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Guilt vs. Responsibility is Powerlessness vs. Power

Most of us do not face a perfect storm of emotional pollution like the chain of events described in my last post, where an argument with a teenage daughter led to a highway altercation, which led to a young man getting fired from his job, which led to a wife and child being traumatized. Most of our reactive behavior stops short of abuse and boundary violations. Yet how many times have you thought something like the following?

"If this hadn't happened, I wouldn't have...."
"If he hadn't said that, I wouldn't have said...."
"If she would have done this, I wouldn't have done that...."
"If only he'd have done that, I could have...."

The difference between guilt and responsibility is more than an abstract moral distinction; it has a definite psychological reality that profoundly affects our behavior and our well being. On a gut emotional level, it is the difference between personal power and chronic powerlessness. Our heightened reactivity to emotional pollution has made us view guilt not as a result of violating our own values but as something done to us by others. Thus we have expressions like, "Don't guilt me," and, "She's laying a guilt trip on me."

Because it feels like someone is punishing us by making us feel guilty, we often have an urge to retaliate against those who do. No one felt guiltier about failing to provide for his family than the young man who was fired from his job and then brutalized his wife in front his child. He blamed them for invoking his guilt, when in reality it came from violation of his own standards. Likewise, the guilt the abused mother felt for failing to protect her son caused her to blame him for having to stay with his father and suffer abuse.

Responsibility, on the other hand, comes from basic compassion, with its inherent motivation to improve, appreciate, connect, or protect. As we act on these motivations, we remain true to our deeper values and feel empowered to make the situation at least a little better.

In the course of my research on the treatment of domestic violence offenders nearly 20 years ago, I observed many group sessions for batterers at seven different agencies. In these group sessions, the leaders forcefully confronted court-ordered clients with the full range of their abusive behavior. The clients were not permitted to give any context for their behavior because that was "making excuses, justifying, and trying to blame the victim." The protocol of our research required us to phone the spouses of the group members after each session to see how their partners behaved during the week. More than half the women reported that their guys came home from the group defensive, resentful, and irritable, only to blame them for having to endure the humiliation, "Because of you, I have to go to that group and be treated like a criminal!" It got so bad that 30% of the dropouts were initiated by the very women the programs were trying to protect. "I told him to stop going," one of the battered women told us. "It was expensive and it was only making him worse; it took several days after each session for him to get over it."

The group leaders in our study were right in the content their confrontations, of course; there was no justification or excuse for the abuse these men perpetrated on their loved ones. The confrontations weren't the problem, it was the contempt and moral superiority the group leaders conveyed, never realizing that their contemptuous attitudes were contributing to more abuse by increasing the emotional pollution of these men's lives.

The group leaders we studied were good people with the best of intentions to make the world safer. They simply did not see what was happening to them in their reaction to emotional pollution. They not only failed to change the abusers (by ignoring the part of them that did not want to abuse), they were changed by the abusers, in that they, too, began to think and act in terms of power and control. They tried to control what their clients thought as well as how they felt and behaved, by dismissing their perspectives and manipulating their guilt, shame, and fear of consequences, which is exactly what the men were doing to their wives. The counselors unwittingly reinforced the abusive dynamic. Along the same lines, researchers who have worked with violent criminals have noted that many play out revenge motives against ordinary citizens for the humiliating comments made by judges during their sentencing. When you demean a violent person, you virtually guarantee that some innocent victim will pay for your indulgence of moral superiority.

The first step toward personal responsibility -- and true personal power -- is to realize that if you do not reduce the amount of emotional pollution in your environment, you will certainly contribute to it, at least indirectly.

Think of this when you're tempted to be rude to a surly waiter or to lean on the horn in response to an aggressive driver or when you want to dismiss or ignore to insult or malign someone you think deserves it: You are contributing, however indirectly, to child abuse, domestic violence, and other harmful behaviors. At the very least, you are spreading emotional pollution that cannot have anything but a negative effect on you and your environment.

Emotional pollution will continue to spread rapidly as long as we confuse guilt with responsibility and think that if we're not guilty of anything, we are not responsible. And as long as we believe that our negative regard of others is justified or that they are deserving of whatever we do in response to their negativity, we are responsible for the virulent spread of emotional pollution we are now experiencing.

 

Comments

Emotional pollution

Thanks for this blog on Guilt vs Responsibility Steven. I'm new to your blog but I enjoyed your keen observation about how so often we humans are actively blaming and making people wrong, thus reinforcing the very same behavior we are trying to stop! We are so blind to what we are doing. We just can't see it and we wonder why the people we are trying to "correct" get so angry at us! I've been working in this arena for a long time, both on the personal level, but now also on the "macro" level of international peace, and it is astonishing to me how much difficulty people have in seeing how we much hurt we inflict on other people and then expect them to change. As if we'd be likely to change ourselves if people shouted at us, demeaned us or dispespected us. It's all a question of putting ourselves in other peoples' shoes. I learned this, a victim of violence myself, when I volunteered for several years, in a maximum security prison, and worked with very violent offenders. It was amazing how much we were alike! I'm going to come back and read more of your other posts. Keep up the great work.


Guilty

Excellent post. So we are truly guilty it's blaming the guilt on someone or something else that increases the pollution. Versus taking responsibility for our guilt and doing something about it "to make the situation at least a little better". Shouldn't the title actually be "Blame vs Responsibility is Powerlessness vs Power"?


Nasty

U are the best. Hope it will help people who are blind to the fact that they contribute to made the world nasty and question their negative behaviour that made the world more nasty.
Another topic to explore is how we harm people psychologically , we will harm ourself inevitably. The direct effect for example, we harm people badly, we become bastard ourself and psychologically, we will harm our mental health etc etc.


Preaching compassion in a narcissistic society

I haven't read your other posts and just stumbled on to this one while looking at some material on guilt, but I'm with you 100% on the concept of spreading emotional pollution by reacting to emotionally violent behavior with more emotional violence. It does nothing except contribute to the narcissist's sense of entitlement. "I had a right to punch you in the nose...look at the way you treat me!"...Never mind that your behavior came after the fact, he will never see that as an obstacle to his logic.
I do wonder where these classes on domestic violence that you mention were held; they sound awful and very much not what I have experienced (second hand.) Most of the classes I have heard or heard about tried to teach the batterer about the addictions inherent in domestic violence-.the addiction of the abuser to violence and that of the abused to the abuser. This approach seeks to REMOVE the anger from the situation-not fuel more of it. It's sad to know that there is still so much misinformation and so many poorly trained people trying to deal with this enormous problem.

I wonder, though, how one can teach compassion, except perhaps by example-How do you teach people how to not throw the first stone, of how not to judge so quickly and with such absolute certainty.Our society is in trouble on so many levels, but much if not most of what's wrong stems directly from the inability of 95% of us to stand back and look at our own behavior before judging that of another..or better still, to and look into our own minds and really see what we are capable of doing,and how easily we could be driven to the most despicable behavior. None of us really wants to see that it is not just the murderer or the rapist who is only a few steps up the evolutionary ladder from the beasts who prowl the jungle at night but ALL of us. How do you go about teaching that?


passive agressiveness

This blog is refreshing to read. I'm guilty of narcicisstism myself. What would you say about passive agressive behaviors? Isn't it also a type of abuse? Many "civilized" people seem to be even more capable of passive agressive approach to problems than obviously violent behaviors.


Passive-aggressive behaviors

Passive-aggressive behaviors ma feel defensive to the person doing them, but they feel abusive to the partner. Love relationships come with an expectation of compassion.


borderline personalities

Our therapist says our daughter/step-daughter has borderline personality disorder. When she is "emotionally raging" we are not allowed to see the grandkids. How can we best deal with this situation? She does not believe she is ill.


Hopefully your therapist

Hopefully your therapist examined her and did not unethically diagnose someone based on a third-party description. Borderline Personality Disorder is difficult to diagnose, as the symptoms can be caused by any number of things. In any case, negatively labeling her will not get you access to your grandchildren. Your best bet is to be as compassionate as you can to her. Recognize that when she is angry she is hurt. Focus on the hurt rather than the anger. If she felt that you cared about her, you might get a better response, not to mention that it could soften how she copes with your grandchildren.


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