7
Dealing with Associated Symptoms of PTSD: Guilt, Survivor Guilt, Shame, and Loss
While symptoms such as guilt, shame and loss are not part of the criteria for a diagnosis of PTSD, they are commonly felt by many survivors. If you experience guilt, survivor guilt, shame, or feelings of loss, then this chapter may help you.
Guilt
If you feel at all responsible for the traumatic event or events you have experienced, there is a good possibility that you have some feelings of guilt. Guilt occurs when you feel bad about your behavior: what you did or did not do before, during, and after the traumatic event. Guilt can be a positive emotion if you really were responsible for what occurred. For example, if you were driving drunk, lost control of your car, and killed someone, you are guilty and have good reason to feel guilty. If you were using illegal drugs and provided those drugs to someone else, and that person went into cardiac arrest, you are guilty. If you perpetrated violence against another person in any circumstances other than self-defense, you have every reason to feel guilt.
Exercise: My Feelings of Guilt
Do you feel any deserved guilt about the trauma or traumas that happened to you or in which you participated? List what you did and why you deserve to feel the guilt. I feel guilty because:
Now look at the circumstances of the trauma. What did you or did you not do to cause the trauma or traumas to happen? Think of yourself as a reporter looking at the event and writing a factual story. Answer the following questions (adapted from Figley 1989):
What happened?
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Why did it happen?
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Why did it happen to me?
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Why did I act the way I did during the event or events?
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Why have I acted as I have since the event or events occurred? How have I changed?
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If the event or events happened again, how would I act? Would I want to do anything differently? Would I be able to do anything differently
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What did this exercise teach you about your actions?
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Now it is time to look at the actual level of responsibility you had for the event. You may have a distorted sense of your responsibility. For example, Susan was a victim of sexual abuse when she was six years of age. She blames herself for what happened. In fact, her perpetrator was a coach, thirty-five years old, left in charge of her while her single-parent mother was away on a business trip. What degree of responsibility did that coach have for the abuse? _____ percent. What percentage of responsibility did her mother have? _____ percent. And Susan? _____ percent. In this situation, does anyone else (society, for example) have any responsibility? How much?
The technique that follows helps determine the percentage of responsibility that you have for the trauma or traumas you experienced; it was developed by Scurfield (1994).
Exercise: My Responsibility
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In what ways do you still feel responsible? (For example, if you did not tell, why not? Were you threatened? Were you ever taught to tell?)
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To summarize the preceding exercise, the steps are to:
Journal Exercise: What I Learned from Responsibility Exercise
What did this exercise teach you about the trauma or traumas that happened? About yourself? About your responsibility? Did these learnings show you that there was any way you could have prevented what happened?
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As Schiraldi noted, “guilt affirms morality” (2000, 182).” The successful resolution of guilt involves a series of stages of denial, processing, and resolution. When you process guilt, you assess any harm that you did and your responsibility for that harm. If you find that you are guilty to any degree, then it is appropriate for you to express how sorry you are and make appropriate amends. Many beliefs that get associated with guilt include “shoulds” and “ought to’s.” If these beliefs are inaccurate, it is important to challenge them by asking yourself what each of the beliefs says about you and then by looking for evidence, both pro and con, to dispute or support the belief.
If you continue to feel guilty for any part you played in the trauma, ask yourself what your guilt can do for you? Does it provide a way for you to atone (in part or totally) for what you did or the part you played? Does your guilt motivate you to change your behavior?
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Are you still saying “If only…” to yourself after answering these questions? When you say “if only,” you may be placing blame on yourself that you do not deserve. The guilt you feel now may be due to the messages others instilled in you at an earlier time, perhaps during the trauma itself. One way to combat guilt, particularly if the trauma happened when you were a child, is to gather photos of you at the time the trauma occurred or look at children now who are the same age you were then. Does this help you see yourself as small and helpless, perhaps in contrast to a large adult perpetrator? Recognizing that a small child can do little to defend himself or herself against an adult perpetrator will help you realize that a child is never responsible for any abuse perpetrated against him or her. You can also look at any real choices you had the chance to make during the traumatic situation (if you were given any), as well as evidence that shows how you made and acted on those choices.
Schiraldi suggests that you answer the following questions about your reactions during a traumatic situation in order to put them in perspective (2000, 195–196):
It’s important that you remember, as Schiraldi said, “Guilt can be adaptive [healthy] if it is realistic and if it leads to improvements in…behavior and character” (2000, 27).
Survivor Guilt
Matsakis (1999) writes about survivor guilt, the guilt that comes from the belief that your actions or nonactions during a traumatic event may have caused or could have prevented the death, injury, or mistreatment of others. Survivor guilt also occurs if you believe you should have experienced death, injury, or mistreatment yourself, but somehow escaped your fate. You may try to keep this aspect of guilt secret because you fear others would condemn you if they learned what you did or did not do.
For example, say you are a war veteran. During the war, you were leading your platoon across an open field. You told two of your men to assume certain positions as they walked beside you. Each of them was killed; you lived. Your guilt says that it should have been you who died, because one of the men switched places with you and had you been walking where he was walking, you would have been dead. Since that time, you keep seeking direct or indirect ways to kill yourself to “take his place.” His ghost comes to you in nightmares, and you think that you owe him your life. Your guilt over his death has grown and grown and grown, even though in reality you are not responsible for it. Had you known that death lay in that path, you would not have sent him to walk there. You would not have walked there either. But you did not know. Naturally, you wish that things had turned out differently and that no one had died in battle. Your pain about the losses of your friends is deep, and your sadness does not go away.
If you were driving and were involved in a car wreck that was your fault and some of the friends riding with you were killed, you may experience similar guilt. You may choose to harm yourself because you do not believe you deserve to be happy or successful. However, you did not have the power to stop their deaths, no matter if you caused them to die through your acts of commission (doing something) or omission (not doing anything). Your survivor guilt may be a way to honor the dead and not forget them without grieving them or putting their deaths to rest. If you truly were responsible for the deaths, your survival guilt may be particularly strong. If you believe that you suffer from survival guilt, the following exercise may help you to identify its existence (Matsakis 1999).
Exercise: My Survivor Guilt
Fill in the blanks of any statement that applies to you.
I made it out alive from ______________________________ when ______________________________ did not.
I made it out less damaged or injured than ______________________________.
I escaped the emotional pain and distress when ______________________________ happened.
I escaped social disgrace and humiliation when ______________________________ happened, and ______________________________ did not. I wish I could die to join ______________________________.
I should have died when ______________________________ happened and ______________________________ should have lived.
If ______________________________ had lived and I had died, ______________________________ would have had a better life or been a better person than I have had or been.
______________________________ is luckier than I am because she or he has no more pain or suffering and I am stuck here with all this pain.
I dream of ______________________________. In my dreams ______________________________ happens.
At times, ______________________________ ’s ghost haunts me.
I fantasize that I could relive ______________________________ and change the outcome to ______________________________.
I have never talked about ______________________________ and/or ______________________________ because of my involvement, which was ______________________________.
I am so guilty that I believe I have lost my soul because ______________________________.
I wish that I had the courage to kill myself but am afraid of what will happen to me after death, because I did ______________________________.
I will be punished if I ever talk about ______________________________.
I no longer have religious faith or a sense of spirituality because ______________________________.
When I have periods of intense grieving about ______________________________, I ______________________________.
When I have periods of intense rage about ______________________________, I ______________________________.
I use substances because I try to numb what happened. I use ______________________________ when ______________________________.
If I watch movies or documentaries about ______________________________ or similar events, I become very depressed and emotional and I ______________________________.
I cannot live for myself; the reason I stay alive is for ______________________________.
I am living for someone who died named ______________________________.
I don’t deserve to live. If I had my way, I would ______________________________.
I should have died on (date) ______________________________ when ______________________________ because ______________________________.
I believe ______________________________ would have had a better life than I have had and/or would have had more to live for, had she or he lived.
I now sabotage my personal relationships with ______________________________ by ______________________________.
I sabotage my professional relationships with ______________________________ by ______________________________.
My guilt is there because I was negligent during or after the traumatic event and I ______________________________.
In hindsight, I know that I could have prevented what occurred by ______________________________.
I also know that I must deal with the fact that I participated in the following amoral actions ______________________________.
I feel that doing ______________________________ has made me lose my faith.
I have tried to escape my guilt by ______________________________.
What did you learn about yourself through completing this exercise?
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If completing this exercise has triggered you or brought up new memories, list those memories here and then go back to some of the exercises in chapters 3 and 4 to work on them.
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Matsakis (1999) says that healing from survivor guilt does not mean that you are to forget what you did or forget those who were hurt or who died. It also does not mean that you will never have regret or guilt again. It does mean that you will look at your responsibility in the events realistically and honestly and will let go of at least some of the destructive ways you use to punish yourself. Part of healing from survivor guilt is to grieve the losses. Ways to deal with loss are found later in this chapter.
Another way to deal with survivor guilt is to find restorative experiences that are economic, vocational, political, or interpersonal and that allow you to help others or somehow atone for what happened before. Matsakis describes seven stages of healing from survivor guilt (1999, 164–165). You can refer to this seven-step process as you complete many exercises in this book:
Now take some time to identify a guilt-producing event that you want to describe in detail here. This activity may trigger your traumatic reactions. It may also bring new information to you. Remember to refer back to some of the exercises in chapter 2 to calm yourself when you need to do so.
Exercise: Events That Caused My Survivor Guilt
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Do you make wrong conclusions about your degree of responsibility for the event? Do you assume too much or too little responsibility?_____________________________________________________
Do you believe you could have prevented the event from occurring?_____________________________________________________
Do you come up with the wrong conclusions about why you made the decisions you did?_____________________________________________________
Do you believe what you did was ethical?_____________________________________________________
Do you have full information about the event to judge the decisions you made? If not, where can you get that information?_____________________________________________________
Do you judge yourself against some ideal picture of what might have happened?_____________________________________________________
Do you have good intentions to make up for what happened? What are they?_____________________________________________________
Will you follow through on one of those intentions? Which one?_____________________________________________________
Are you using only your emotions to judge yourself in relation to the event?_____________________________________________________
Do you still believe you were totally responsible for what happened (even after completing the exercise “My Responsibility” above?_____________________________________________________
Could you really have prevented the event?_____________________________________________________
Did you really have the power to stop the event?_____________________________________________________
Could you really have reacted differently?_____________________________________________________
Do you really believe that, if you had died during the event, another person would have survived?_____________________________________________________
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Another way to deal with survivor guilt is to try new ways of self-talk and new ways to think about what happened. Whenever you have an irrational thought about your guilt, try to counter it with something more positive and realistic.
Exercise: Substituting Positive Thoughts
Look at the previous exercise. Identify five irrational thoughts about your participation in and responsibility for the event:
Now what positive thoughts might you substitute for each of these negative thoughts?
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Exercise: A Healing Monologue
Matsakis suggests you stand in front of a mirror and repeat the following monologue to yourself three or four times a day until you can recite it almost automatically (1999, 222).
During ______________________________, the following situation happened ______________________________. Whenever I remember what happened, I usually think ______________________________ (put in the thinking error here), and feel guilty. When I feel guilty about ______________________________, I need to remind myself that I am thinking incorrectly. Instead of thinking ______________________________, I need to view the situation as ______________________________ (put in the more positive, realistic thought). I also need to remember that I displayed the following strengths during the event ______________________________ and can give myself credit for those strengths. It would be a mistake for me to concentrate only on these good things, though, because I am guilty (in reality) for ______________________________. However, it would also be wrong for me to concentrate only on the negative aspects of what happened.
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Making Amends
You may also deal with your survivor guilt by making amends. One way to make amends is to create a ritual for healing. This process is described in the section “Healing Rituals ” later in this workbook. Matsakis notes that making amends can lessen feelings of guilt and that “there is always something you can do to make amends, even if it is not perfect or powerful enough to change the past” (1999, 226). You might do something to work with the living (volunteer at a hospital), or for a cause that in some way deals with the trauma you experienced (Mothers Against Drunk Drivers). Perhaps you can make amends financially (donating funds to help construct a trauma center for teens).
Journal Exercise
If you were to make amends, describe in your journal or notebook how you would do it.
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Exercise: What I Learned from Survivor Guilt Exercises
What was it like to do the exercises having to do with survivor guilt? What did you learn about yourself by doing them? About your guilt?
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Shame
Another emotional response to traumatic events that is common to many survivors, though not a symptom of the PTSD diagnosis itself, is shame. What is shame? Shame goes beyond guilt and is more difficult to overcome. Guilt means you feel bad for what you (supposedly) did or did not do during a traumatic event. Shame means that you feel bad for what or who you actually are. It is a deep feeling that originates from feeling flawed when you believe that only perfection is acceptable. Shame sometimes results from being used in an unacceptable or degrading manner (e.g., shame over feeling physical arousal while you were being molested).
Shame is a form of self-torment that includes feelings of inadequacy, inferiority, embarrassment, and disappointment and can lead to the formation of a shame-based identity—a situation in which your entire self-concept is based on your shame. Shame does not seem to get discharged through crying or expressing anger (Rothschild 2000). Feelings of shame may lead to aggression against yourself for violating your own inner standard of acceptable behavior. If you feel shame, you feel as if you are exposed to the world as bad. When you have been violated through a traumatic event, particularly if you were a victim of childhood abuse, you may feel shame about what happened to you. Your perpetrator may have told you messages during the abuse or afterwards that now make you feel ashamed (e.g., you liked what happened to you, you chose it, etc.). You may have accepted those messages as true and as part of you rather than as messages that are false and have come from outside you. These messages, called introjects, are lies that you no longer need to accept as your truths. Your own truth lies in you—you can make your own choices now about who you are and what you believe.
You may feel shame if and when you are put in a situation in which you have no power to choose. Then you feel wrong, bad, or worthless, or like you don’t measure up because the bad thing happened to you. Shame is a painful emotion because it involves very negative, critical judgments of yourself that lead to feelings of humiliation, inadequacy, and low self-esteem. Feelings of shame can also lead you to seek isolation and separateness. The roots of shame lie in your abuse, violation, assault, or betrayal and in your damaged, undermined, or destroyed sense of self.
Exercise: My Shameful Beliefs
Before you look at your personal shameful beliefs, first see if any of the following statements describe you. Put a check by each one that does. These statements may have originated in the messages told to you. If any of these messages came from abusers, note their source or sources after each belief.
Belief | This belief comes from: |
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_____I cannot take risks. | ________________________________ |
_____I am not allowed to be seen or heard. | ________________________________ |
_____I am invisible. | ________________________________ |
_____To avoid disapproval, I do things I don’t want to do. | ________________________________ |
_____I am not allowed to ask for what I need. | ________________________________ |
_____I am inferior to others. | ________________________________ |
_____I must treat myself negatively because I am bad. | ________________________________ |
_____My beliefs about myself are all negative. | ________________________________ |
_____I must be perfect. | ________________________________ |
_____I am a disappointment to____________________ | ________________________________ |
_____My interests, choices, and wants are not of value to others. | ________________________________ |
_____If something goes wrong in my world, it is my fault. | ________________________________ |
_____I constantly look for ways to prove I am to blame for ____________________ | ________________________________ |
If you hold any other shameful beliefs, list them here.
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Of the beliefs listed above, which are the three most powerful and shameful in your life? You do not have to come up with three: one or two such beliefs can control your life. If you have more than three, continue the list on another piece of paper.
Now look at each of these beliefs and at their sources. What situation or situations led to their becoming a part of you? Who said them first? What facts lie behind them? Complete the exercise below for each of the beliefs you listed above. If you have more than three, you can complete the exercise using those beliefs on separate pieces of paper.
The situation:________________________
The speaker:________________________
The facts of the situation:________________________
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The belief I can substitute for this shaming belief:________________________
The situation:________________________
The speaker:________________________
The facts of the situation:________________________
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The belief I can substitute for this shaming belief:________________________
The situation:________________________
The speaker:________________________
The facts of the situation:________________________
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The belief I can substitute for this shaming belief:________________________
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The primary ways to combat shame are to recognize it, identify it, name it, name or describe the events that created it, and then substitute a new belief or beliefs. According to Power, “Healing from shame is the primary journey of the wounded heart…Restoration is a process;…begin with recognition you are separate [from the shameful event], then deal with feelings of vulnerability, woundedness, and pain” (1992b, 60).
Use the following exercise to work out some new, healing beliefs and behaviors.
Exercise: Healing from Shame
I can also choose to assert myself when I am with persons who still try to shame me by:
I can create positive affirmations to combat shaming. Three I am able to use (and am willing to at least try to believe) are:
If someone tries to shame me or if shameful feelings start to return, I can nurture myself by:
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Grief and Loss
Trauma frequently includes loss. You may have lost your sense of safety and security, the meaning and purpose of life, your physical health, your ability to relate with others, your identity, your self-esteem, or someone or something you love. Loss leads to grief. Grief involves stages of disbelief or shock, anger or irritability, anxiety, depression, impaired concentration, and sleep disturbance—symptoms similar to those of post-traumatic stress disorder itself (Figley, Bride, and Mazza 1997). If the trauma you experienced involved death, the first reaction you may have had to that death is shock or denial, both of which function to protect you from distress and pain. The first goal for dealing with grief is to accept the reality that the one you love is dead. The shock or denial reaction is legitimate; it generally gives way to a feeling of disorganization and a need to adjust to a world without the loved one. In other words, you begin to move on.
Journal Exercise: The Grieving Process
In order to begin working through your grief, you may want to write down everything you miss about the person who died. Use your journal, and start by completing the following sentences:
Since _____________________________________________________ died, I never can _____________________________________________________.
We never can ___________________________________________.
You may also try to answer the following questions:
You may also draw the place of death with as many details as you remember, tell the story about the death in detail aloud or in writing, or write a letter to the dead person (Ayalon 1992).
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The final phase of grieving involves acceptance, the establishment of an ongoing relationship with your loss and with your loved one, and the recognition that you will never be the same. It also involves transcendence beyond the death using personal spirituality and faith, as well as channeling your energy into and reaching out toward something positive, such as a new person, career, project, or mission. Finding transcendence often means changing your attitudes toward life, death, yourself, suffering, and spirit.
Sometimes, it is possible for you to create positive statements about your grief. Some examples of these statements might be:
What other positive statements about grief can you make?
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As you work through your grief, it may help if you:
Healing Rituals
When you feel guilt, shame, or grief, you may want to create a healing ritual to help yourself or to honor the person who died. A healing ritual is a structured activity designed to help release grief and pain. A ritual may help you find support from those around you as you learn to relate to the trauma in a new way. According to Williamson and Williamson (1994), rituals help to fulfill needs for inner nourishment and meaning and are a way to experience both inner and outer transformation. They also are a means to enhance our spirituality and to bring about emotional healing after crisis and trauma. Rituals often spring from the symbols and images of everyday experiences. These symbols can give meaning, purpose, and energy to our lives. According to Catherall (1992) there are seven steps to a ritual. These steps are explored in the exercise that follows, which is intended to help you design your own ritual.
Exercise: My Healing Ritual
I want to do a ritual for ___________________________________________ because ___________________________________________
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Once you have put the ritual on paper, consider whether you want to actually do it. Can you make a commitment to do the ritual? When will you do it?
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If you like, write a bit about how completing this exercise helped you?
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The Rituals of the Phoenix Rising
Williamson and Williamson (1994) describe the ritual of the phoenix rising as an example of a healing ritual. The phoenix was a symbol of the Egyptian sun god and was believed to live for 500 years. According to the myth, it then burned itself to ash on a pyre but did not die. Instead, it rose to live again in a state of youth. The phoenix can be a symbol of immortality and regeneration, as well as of transformation from what you are to what you want to become. You may use this ritual to shed things that are holding you back, such as survivor guilt, shame, worry, fear, lack of self-esteem, or indecision.
The ritual involves designing a personal phoenix medallion and creating your own affirmation to put on the medallion. The affirmation might say something like, “From the ashes of past traumas, I rise as a phoenix to a new freedom and sense of being.” You may also choose your own personal symbols of freedom and transformation to use in this ritual. Williamson and Williamson suggest you take a black marking pen and write words that are personal symbols of freedom on the back of the medallion you have created. These words might include “faith,” “self-love,” “forgiveness,” “patience,” “praise,” “strength,” “truth,” “spirituality,” “redemption,” “peace,” or others.
Journal Exercise: My Phoenix Medallion
Take a few minutes to decide on your own personal words and affirmations and write them in your journal. Now, close your eyes, and think about what your medallion will look like. (You can also make a real medallion from clay or cardboard or other materials.) Draw a picture of the front and back of your medallion in your notebook or journal. Close your eyes and think some more before you write your healing words or affirmations on your medallion’s back. You may draw a picture on its front as well. This medallion becomes a visual reminder of your commitment to growth. Put the medallion in a special place or carry it with you so that you can have access to it regularly. You may look at your medallion as often as you need to to remind you that you always have new opportunities to heal.
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Regular Rituals
Rituals do not have to be onetime events. Sometimes participation in a regularly observed ritual unites you and others who have similar pasts or traumas and gives you a sense of group identification. Once a year, certain Quaker meetings are followed by a separation ritual for women who have lost a child. Women go to a designated tree and put an offering or gift on it for each child lost. The children may have died, been aborted, been miscarried, or been put up for adoption. These women share their grief and provide each other with support.
Another ritual occurred at 9:02 A.M. on April 19, 200l. At that time, in Oklahoma City, the names of each of the 168 victims of the Oklahoma City bombing were read as their empty chairs sat mournfully in the empty field that used to be the building in which they died. This ritual honored the victims and assured the survivors that their loved ones are remembered. When rituals such as these are repeated regularly, perhaps yearly, they can bring a sense of order through their familiarity and provide a safe way for the living to express their feelings both symbolically and directly.