Quote: Regret is the feeling you feel when you know you have done an ACT that causes harm to someone else.
not necessarily. Regret can also be knowing one did not take action. Like asking that girl out in school when you could. This doesn't result in any harm. The only harm in this situation is knowing one didn't try. Which can lead to shame. One can also regret not being there for a person when they could before they killed themselves. In that situation harm is very present. Regret and harm aren't always mutual.
Quote: Guilt is the realisation that you have done something that causes harm to another.
Again, the two aren't always mutual. One could feel guilty eating chocolate (which could lead to health issues if one is fat. But if not then no harm). Guilt comes from a realisation that someone did something that MIGHT be counter productive or/and harmful or otherwise be viewed as "something that shouldn't be done" by other people (leading to feelings of shame and guilt). Wherever that's ACTUALLY the case is another matter though (eg: Is it irrational fear). I know guilt all too well. Was a lot of harm involved which lead to it. The trap people fall into with guilt is wallowing in self pity. Which is why I say make it about responsibility instead. It forces you to consider why more. Examine action and reaction.
Quote: Shame is EITHER, the feeling of being ASHAMED in the PRESENT by your act OR....it is the feeling associated with how you view yourself.
Often both. Additional, the PAST leads to PRESENT shame as well. Get looked down on enough and you're going to start seeing yourself that way. This can result in feeling like you can't be "you". Like you're "not allowed" to enjoy/express yourself or be involved in what makes you happy. There's also feeling ashamed for making promises and not keeping them. That can fuel self doubt of ones own abilities. It puts people in relationships in a tight spot. Call them out on it but risk fuelling that self doubt. At the same time it's the only way to stop those broken promises. People might not mean to do that but it still happens. Shame often comes from making mistakes and messing up (which can lead to self loathing/self hate).
Quote: SHAME, is deeply rooted, and according to the National Institute for the Clinical Application of Behavioral Medicine, children as young as 18 months old can develop shame.
I assure you it can happen MUCH sooner. Kids that are too ashamed to show their faces at school (teachers pet) Or when a child is so threatened they only feel safe when they eat (the eating habit itself leading to shame). When so many grown ups go "Do this. Don't do that. I decide what's right/wrong for you" they just get sick of it. Then they do stupid shit. They do regret it. They are ashamed about it (some of them anyway). It's why they develop anxiety, become evasive, isolate themselves. People that young tend to be more honest though. Won't make excuses and go "It was all mistakes". Will freely admit they MEANT to hurt you at times (and therefor there's no shame of a lie or an excuse). So what does this say of grown ups that only ever pin it all on mistakes?
Quote: But here is the rub, sometimes, humans can have their feelings "mislabeled". What the original poster was ACTUALLY feeling was a sense of disappointment, in herself. That is a milder form of shame and was NOT shame.
All labels get mislabelled. It's why I don't hide behind them. Context is what has to be talked about. And how one thing leads to another. The OP is disappointed but how do you know they're not ashamed in their failure? You're also saying "It's mild shame" but them say it's not shame. That contradicts. I think what YOU'RE actually saying is that it's not a high level extremely harmful form of shame. That there's different "levels" of shame. I think that's what you meant.
Different levels or not it's still best to "nip it in the bud" so to speak. Find the "root" of what causes such feelings to exist at all. If a tree is very tall it doesn't mean you have to go over every leaf. Just go right back to that point in time where it all began.