Defining Worth in the Age of Instagram: How to Break Free from the Shame Loop

In the age of Instagram, we are asked—every moment, every scroll—Who are you? But we are not asked this in kindness. We are asked with the expectation of an answer that is polished, curated, worthy of being seen. We become fluent in performance, in self-editing, in shaping our lives into something palatable for others. And somewhere along the way, we mistake this carefully built version of ourselves for the truth.

Do you understand yourself beyond this projection? Beyond the likes, the external affirmations, the fear of judgment? Do you love yourself, not as an aesthetic, but as a living, breathing, imperfect being? Or are you still trying to fix what you’ve been told is broken?

We speak of self-awareness as a virtue, but what kind of questions do we ask ourselves? Do we investigate with curiosity or criticism? Do we tell our own stories with understanding, or are they woven with judgment? Do we filter our identity through the opinions of others, as if their approval is the final stamp of our worth?

Brené Brown defines shame as the feeling that makes us small, flawed, and never enough. It is the fear of being unlovable. And if we are honest, isn’t this fear woven into so much of what we do? The way we present ourselves, the way we chase perfection, the way we recoil when we feel exposed?

Shame is universal. It shows up in body image, family roles, career choices, relationships, money, aging. It thrives in secrecy, in the unspoken fears we carry. It manifests in three ways, according to Dr. Linda Hartling:

1. We move away—we hide, withdraw, shrink ourselves.

2. We move toward—we please, appease, overcompensate.

3. We move against—we fight back, use shame to combat shame.

But all of these are just ways of avoiding the truth: Shame does not make us unworthy. It makes us human. And what if, instead of running from it, we leaned in? What if we named it, spoke it, stripped it of its power?

Brené found that those who are resilient to shame share four traits:

• They recognize their shame triggers and patterns.

• They question the unrealistic expectations that tell them they are inadequate.

• They share their stories with people they trust.

• They speak shame aloud—because the moment it is spoken, it begins to lose its hold.

So ask yourself:

• Who do you become when shame takes over?

• How do you protect yourself—by hiding, pleasing, or fighting?

• Who do you turn to when you’re caught in a shame spiral?

• What is the bravest thing you could do for yourself when you feel small?

The world will always give you a reason to doubt yourself. But you were not made to live conditionally, only as a reflection of what others approve. You were made to be whole. And the moment you claim your worth—not as something to be proven, but as something that has always been yours—you step into the life that was waiting for you all along.

Ingram’s Path | Subconscious Healing

Transpersonal Hypnotherapist, Advisor, Spiritual Liberator & Speaker

I help people free themselves from the prison of their own mind—from the loops, lies, and roles they never chose but learned to perfect to survive.

WHAT I BELIEVE

I believe healing is remembering. Not fixing or improving, but returning—to the self you were before the world gave you roles to play and rules to follow.

I believe the body holds the truth, even when the mind forgets.

That symptoms are not enemies, but messengers. And that sovereignty begins when we stop calling our sensitivity a flaw.

I believe that silence—especially the kind we swallowed as children—can become a lifelong exile, and my work is about helping others come home.

I believe that grief has wisdom, rage has history, and that the nervous system is not broken—it’s faithful. Faithful to what once kept us safe.

I believe in magic, but not fantasy. The magic of integration.The miracle of being truly seen.The quiet holiness of finally saying, “This is mine,” and meaning it.

I believe truth is sacred, but not all truth has to be loud. And that sometimes the bravest thing you can do is pause, soften, and speak anyway.

I believe the future is not made by force, but by resonance. That some things must be gently rewritten in the body before they can be lived out loud.

I believe that presence is the portal. That people don’t need to be saved. They need space. And maybe a hand. And a mirror that says:

You are not too late. You are not too much. You are not the problem. You are the path

📍 Serving Clients Worldwide via Zoom | Learn More at Ingram’s Path

https://www.ingramspath.com
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Fear and How It Shapes Us: Breaking Free from the Cage We Build Ourselves

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