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The Colorado Counseling Podcast
Overcomers Counseling
76 episodes
7 months ago
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Mental Health
Health & Fitness
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Mental Health
Health & Fitness
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Releasing Shame Meditation
The Colorado Counseling Podcast
12 minutes 8 seconds
7 months ago
Releasing Shame Meditation
Shame is one of the heaviest emotions we can carry. It often sits quietly in the background, influencing thoughts, behaviors, and the way we perceive ourselves. While everyone experiences shame at some point, it’s easy to forget that this feeling doesn’t define who we are. Releasing shame requires curiosity, patience, and self-compassion. Through a guided meditation for releasing shame, you can create a safe space to explore this emotion, untangle its hold, soothe compulsions (if any), and replace it with understanding and kindness. This process is not about silencing shame or forcing it to disappear but about transforming it into something lighter, an opportunity for healing. Guided meditation becomes your tool for navigating this path, offering rest, perspective, and the chance to reconnect with the worthiness already within you.   What Does Shame Feel Like in the Body? Shame doesn’t just stay in the mind; it finds a home in the body. For some, it feels like tightness in the chest or a knot in the stomach, while others experience a lump in the throat or a sensation of weight on the shoulders. These physical manifestations are the body’s way of releasing signals that something needs attention. Take a moment to gently notice where shame resides in your body. This isn’t about judgment or trying to fix anything. It’s about curiosity and awareness. When we approach shame with compassion, we allow it to loosen its grip, making space for release. Why Guided Meditation Helps Releasing shame is no easy task, but meditation provides a framework for approaching it with care. Guided meditation offers a structure to help you stay in the present moment while exploring your feelings. It anchors you with tools like deep breathing, body scans, and visualizations, empowering you to process shame by observing instead of judging. What makes this practice so effective is its focus on mindfulness. Mindfulness teaches you to focus on your experience as it is, without criticism. When shame arises, guided meditation reminds you, “This is a feeling, not who I am.” With consistency, this practice transforms shame into clarity and compassion. Exploring and Releasing Shame Imagine sitting quietly in a space that feels safe and supportive. You’re breathing slowly, letting your body relax and your mind settle. This is the foundation of guided meditation—creating a sanctuary where you can gently connect with your emotions. Start with your breath. The rhythm of inhaling and exhaling becomes a steady anchor. Feel it filling your lungs and creating room to process whatever arises. Bring awareness to the shame you may be carrying. Does it have a shape, a color, or a texture? Visualize wrapping this feeling in warmth and care, letting each breath soften its intensity. One powerful exercise involves picturing shame as a cloud. This cloud may have been following you, heavy and persistent. But with each breath, the edges start to dissolve. You can imagine it shrinking, dissipating into a clear blue sky, leaving behind lightness and calm. Self-Compassion as a Path to Freedom A guided meditation for releasing shame doesn’t just help you notice and process the emotion—it teaches self-compassion as the ultimate act of healing. Shame often arrives with self-judgment or guilt, making it easy to feel stuck. Compassion helps change the narrative. Consider a moment when you felt overwhelmed by shame. Instead of resisting those feelings or harshly critiquing yourself, gently ask, “What do I need most right now?” This question brings kindness into the experience. Maybe you need acknowledgment or validation. Perhaps it’s the reminder that feeling shame doesn’t mean you’ve done something wrong, it simply means you’re human. You might use the metaphor of the adult chair model in your practice. Picture yourself stepping into a chair of understanding and wisdom, one that exists to hold space for emotions without letting them consume you. This allows shame to lose it
The Colorado Counseling Podcast