Shyness and Self-Hatred
Early in my career, when clients would talk about intense forms of self-criticism or self-loathing, I used to make interpretations that focused on the savage and perfectionistic superego. Over time, I'd help them develop the mental ability to withstand this savagery and protect themselves from it. Later, as I described in this earlier post, I began to think more about learning from experience and facing our actual faults: the ways that brutal attacks on the self can represent a refusal to accept who we really are, with all our warts and limitations, which then leads to a cycle of crime and punishment where we repeatedly atone for our "sins" but learn nothing about what drives them. I still believe both of these perspectives have value.
Lately, however, as I've begun to focus more on shame and the defenses against it, I've come to see that self-hatred is a kind of defense in itself. Especially as I delve deeper into the work of Sylvan Tomkins and Donald Nathanson, I'm coming to understand how both shyness and self-hatred are strategies for coping with the shame that comes from rejection. They're both examples of what Tompkins calls the "Attack Self" script for managing the painful experience of shame. From a lay perspective, for readers who aren't familiar with affect theory, this might seem counter-intuitive but bear with me. I need to lay a little groundwork.