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368 pages, Paperback
Published January 1, 2020
"When I started this research I wasn't sure about the distinction I had seen drawn between good shame and bad shame. There is a small group of researchers, [...] who believe that shame has both negative and positive consequences. The positive consequence of shame, they content, is its ability to serve as a compass for moral behavior. [...] Seven years of testing the proposition that shame can't be used to change people combined with a lack of actual data supporting this claim, made me a little suspicious, but I was willing to let the research speak for itself.
It didn't take very long for me to reach the conclusion that there is nothing positive about shame. In any form, in any context and through any delivery system, shame is destructive. The idea that there are two types, healthy shame and toxic shame, did not bear out in any of my research."
"Within the research community, there are interesting debates about the relationships between embarrassment, guilt, humiliation, and shame. Although there is a small group of researchers who believe that all four of these emotions are related and represent varying degrees of the same core emotion, the vast majority of researchers believe that the four are separate, distinct experiences. Like most of the studies on shame, my research strongly supports the argument that embarrassment, guilt, humiliation and shame are four different emotional responses."