Self-Sabotage and Shame: Building Resilience Against Self-Judgment

How shame drives Self-Sabotage and how to build shame resilience following Brené Brown's research.

Shame — the belief that you are fundamentally flawed or unworthy — is one of the most powerful drivers of self-sabotage and the primary barrier to seeking help.

How Shame Maintains Self-Sabotage

  • Shame drives concealment of self-sabotage, preventing the help that would reduce it
  • Self-blame for self-sabotage creates additional psychological burden
  • Shame spirals can trigger and worsen self-sabotage episodes
  • Shame isolates — and isolation is a primary self-sabotage amplifier

Shame vs. Guilt in Self-Sabotage

Shame ('I am bad/flawed because I have self-sabotage'): Drives more self-sabotage

Guilt ('My behavior related to self-sabotage hurt someone'): Can be productive

Therapy often helps shift from shame to guilt and then to self-compassion.

Building Shame Resilience for Self-Sabotage

Brené Brown's shame resilience framework: recognize shame triggers, practice critical awareness, reach out, and share your story — all applicable to self-sabotage shame.

Related Resources

Bringwise

Turn psychology into daily habits

5 minutes a day. Science-backed insights you can actually use.

Download Free