Blaming Oneself
When patients leave their doctors feeling misunderstood, uncared for and frustrated, they often blame themselves. Often clients tell me that their doctors could find nothing wrong with them so they struggle with the notion that they are making it up or it is really nothing and that they are exaggerating how badly they feel. They fear being labeled as a hypochondriac or being told that their illness is psychosomatic. Sometimes they stop taking their concerns to their doctor for fear of judgment. A psychosomatic illness is one in which emotional issue results in an illness emerging in the body. Some physicians treat illnesses that derive from emotional issues as matter-of-factly as one would a virus and truly do understand the mind-body connection. But other physicians and much of the general population view a psychosomatic illness as a weakness or a sign that one’s emotions are so out of control that they have made their body sick.
Many people that come to see me carry shame around the notion that their emotional pain may have resulted in a physical illness and view this as a personal failure. The shame and self-blame that some carry is a heavy burden that weighs down the body and the psyche and slows the healing process. Others profess that their illness is “real” and refuse to look at any underlying emotional issues that may be contributing to their body being out of balance also fearful that they will be judged. In many indigenous cultures there is a belief that all illness, be it expressed emotionally or physically can be traced to a loss of core essence and that this loss must be restored to return to full health. There is no judgment or shame regarding the pathway that one expresses this loss of core essence. The acceptance of the various aspects of our being – the emotional, energetic and physical – and the interplay among these levels can go a long way towards lifting us from the burden of self-blame and shame and towards ease in healing.