Here are some practical suggestions for releasing shame and embracing
love and wholeness. l) Feel your pain. This is an essential step in
understanding where you've been and what you've experienced. You need to
recognize the suffering that you've felt or you've denied in order to move
beyond it. Through hypnosis, for example, it's possible to re-experience old
pain in a safe, gentle atmosphere. Once you have truly gotten in touch with
your pain, then you can begin to release it, not before. 2) Re- connect with
your inner child. If you have experienced deep shame, your inner child has
likely been traumatized and terrified. It is extremely beneficial to befriend,
nurture, and heal the child within you and to create an atmosphere of safety so
that this part of you can experience the freedom and acceptance which it was
denied in the past. 3) Learn to love yourself. This is obviously not an
overnight process. By surrounding yourself with supportive friends, family
members, and professionals who continually validate you for who you are, you
will gradually learn to appreciate your talents and positive attributes and
eventually learn to embrace yourself as a unique, valuable, and lovable human
being. Reading Louise Hay and other such books may be helpful. 4) Integrate
your parts. I have found specific techniques such a Voice Dialogue and
conscious or hypnotic parts therapy to be of tremendous useful- ness in
increasing awareness of the various, often conflict- ing, parts of you with the
goal of establishing wholeness and integration. 5) Support groups . It
is often comforting and growth-producing to share your pain as well as your
insights and awarenesses with others who have also been through similar
experiences. Choose a group that both feels comfortable and stimulates your
evolution and don't be afraid to leave when you've learned all that you can
from it. 6) Finding your spiritual home . Whether it be a l2-step
program, a New Thought church, a yoga class, Native Ameri- can healing circle,
guru, or your own spirit guide, connect as deeply as possible with Source.
There is no better way to heal shame than to recognize the true perfection and
purity that you are, to release all that prevents you from being whole, and to
embrace the Holy Spirit which fills your being.
Drs. Judyth Reichenberg-Ullman and Robert Ullman is a naturopathic and
homeopathic physician and cofounder of the Northwest Center for Homeopathic
Medicine in Edmonds, WA. She is coauthor of The Patient's Guide to
Homeopathic Medicine and Beyond Ritalin: Homeopathic Treatment of ADD
and Other Behavioral and Learning Problems. She can be reached at (206)
774-5599.