We need to talk about shame Bren Brown

Shame is the gremlin who says: […] “never 
good enough” – and, if you can talk it out of  

that one, “who do you think you are?” The thing 
to understand about shame is it’s not guilt.  

Shame is a focus on self. Guilt 
is a focus on behavior. Shame is,  

“I am bad.” Guilt is, “I did something bad.”
 

Shame is highly, highly correlated with addiction, 
depression, violence, aggression, bullying,  

suicide, eating disorders. And here’s 
what you even need to know more. Guilt,  

inversely correlated with those things.
Shame, for women, is this web of unobtainable,  

conflicting, competing expectations about who 
we’re supposed to be. […] For men, shame is not  

a bunch of competing, conflicting expectations. 
Shame is one: do not be perceived as what?  

Weak.
But the truth is […] vulnerability is  

not weakness. I define vulnerability as emotional 
risk, exposure, uncertainty. It fuels our daily  

lives. And I’ve come to the belief—this is my 
12th year doing this research—that vulnerability  

is our most accurate measurement of courage.
If we’re going to find our way back to each other,  

we have to understand and know empathy, 
because empathy’s the antidote to shame.  

If you put shame in a Petri dish, it needs three 
things to grow exponentially: secrecy, silence and  

judgment. If you put the same amount in a Petri 
dish and douse it with empathy, it can’t survive.  

The two most powerful words when 
we’re in struggle: me too.
 

If we’re going to find our way back to each 
other, vulnerability is going to be that path.