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Guilt!
It's Good For You!
by Richard
O'Connor
"Guilt,
not agriculture or the wheel,
may be the foundation of civilization."
A therapist I
respect recently wrote, "Guilt is good for
you."
This brought
me up short. We spend so much time helping people who punish
themselves and constrain their lives with an overdeveloped
sense of guilt that it's easy to forget the other side of the
coin. My colleague went on to limit his statement,
"Guilt
is good for you, provided it lasts no longer than five
minutes and it brings about a change in behavior."
This got me
thinking about when and where guilt is appropriate. One
guideline, implicit in the comments above, is that guilt
should be about behavior. One of the most common psychological
mistakes people make is feeling guilty over thoughts or
emotions.
Sexual
fantasies, for instance, are harmless. Angry feelings,
thoughts of revenge against those who hurt us, are
unavoidable. But many people think less of themselves for
sexual or aggressive feelings. This is unfortunate. We cannot
control our thoughts or feelings, and it makes no sense to
feel guilt over that which we can't control.
Unfortunately
it goes further than that. Thoughts or feelings which trigger
guilt feelings are also subject to defenses that keep them out
of consciousness. We may briefly entertain lustful, angry, or
other unacceptable thoughts or feelings only to have our
internal censor kick in to suppress conscious awareness.
You might
assume that if we're not conscious of the unacceptable impulse
we wouldn't feel guilty about it. You'd be wrong. It happens
all the time that people feel guilty about things they're not
even aware of. You don't get the pleasure of the fantasy --
the imagined tryst with the object of desire, the daydreamed
shootout with the bully -- but you do get to feel guilty about
it. No fair.
This is the
kind of guilt that constricts people's lives, makes them
depressed and unhappy with themselves. One way that therapy
works is to bring the unconscious impulses, the precursors of
guilt, out into the light of day.
"So you
sometimes have sexual fantasies about people other than your
spouse? Is this a terrible thing? Just who is hurt by this?
On the contrary, perhaps you deserve to feel a little pride
that you have these impulses yet choose not to act on them.
You have an ethical code that you strive to live up to.
Surely that is better than trying to pretend you don't have
feelings."
One of the
major goals of therapy is to extend the range of conscious
decision-making that people have in their lives, reducing the
range of behaviors, thoughts, and feelings that are governed
by unquestioned habits and assumptions.
So in what
sense is guilt good for you? Guilt, when applied to behavior,
is the little alarm system that tells us when we are not
living up to our own standards. Where our standards come from,
and how much ours are like others', are beside the point for
now.
Guilt is what
we feel when we have let ourselves down. Without it, we would
be in an amoral world in which everyone could act on the
impulse of the moment. Guilt, not agriculture or the wheel,
may be the foundation of civilization.
And how to
make sure that guilt only lasts a few minutes? I believe the
Catholic Church teaches that forgiveness of sins requires two
things: sincere repentance, and a firm intention to
amend.
Repentance of
guilt, by itself is not enough. I've known many people whom
I've felt were truly remorseful for their actions, but
repeated them again at the next temptation. It takes a
determination to do better next time to allow us to put guilt
away.
Next time we
may fail again, but if we truly wish to change our behavior,
eventually we will succeed.
This
article was written by the author of "Undoing
Depression" (Richard O'Connor).
Info/Order
book.
More books by this author.
About The
Author
RICHARD
O'CONNOR is the author of two books, Undoing
Depression and Active
Treatment of Depression. For fourteen years he was executive
director of a private, nonprofit mental health clinic serving Litchfield
County, Connecticut. He is a practicing psychotherapist, with offices in
Canaan, Connecticut (860-824-7423) & New York City (212-977-4686).
Visit his website at http://undoingdepression.com.
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