To help you do this, I have laid out the three levels of self-awareness; the mental, the sensory, and the emotional. Each of these levels is related to an area of the brain in which we’ve created a “memory” of what’s happening. When we learn about this area, we can better make use of our attention.
Each level of self-awareness has a distinct purpose. The first, the mental, is where the person learns how to use their memory to make sense of their surroundings. The second, the sensory, is the sensory part of the brain, which focuses on sensory input. The third, the emotional, is where the person learns to relate to their emotions.
The first level of self-awareness is the most important. Once you’ve learned to use your memory, it allows you to make sense of your environment, but it also allows you to take in a lot of information from your surroundings. The second level of self-awareness is what the brain is most interested in. The third level is more associated with emotions, but you can use it to make sense of things.
The shame part of the anatomy is a bit more complex than most people realize. As the concept of shame is so vast (and the concept itself is so complex), we haven’t really had a very clear understanding of what shame is. Most people see shame as something that happens to people who aren’t good enough. But shame isn’t primarily about how we “are” as individuals. It is about how we as a society treat other people.
Shame is the feeling we have when we see ourselves. And the feeling of shame can be so strong, so strong that we actually experience it as a physical sensation of pain. When our society says that we are born into this shame, the thing that we really have to remember is that we are born into another shame.
Shame has a pretty interesting history. For thousands of years the Romans, who were the first to use the word shame, and started the system of how we treat each other, would give each other bodily punishment at birth. This punishment was called the “stigma.” Later on, the word shame came to be used by the Greeks, who came up with the concept that the physical pain of shame was more than just a feeling.
The Greeks didn’t use the word shame, but they had a pretty good idea of what it meant, and what it should and shouldn’t be. At the time, the stigma was a punishment we had to endure during our infancy. It was a punishment that could be inflicted on a baby, or a child, or a person. Later on, the idea of the shame came into being when people started to be treated with a more severe form of punishment.
It’s an interesting concept, but it doesn’t seem like it’s going to make much sense. The reason why it’s so hard for me to think of shame as a feeling is because I don’t have a lot of feeling-feelings. I can feel my body’s feeling, and it’s not in the same way a child or a child with a brain or a heart can feel. The best thing I can say is that I can feel my body’s feeling when it’s crying.
There’s a lot of talk about that, but for me the reason why the shame is so hard to say is because I cant get a good picture of what it is. It’s a shame feeling, not a sense of shame.
My point with this analogy is that you can feel shame, but you can’t really know what its like unless you can experience having it. There are many reasons why a feeling can be tough to describe, and for that reason I do wish it was easier to say what shame feels like.