You feel anger, and you’re lashing out at yourself. You’re being super hard on yourself, you’re have thoughts of self-harm, suicidal fantasies or severe self-criticism. It feels like there’s a seething anger beneath your skin. Usually, anger turned inwards is a sign that you didn’t have permission to be angry as a child. It wasn’t safe enough to express anger when you were younger, because the adults around you could not tolerate the intensity of the experience, and therefore it’s been turned inward instead of expressed.
To work with this, you may want to first give that part a space in the room.
Bring the emotional bully into the room, give it an empty chair and invite it to a conversation {gestalt therapy}.
It may be using words that were told to you by a caregiver, someone who was abusive or absent { and the message could be anything from “you’re not worthy of my time” to “you’re a bad boy”, or “you made me hurt you/yell at you”}.
Giving this part space and inviting it to a dialogue allows you to reassure the worry, challenge the beliefs, and come to a healthier “agreement”. When you do this, you will begin to start answering who it is that you’re truly angry at. It may be someone who didn’t protect you, care for your or maybe even harmed you. You’ll notice that the self blame may be misplaced as it wasn’t feasible to expect your own {often, younger} self to protect yourself in that specific incident.
Sometimes this isn’t about person, but rather, sadness that god, society or the world didn’t protect or defend you.
...and your healing will be about slowly rebuilding trust in the universe as you heal.
Your disappointed or anger may be with the world, society, god, or with some other form of construct that “should have” protected you- and you’re wondering “how was this “allowed “to happen” and “why was I not protected?”… and in your healing you'll slowly reconstruct a sense of safety and trust with personalized experiences and resources.
2) Unshakable Shame.
Shame makes you truly believe that you’re bad at your core. It’s an emotion that distorts your entire identity, making you believe you’re damaged, no-good and unworthy of love and goodness. Often, if you were ignored, hurt or shamed as a child you will carry shame as an adult. Shame expresses itself in may ways; the way you interact with others, the kinds of relationships you believe you’re deserving of, how you speak up in the workplace, ask for that promotion and how you parent you kids and set boundaries.