Understanding Children’s
Emotions: Pride and Shame
Children need to know
that we are proud of them.
Published on May 14, 2012 by Kenneth Barish, Ph.D. in Pride
and Joy
Discussions of children’s motivations and behavior too often
overlook the importance of feelings of pride and shame. A child’s need to feel
proud, and to avoid feelings of shame, is a fundamental motivation, and remains
fundamental, throughout her life. It would be difficult to overestimate the
importance of these emotions in the psychological development - and emotional
health - of our children.
Shame is our instinctive response to personal failure or
inadequacy, especially the public exposure of inadequacy. Embarrassment is a
temporary and mild form of shame; humiliation, aloneness, and self-hatred are
severe forms of shame.
Children experience feelings of shame when they suffer any
social rejection; when they are unable to learn; when they are defeated in
competition; when they are bullied, insulted, or taunted; and when they seek
acceptance and approval from admired adults but are, instead, subjected to
criticism or derogation. When children tell us that they are anxious, they are
often anxious about the possibility of feeling ashamed.
Children with difficulties in motor coordination or delays in
language development experience shame early in childhood. Somewhat later,
difficulties in learning, especially in learning to read, always evoke in
children a deep feeling of shame. In childhood, shame leads to avoidance and
withdrawal and then, in adolescence, to desperate attempts to alleviate, or get
rid of, this painful state of mind. Many experiences that evoke a feeling of
shame (for example, experiences of exclusion or ridicule) are uniquely painful,
and the feeling of shame, perhaps more than any other emotion, stays with us.
I can still recall, more vividly and poignantly than I would
like, moments of shame from many years ago when, as a son (and as a father), I
let my parents (and my children) down. Although I have long since been forgiven
for these personal failures, my memories are still painful. Thankfully, I am
able to put these moments in perspective; they are now more than balanced by
moments of pride. In this way, we should also help our children put in
perspective their own moments of embarrassment and failure.
When children are successful and feel proud, they
instinctively look to others. When they fail and feel ashamed, they look away.
This is in the nature of pride and shame. The universal behavior associated
with the emotion of shame is concealment; we all attempt to hide or cover up
what we are ashamed of. Pride is the antithesis of shame. The feeling of pride
is accompanied by an outward movement and a desire to show and tell others, to
exhibit or show off. Pride is expansive, both in action and in our imagination.
Shame contracts, in our posture (our shoulders fall in and we look downward and
away) and in our thoughts and imagination—in our setting of goals and in what
we consider possible for ourselves.
A child’s expectation of feeling proud or ashamed therefore
decisively influences her choices - those situations she actively seeks and
those she avoids. Shame - our emotional response to exclusion and failure -
lowers aspirations. Pride — our emotional response to acceptance and success —
raises aspirations. The evolutionary psychologist Glenn Weisfeld succinctly
explains, “We anticipate pride and shame at every turn and shape our behavior
accordingly.”
Especially, children want their parents to share in their
pride and to be proud of them. Our children’s feeling - their inner certainty -
that we are proud of them is an essential good feeling, an anchor that sustains
them in moments of discouragement, aloneness, and defeat. Our feeling that our
parents are proud of us is a motivating and sustaining force throughout our
lives, and a protective factor in the emotional lives of our children. The
opposite is also true. Parental scorn is among the most deeply destructive
forces in the psychological development of any child.
When, as parents, we fail to express pride in our children,
when we are frequently dismissive, critical, or disapproving, our children will
be more vulnerable to emotional and behavioral problems of all kinds. They will
live, more than they should, with discouragement and resentment. These feelings
will then come to be expressed in some way, perhaps as defiance and rebellion,
or as a failure of initiative, or as an inability to sustain effort toward
long-term goals.
We therefore need to let our children know, as often as we
can, that we are proud of them — for their effort and for their
accomplishments. And we should not be afraid to “spoil” them with this form of
praise.
Copyright Ken Barish, Ph.D.
Ken Barish, Ph.D. is the author of Pride and Joy: A Guide to
Understanding Your Child’s Emotions and Solving Family Problems.
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