How Clinical Psychology of Religion Can Support Mental Health: An Ecological–Existential View, Illustrated by the Case of Shame
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. An Ecological Approach to Mental Health: Mental Well-Being and Mental Health Problems Arise from Multiple Interactions
3. An Ecological–Existential View on Shame: Interactional Emotion and Existential Feeling
4. Clinical Psychology of Religion Supporting Mental Health
Jill is a woman in her forties who seeks help for difficult interpersonal functioning and eating problems. Her life story is characterized by attachment trauma, emotional neglect and sexual abuse. Her parents ‘were fighting with their own demons’ of alcohol abuse and depression and neither paid attention to her emotional needs nor helped her to develop her own boundaries. As a teenager, she fell victim to sexually transgressive behavior of various friends and was raped several times. She felt ashamed and disgusted her body. ‘The feeling of being totally naked was so overwhelming–I felt burning pain and I couldn’t stop it.’ Her parents labelled these sexual contacts as voluntary behavior and condemned them. They even condemned Jill as a person, scolding her and calling her a whore. She was told to leave home and to rent her own room. Furthermore, her father, whose religiousness was typified by fear of judgment and obeying the rules, asked the priest whether she could receive the holy communion any longer. Hence, Jill’s conclusion is that she is a sinner who will never receive God’s forgiveness and compassion. However, she does not share this existential core belief with the therapist during her anamnesis.
The start of the therapy is hard. Jill’s self-criticism hinders the therapeutic relationship. She regularly interprets her struggles as posturing, and considers herself to be a quitter who has to try harder. ‘I am so stupid’ she often says, being afraid of the therapist’s judgments about her. At the same time, she feels worthless and empty, and her eating behavior is an attempt to deal with those feelings of emptiness. In addition, she feels uncomfortable to be seen and is delighted with online sessions during COVID-19 lockdowns, which enable her to hide her body as much as possible. Her therapist recognizes the central role of shame in Jill’s pathology and identifies different coping strategies: avoidance, withdrawal, and, most of all, self-attack (Nathanson 1992). The therapist helps her to understand her self-judgment and assumptions about the therapist’s evaluations as both an internalization of her parents’ condemnation and neglect (implying that she is not good enough), and a defense mechanism to cope with shame, anxiety and fear of being abandoned (Arntz and Van Genderen 2020; Malan 1979). Her eating behavior has the same defensive function, leading to more shame and self-judgment. In this way, Jill discovers how traumatic interactional patterns of the past result in dysfunctional intrapersonal and interpersonal interactions in the present. She recognizes how shame dominates her psychic experience and daily behavior, making it impossible to connect to others and to receive their acceptance and compassion. ‘I am unworthy’, she repeatedly says, ‘I am too bad.’
During one of the sessions, Jill lets slip that God also does not want her any longer. Exploration of her feelings and thoughts about God reveals that Jill does not only associate God with her father’s condemnation, but also with her body-related shame. She feels naked before God, ‘he sees right through me’, and she cannot hide herself for his gaze, as God is omnipresent, she believes. Sexuality plays a part in this context, which is negatively evaluated, as sexual sins are regarded as the most severe ones within religion and religious communities, according to Jill. From now on, the therapist does not limit himself to ecological analyses of Jill’s shame from a psycho-social-cultural perspective (cf. Campbell et al. 2009; Zhu et al. 2020), but includes an existential and religious perspective. Her feelings of unworthiness and her urge to hide turn out to have ultimate proportions and hamper recovery: being convinced of God’s absolute rejection and believing that he will never accept her lead to the experience that she has no ground under her feet, and will never find a foundation to build her life on. Hence, the therapist focuses on the interactions of Jill’s existential assumptions and feelings with her present functioning. Her current feelings of shame and strategies to cope with them are understood within the network of interactions between existential core beliefs, experiences with her parents during her youth, current interactions with significant others, representations of God, ideas about and experiences with her past and present religious community, body-related views and feelings and the numerous emotions which characterize the different interrelated nodes of this network. For example, they explore how her shame towards God and her perceptions of God’s penetrating gaze are dynamically related to violations of body integrity, her inability to set boundaries due to emotional neglect, her experiences with her parents, whose rejection and condemnation was associated with their punitive God representations and emphasis on authority, also within the religious community, their focus on purity with regard to religious practices and how these feelings and perceptions in relation to God affect other aspects of her experience and functioning, including the therapeutic relationship.
With help of therapeutic interventions, such as schema therapeutic interventions and limiting reparenting, which provides new corrective emotional experiences of acceptance and safety (Arntz and Van Genderen 2020; Christian et al. 2012), Jill is invited to re-write her narrative, and to define her identity no longer in terms of a shameful sinner. Instead of attributing all guilt and shame to herself, she gradually learns to notice the guilt and negligence of others. As a result, there is more room for grief and pain due to victimhood, and self-condemning behavior decreases. Jill becomes more open to representations of God as accepting, loving and compassionate, which is mutually related to the development of self-compassion and the ability to receive the love, compassion and acceptance from others.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Schaap-Jonker, H. How Clinical Psychology of Religion Can Support Mental Health: An Ecological–Existential View, Illustrated by the Case of Shame. Religions 2022, 13, 1009. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111009
Schaap-Jonker H. How Clinical Psychology of Religion Can Support Mental Health: An Ecological–Existential View, Illustrated by the Case of Shame. Religions. 2022; 13(11):1009. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111009
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchaap-Jonker, Hanneke. 2022. "How Clinical Psychology of Religion Can Support Mental Health: An Ecological–Existential View, Illustrated by the Case of Shame" Religions 13, no. 11: 1009. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111009
APA StyleSchaap-Jonker, H. (2022). How Clinical Psychology of Religion Can Support Mental Health: An Ecological–Existential View, Illustrated by the Case of Shame. Religions, 13(11), 1009. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13111009