DID: Scales  Completed:  Multidimensional Relationship Questionnaire (MRQ; Snell et al., 1996): Rel preoccupation, Rel. anxiety, Rel. Dep. Fear of rels.; Rel. esteem, motivation, satisfaction.  Personal Feelings Questionnaire-2 (PFQ-2; Harder & Lewis, 1987)  The Compass of Shame Scale (CoSS; Elison et al., 2006)  Avoidance, withdrawal, attack self, attack other  The State Shame and Guilt Scale (SSGS; Marschall et al., 1994)  Stress Reactions Checklist for Disorders of Extreme Stress (SRC; Ford et al., 2007)  The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ; Bernstein & Fink, 1998)  Dissociative Disorders Interview Schedule: BPD, DID (DDIS; Ross et al., 1989).  Dissociative Experiences Scale (Carlson & Putnam, 1993
  • 40. Shame& DID Results: Difference Variable DID Non-DID F p Abuse-Negl 86.35 (22.9) 64.13 (23.7) 19.01 .000 DESNOS 32.51 (10.4) 22.67 (9.4) 16.12 .000 DES-tot. 55.14 (18.6) 22.03 (14.1) 63.77 .000 DES-Tax. 53.14 (27.5) 14.83 (15.0) 69.24 .000 PFQ-Shame 25.71 (6.6) 19.42 (6.7) 14.95 .000 PFQ-Guilt 15.54 (4.9) 13.41 (3.7) 3.81 .055 CoSS Avoid 32.00 (6.7) 33.7 (6.8) 1.06 .131 CoSS Attself. 48.63 (9.6) 45.9 (10.4) 1.23 .27 CoSS Withd. 49.66 (6.3) 45.7 (8.4) 4.65 .035 CoSS AttOth. 23.08 (8.4) 27.29 (8.6) 3.89 .053 Rel. Preocc. 1.68 (2.7) 1.96 (4.1) .15 .70 Rel. Anx 15.25 (6.2) 10.71 (7.4) 7.47 .008 Rel. Dep 13.71 (5.8) 8.35 (6.3) 13.03 .001 Fear of Rel 14.57 (5.2) 11.4 (5.5) .6.14 .016
  • 41. Study 2 Results: Correlations DES-T Shame DES-T Shame .61 (.000) Guilt .55 (.000) .59 (.000) DESNOS .67 (.000) .70 (.000) CoSSAvoid -.24 (.06) -.17 (.18) CoSSAttSelf .32 (.01) .66 (.000) CoSSWithd .54 (.000) .69 (.000) CoSSAttOther -.18 (.15) -.04 (.48) Rel.Preocc -.02 (.89) -.16 (.63) Rel. Anxiety .47 (.000) .52 (.000) Rel. Depression .46 (.000) .41 (.001) Fear of Relationships .34 (.006) .38 (.002)
  • 42. Does dissociation or shame predict relationship problems?  hierarchical regression (except on Rel preoc-no Correl) Predictors: Shame (step 1); DES-T (step 1); Shame × DES-T (Step 2)
  • 43. What predicts rel. difficulties? Shame DES-T Shame by DES-T Rel. Anxiety Rel. Depression Fear of Rels. UniqR2=8%, p <.05 UniqR2=3%, p =.07 UniqR2=7%, p <.05 UniqR2=4%, p =.07  Relationship Anxiety: RsqAdj = 28.6%, F(3,61)=9.58, p<.05  Relationship Depression: RsqAdj=20.1%, F(3,61)=6.36, p<.05  Fear of Relationships: RsqAdj=11.8%, F(3,61)=3.85, p<.05.
  • 44. Discussion  DID higher on dissociation and shame than tight non-DID comparison  Also higher on relationship anxiety, depression and fear of relationships  Dissociation and shame related to:  shame, withdrawal and attack-self (thus dissociation association with more awareness of shame)  Relationship anxiety and depression, & fear of rels.  Both shame and dissociation uniquely predict different aspects relationship difficulties  Both predict rel. anxiety (dissoc-trend).  Dissoc predicts rel depression  Shame predicts fear of relationships (trend)
  • 45. Shame, psychosis & dissociation: the future  Both schizophrenia and DID relational disorder  Etiology:  DID, ?Schizophrenia  Content and nature:  DID  Other ‘selves’, ‘personified’ object relations (internal)  How other people relate to person (external)  Schizophrenia  Auditory verbal hallucinations, ego-dystonic objects relations (internal)  How other people relate to person (external)  All these areas ripe for investigation of shame, especially comparative work
  • 46.
  • 47. Therapy as shaming  “Because of the power imbalance between patient and therapist, and because the patient exposes her most intimate thoughts and feelings without reciprocity, the individual therapy relationship is to some degree inherently shaming” (Herman, 2011, p. 271).
  • 48. Why is shame so hard to access in clients?  Risks in telling shame narratives for client:  Being perceived as inferior (thus reinforcing shame). Feeling they may be perceived as even less than they were before narrative.  Evoking disgust in the other and therefore repelling them.  The connection, even if tentative and weak with therapist will be broken.  Having importance of this feeling dismissed, overlooked and ignored
  • 49. Pacing shame in therapy  “In the same way that narratives of fear must be titrated so that the client experiences mastery over fear rather than a reinstatement of it, so too narratives of shame should be titrated so that the client experiences dignity rather than humiliation in the telling” (Cloitre, Cohen, & Koenen, 2006, p. 290)
  • 50. Roadblocks - therapeutic relationship  “Transformation of shame is highly dependent on the therapeutic relationship” (Greenberg & Paivio, 1997, p. 235)  The quality of therapeutic relationship is highly dependent upon the client AND the therapist  “Shame triggered in either therapist or patient can be a source of therapeutic rapture” (Gilbert & Procter, 2006, p. 353)
  • 51. Roadblocks: the therapists  What is one of the biggest impediments to the clients overcoming shame?  The therapist!!!!
  • 52. Shame in psychotherapy  “Despite its destructive toll, shame seldom is addressed in psychotherapy. Patients almost never disclose shame as a presenting complaint, and psychotherapists often do not address shame due to difficulties sifting through countertransference issues unique to shame (Hahn, 2000) and their own painful encounters with shame in childhood and psychotherapy supervision (Hahn, 2001)”  Hahn, 2009, p. 303