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Tools
for Personal Growth
Handling Guilt
Content:
What is guilt?
Guilt is:
-
Feeling
of responsibility for negative circumstances that have befallen yourself or
others.
-
Feeling
of regret for your real or imagined misdeeds, both past and present.
-
Sense
of remorse for thoughts, feelings, or attitudes that were or are negative,
uncomplimentary, or non-accepting concerning yourself or others.
-
Feeling
of obligation for not pleasing, not helping, or not placating another.
-
Feeling
of bewilderment and lack of balance for not responding to a situation in
your typical, stereotype manner.
-
Feeling
of loss and shame for not having done or said something to someone who is no
longer available to you.
-
Accepting
of responsibility for someone else's misfortune or problem because it
bothers you to see that person suffer.
-
Motivator
to amend all real or perceived wrongs.
-
Strong
moral sense of right and wrong that inhibits you from choosing a ``wrong''
course of action; however, you assign your own definitions to the words.
-
Driving
force or mask behind which irrational beliefs hide.

How do others play on your feelings of guilt?
People can and sometimes will:
-
Make
you believe they will suffer greatly if you do not respond positively to
their request(s).
-
Call
on your guilt to respond to their requests, even when it means violating
your rights.
-
Respond
to your irrational self by reinforcing your irrational thinking, giving
you a sense of blame, for past, present, or future actions.
-
Build
up a verbal or imagined scenario that portrays you at fault for inaction,
thus guaranteeing your sense of guilt and your willingness to do anything
to alleviate it.
-
Accuse
you of misdeeds, words, or actions to arouse your sense of guilt and make
you believe you are the one with a problem in an interpersonal
relationship difficulty. (This effectively takes the pressure off of
them.)
-
Reinforce
your negative self-perceptions, encouraging you to be guilt ridden and self-judgmental
for their benefit.
-
Build
a case with moral absolutes to convince you of the ``right way'' to do
things, avoiding that negative feeling of guilt for themselves.
-
Set
up situations for you in which you will believe your alternatives are
limited to that which results in the least sense of guilt.
-
Feign
or fake hardship, illness, discomfort, unhappiness, incompetence, or other
negative behavior to arouse your sense of guilt and have you take over
those tasks, or duties bringing imagined negative consequences for them
-
Threaten
negative consequences, like going to jail, to the hospital, to the
juvenile detention center, failing school, dying, or divorcing you. This
manipulation uses your guilt to benefit them..

What can guilt do to you?
Guilt can:
-
Make
you become over responsible, striving to make life ``right.''
You overwork. You over give of yourself. You are willing to do anything in
your attempt to make everyone happy.
-
Make
you over conscientious. You fret over every action you take as
to its possible negative consequence to others, even if this means that you
must ignore your needs and wants.
-
Make
you over sensitive. You see decisions about right and wrong in
every aspect of your life and become obsessed with the tenuous nature of all
of your personal actions, words, and decisions. You are sensitive to the
cues of others where any implication of your wrong doing is intimated.
-
Immobilize
you. You can become so overcome by the fear of doing, acting, saying, or
being ``wrong'' that you eventually collapse, give in, and choose
inactivity, silence, and the status quo.
-
Interfere
in your decision making. It is so important to always be "right''
in your decisions that you become unable to make a decision lest it be a
wrong one.
-
Be
hidden by the mask of self denial. Because it is less guilt
inducing to take care of others first, instead of yourself, you hide behind
the mask of self denial. You honestly believe it is better to serve others
first, unaware that "guilt'' is the motivator for such "generous''
behavior.
-
Make
you ignore the full array of emotions and
feelings available to you. Overcome by guilt or the fear of it, you can
become emotionally blocked or closed off. You are able neither to enjoy the
positive fruits of life nor experience the negative aspects.
-
Be
a motivator to change. Because you feel guilt and the
discomfort it brings, you can use it as a barometer of the need to change
things in your life and rid yourself of the guilt.
-
Be
a mask for negative self belief. You may actually have low self-esteem, but claim the reason for your
negativity is the overwhelming sense of guilt you experience.
-
Mislead
or misdirect you. Because many irrational beliefs
lie behind guilt, you may be unable to sort out your feelings. It is
important to be objective with yourself when you are experiencing guilt; be
sure that your decisions are based on sound, rational thinking.

What irrational beliefs or negative self-scripts are
involved in guilt?
-
I
do not deserve to be happy.
-
I
am responsible for my family's (spouse's) happiness.
-
There
is only one ``right'' way to do things.
-
It's
bad to feel hurt and pain.
-
My
children should never suffer in their childhood like I did in mine.
-
My
kids should have more material things than I did.
-
It
is my fault if others in my life are not happy.
-
If
my kids fail in any way, it's my responsibility.
-
It
is wrong to be concerned about myself.
-
People
are constantly judging me, and their judgment is important to me.
-
It
is important to save face with others.
-
It
is wrong to accept the negative aspects of my life without believing that
I am responsible for them myself.
-
I
am responsible if either positive or negative events happen to the members
of my family.
-
I
must not enjoy myself during a time when others expect me to be in
mourning, grief, or loss.
-
You
must never let down your guard; something you're doing could be evil or
wrong.
-
I
must always be responsible, conscientious, and giving to others.
-
How
others perceive me is important as to how I perceive myself.
-
No
matter what I do, I am always wrong.
-
I
should never feel guilt.
-
If
you feel guilt, then you must be or have been wrong.

Suggested steps to overcome guilt
Step
1:
You can recognize the role guilt is playing in your life by choosing a
current problem and answering the following questions in your journal:
a
.
What problem is currently troubling me?
b
.
Who is responsible for the problem?
c
.
Whose problem is it, really?
d
.
What did I do to make this problem worse for myself?
e
.
How much guilt do I feel about this problem?
f
.
How much does the guilt I experience exaggerate or exacerbate my
problem?
g
.
If I felt no more guilt what would my problem look like then?
If
the answer to question ``g'' is that your problem can be solved by reducing
guilt, go to Step 2.
Step
2:
Redefine your problem with the absence of guilt as an issue.
In
answering the questions in Step 1 you recognized that guilt was preventing
resolution of the problem. To redefining your problem, answer the following
questions in your journal:
-
How insurmountable is the problem?
-
Is this problem an interpersonal or intrapersonal problem?
-
If it is interpersonal: Can I help the other person and myself to set
aside guilt and resolve this problem?
-
If it is intrapersonal: Can I set aside guilt or the fear of it and
resolve this problem?
-
Does this problem have more than one solution? Can others and myself
experience satisfaction, comfort, and resolution with a minimum of
debilitating guilt?
-
Whose problem is it, really?
-
Is it my problem or another(s)?
-
Am I taking on another's responsibility?
-
Am I trying to keep another from experiencing pain, hardship, or
discomfort?
Step 3:
If the problem is really someone else's, give the problem back to the
person(s) to solve and to deal with.
If the problem is yours, go to Step 4.
Step
4:
You must confront the real or imagined guilt or fear of guilt preventing
you from either handing the problem back to the person(s) whose problem it
really is (Step 3) or from handling the problem on your own. Consider the
following:
a
.
What fears are blocking me at this moment from taking the steps I need to
resolve this problem?
b
.
What are the irrational beliefs behind these fears?
c
.
Refute the irrational beliefs using the steps given in the ``Handling
Irrational Beliefs'' section two in Tools for
Personal Growth.
d
.
Initiate a program of self-affirmation as presented in the "Self-Affirmations''
section 3 in Tools
for Personal Growth..
e
.
Use an imagery scenario with ``guilt'' as an object you packaged in a
nice box. It is brought to a mountain top and thrown off a cliff for good.
f
.
Affirm for yourself that:
-
You
deserve to solve this problem.
-
You
deserve to be good to yourself
-
You
deserve to have others be good to you, too!
Step
5:
If your guilt is not resolved after completing Steps 3 and/or 4, return
to Step 1 and begin again.

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