Stop blaming yourself for things that aren't your fault
It's an admirable quality to take responsibility if something goes wrong and is your fault, but if you
tend to blame yourself for everything then you will be having a tough time of it.
Blaming yourself for all kinds of stuff such as whether other people are happy, whether
other people work hard, whether your relationship fails to thrive, whether a
social event is going well - is so much work!
Self blame: control versus influence
People who blame themselves for too much mistake influence for control. A mother may be
able to influence her child when it comes to academic study but she can't
completely control the child's motivation (or lack of). You may be able to influence whether your partner or friend has a good time but you certainly
can't be totally responsible.
Too much self-blame is really about grabbing too
much of the 'responsibility pie'. You can really being to think about what
percentage or portion of responsibility you actually have in situations. People
who are prone to guilt and self-blame take the whole 'pie' for themselves.
Small wonder then that those who internalize bad stuff like this put themselves at greater risk of depression. (1)
Self blame and depression
Psychologists call a tendency to just blame oneself when things go wrong as having
an 'internal locus of control'. People who blame themselves for bad stuff also tend to
not take credit when things work out well. This is called having an external locus of
control.
So if a relationship breaks down the self-blamer may exclusively blame
themselves 'I ruin everything!' rather than seeing outside factors such as the
ex-partners behavior or external stresses on the relationship as also partially
to blame.
But when things go well, say the self-blamer organizes a successful
business meeting, they may find it hard to accept compliments and be eager to
talk in terms of them 'just being lucky' or other people being core to
its success and so forth.
Why do people self-blame?
If you were brought up by someone who tended to dish out blame unfairly then you
may have learnt to direct unfair blame towards yourself. You may be a person who
sees reality in very 'black or white' ways and applies perfectionist standards to
your own performance and behavior meaning you continually let yourself down and
then have an excuse to 'lash' yourself with recriminations.
It's vital to understand that a mature person will see where their own responsibility
lies and seek to do something about it (never accepting any responsibility carries
it's own problems) but the self blamer tends to totally blame themselves.
Stop Blaming Yourself will redress the responsibility balance, meaning you'll be better placed to see the
bigger picture and your own part in it with more calmness and objectivity.
Download Stop Blaming Yourself and free up your life.
(1) 'Learned Optimism' by Martin Seligman, publ Vintage Books, Mar 14 2006
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