Advanced DBT & Emotional Regulation

September 12, 2025

Radical Compassion for the “Protective Part”: Using DBT to Heal Chronic Shame

If you live with chronic shame, you know it isn’t just a “bad mood.” It’s a full-body experience. It’s the heat in your cheeks, the weight in your chest, and the overwhelming urge to disappear, hide, or shrink into the floorboards.

In the mental health world, shame is often treated as a “distorted thought” that we need to argue away. But at Bring Joy Home, we look at shame through a somatic lens. We see shame as a Protective Part of your nervous system—one that is stuck in a “Dorsal Vagal” collapse.

To heal shame, we don’t try to “kill” it. We use the DBT skill Turning the Mind to practice Radical Compassion for the part of you that is trying so hard to protect you by making you small.

radical compassion acceptance

The Biology of the Shame-Spiral

To your nervous system, shame is a survival strategy. In the wild, if a member of a tribe did something that might get them kicked out, the “shame response” would kick in to make them submissive. By looking down, lowering the voice, and shrinking, the individual signals to the “alpha” or the group: “I am not a threat, please don’t exile me.”

For those with trauma, this system is on a hair-trigger. Your brain perceives a small mistake—a typo in an email, a social awkwardness, or even a moment of self-care—as a “threat of exile.” Your body slams on the brakes.

This is why you can’t just “think” your way out of a shame-spiral. Your body believes your life is at stake.

Shame as a ‘Protective Part’

In Somatic Parts Work, we recognize that shame is often a “Manager” or “Protector” part.

  • The Mission: To keep you from being rejected by others.
  • The Method: By criticizing you first, so you “know your place” and don’t take risks that might lead to public failure.

When we view shame as a protector, our relationship to it changes. Instead of saying, “I hate that I feel this way,” we can use Radical Acceptance to say, “I see you, Shame. I see that you are trying to keep me safe by making me invisible. Thank you for trying to protect me, but I am safe enough to be seen right now.”

Turning the Mind: The DBT Path to Compassion

In DBT, Turning the Mind is the practice of choosing—over and over again—to accept reality and move toward a goal. When you are in a shame-spiral, your mind is turned toward “Self-Attack.” To heal, you must “Turn the Mind” toward “Self-Compassion.”

  1. Observe the Spiral: Notice when the “shame-storm” is hitting. Name it: “Ah, my shame protector is very active right now.”
  2. Accept the Sensation: Instead of fighting the heat in your face or the heaviness in your chest, try to breathe into it. Fighting shame only creates more shame.
  3. Make an Inner Commitment: Turn your mind toward the fact that you are a human being who is allowed to make mistakes. Choose to be on your own side.

Somatic Tool: The Heart-Hand Anchor

Because shame is a “collapse” of the nervous system, it responds best to warmth and touch. This provides the physical “safety data” that the brainstem needs to move out of the freeze state.

  • The Practice: Place one hand firmly on your heart and the other on your belly. Feel the warmth of your palms. This isn’t just “comforting”; it stimulates the release of oxytocin and signals to the Vagus nerve that you are “contained” and “safe.” As you hold yourself, say internally: “I am here. I’ve got you. We aren’t going anywhere.”

CBT: Challenging the ‘Universal Defect’

While the body settles, we use CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) to tackle the “Global Labeling” that shame loves. Shame says: “I am a mistake.” Guilt says: “I made a mistake.”

We help you “Check the Facts.” Is it a fact that you are “worthless” because you missed a workout? Is it a fact that you are “unlovable” because a date didn’t go well? By separating your actions from your essence, we break the power of the shame-label.

Bringing Joy Home: From Hiding to Leadership

“Bringing joy home” means creating an internal environment where all parts of you—even the ones that carry shame—are welcome. When the Shame Part realizes that the Self (the Wise Mind) is now capable of handling the world, it doesn’t have to work so hard to hide you. It can finally relax.

You don’t have to be “perfect” to be worthy of your own compassion. In fact, it’s the moments of our deepest “messiness” where compassion is most needed.


Are you tired of living in the shadow of your own self-judgment?

Shame is a heavy burden to carry, but you don’t have to carry it alone. At Bring Joy Home, our therapists are trained to help you navigate the “shame-storm” using somatic, DBT, and parts-work tools that actually get to the root of the collapse. Reach out today to start the process of turning toward yourself with kindness.

About Bring Joy Home

Bring Joy Home is a therapy practice based out of Durango, Colorado, offering in-person services locally and throughout the state of Colorado virtually. We are dedicated to the intersection of behavioral science and somatic wisdom. We believe that true healing requires more than just “talk”; it requires a nervous system that feels safe enough to thrive.

Whether we are supporting clients through psychedelic integration, executive function burnout, or chronic stress, our mission remains the same: to help you move out of survival mode and bring your joy back home.

Learn more about our team of specialists here >>

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Disclaimer: This blog post was written with the help of AI and refined by one of Bring Joy Home’s staff members.