Shame Should Be a Badge of Honor

In a previous article, I mentioned the interesting confession of an educator friend who has years of experience in teaching, and only at the best schools.

"Usually," my friend had lamented with a big sigh, "a small child arrives for his first day of school with an excellent self-image."

"Great - so what's the problem, then?" I asked.

"Well, very often, that's the end of the story!"

The following incident, which I read of recently, may be an extreme example, but it surely represents the type of thing my friend had in mind.

A certain teacher asked her pupils to open the homework they were supposed to have prepared the previous evening. She noticed that little Suzie failed to open her book, and asked her why.

Suzie turned red and managed to stammer: "I...didn't ...do the homework. I...I...forgot about it."

Thereupon, the teacher took a small coin out of her pocket, glared at the object of her anger and snickered: "Suzie, do you see this penny? Well, Suzie, I can tell you, you're worth less than this little coin!"

I don't know what our teacher had hoped to achieve, except perhaps to imbue in the poor girl a hatred of learning for the rest of her school career. The only thing we can be certain of, is that it's past time that this lady looked for a new profession.

If what she had intended was to instill in her pupil a sense of shame, that's a kind of shame that's clearly very, very destructive. But it must be said, and said very clearly, there's another kind of shame that's very, very constructive.

And it's nothing less than a tragedy that in today's so-called civilized society, we've all but lost that sense of constructive shame. And as a society, we're destined to pay very heavily for it.

I was inspired to write these words by an article by Dr. Joyce Brothers in Parade Magazine of Feb. 27, entitled "Shame May Not Be So Bad After All." Indeed!

A world in which a woman boasts openly on a TV talk show about seducing her sister's husband, in which a man on a reality show brazenly describes his plan to humiliate an unsuspecting teammate - "knife him in the back" - a world in which songs about the joys of beating up women are openly aired and new computer games where the mission is to kill John F. Kennedy are openly sold on the market - is this a healthy world or a very, very sick one?

Carrying around the "baggage" of shame only makes people bad about themselves, say some pseudo-psychologists. Dr. Brother correctly points out that rather than increasing our self-esteem, the suppression of shame can do just the opposite.

"Positive shame," she asserts, "occurs when we see ourselves as we really are - perhaps too involved to notice that our spouse needs our help, perhaps too scared of what others think to stand up for someone in trouble, perhaps too resentful of the past to allow a wound to heal..."

Negative, destructive shame is something we can all do without.

But bringing back the positive shame of years and generations gone by is a prerequisite if we are to save this world.

Azriel Winnett is creator of Hodu.com - Your Communication Skills Portal. This popular free website helps you improve your communication and relationship skills in your business or professional life, in the family unit and on the social scene. New articles added almost daily. Visit Azriel's blog at: http://hodu.com/blog.