Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Letting Go of Shame: A Psychoanalytic Reading of The Prodigal Son


Series: Diary of A Divinity Student (Entry #4)




This past semester, I participated in a Student-Faculty Colloquium at Howard University School of Divinity.  I was a student-respondent among three faculty-respondents.  This exercise allowed me to further explore an area of great interest: the intersection of psychology and religion.

(A Response to Dr. Jay-Paul Hinds’ “Shame and it’s Sons: Black Men, Fatherhood and Filicide”)

    What is filicide?  Upon preparing my response, I asked myself this question.  As a result, I could not help but notice that Christ, himself, was a victim of filicide.  According to the Christian story, we are saved by a Father, who begat a son, and killed that son (by way of the cross).  While we emphasize Christ’s degradation and use it as a source of empowerment that invites us to a personal faith-journey of metamorphosis, there is something quite unsettling about this model.  While Dr. Jay-Paul Hinds, in his paper, “Shame and Its Sons: Black Men, Fatherhood and Filicide”, asserts the contrary, it is my opinion, that shame is not a secure base from which to nurture our sons and daughters in the black community.  We are surrounded by a culture of shame.  Furthermore, shame is a complex emotion and it is unrealistic that wholeness can come from such a broken place.  In this response, I have identified the following three areas of shame: theological, societal and familial. 

First, our sons and daughters are oftentimes exposed to a theological shame, as a result of church upbringing.  We are taught that we are to be ashamed of our “sinful” human nature, and that is in fact, proof that we are in need of a savior.  I am reminded of the short story, by Langston Hughes, entitled, “Salvation,” which depicts a thirteen-year-old boy, who was shamed into salvation, if you will.  In fact, our shame is two fold.  Not only are we made to feel a sense of self-disgust as a result of our “sinful” human condition, we are also reminded of the shamefulness of the cross.  Christ sacrificed his shame for our own. Songs such as “I Know It Was The Blood,” further prove this point:

They nailed him to a tree; they nailed him to a tree for me. 
They pierced him in his side; they pierced him in his side, for me. 
One day when I was lost, he died upon the cross and I know it was the blood for me.

Essentially, we are taught that we must admit our shameful shortcomings, accept the gift of salvation, or Christ’s shameful crucifixion was in vain. 



Second, our sons and daughters, growing up in the United States, encounter a societal shame.  It is the shame of bearing black skin.  We live in a land, which enslaved, lynched, and segregated our ancestors, and in many ways still seeks to oppress us today.  Let us take the recent, story of Trayvon Martin, for example.  Many of us know the story.  He was a black, young male, walking through a white neighborhood, on his way to purchase iced tea and skittles, never to return.  And sadly, in our society, such degradation of black males is not uncommon.  Or, for our daughters, beyond the skin, there is a shame attached to black hair.  I am reminded of Tiana Parker, the teary-eyed six-year-old girl in Tulsa, Oklahoma sent home from school because the school “banned natural hairstyles such as afros and dreadlocks.”  Due to these underpinnings of theological and societal shame, I argue that this emotion is not a foundation of familial empowerment for our sons and daughters in the African-American community.  


 *Trayvon Martin and Father, Tracy Martin

However, I applaud Dr. Hinds’ use of a biblical paradigm to shed light on family dynamics and issues of mental health.  This is often a taboo topic in the black community.  Moreover, I hold that in the story of the prodigal son, the father is a starting point for analysis of the family structure, not the answer to it. 

Third, Hinds asserts that for both father and son, mutual shame or vulnerability can serve as a platform for empowerment.  Namely, Hinds assumes that the father is in a healthy enough place to relate to his son, to begin with.  Given the social issues surrounding the father-son dynamic, in our context today, of which Hinds states its effects adequately and with much analysis, the end goal of reconciliation by way of mutual vulnerability seems to understate the complexity of the issue.  Next, Hinds assumes that the father is aware of his own shame and willing to admit how it has impacted the father-son relationship.  The father must do his own internal work before attempting to address the son’s.  As the father, he may not be ready to undergo such a difficult process of self-introspection.  Especially, if his own shame as a son (the father) has not been addressed in his own life.  If the father and son come to a healthy place were reconciliation is possible, it will not come from a place of familial shame.  The father is not all encompassing, possessing all of the answers that the son needs for his own development.  For me, this solution echoes the paternalistic-patriarchal model of our theology.  Perhaps some of the questions we ask God, we hold the answers to.   Perhaps the son has more to say than the parable exemplifies. 


           *The Return of The Prodigal Son by Romare Bearden 
 
From what place should fathers relate to their sons and daughters?  In the story, maybe the father did the right thing in not addressing his son’s inner shame.  Maybe the father was aware of what he COULD provide: monetary as opposed to emotional support.  Perhaps the task for the lost son or daughter is to realize what the father can provide—if anything.  Perhaps it is why the prodigal child took the voyage to begin with.  Throughout our lives as sons or daughters, we will leave home many times.  We will leave in search of a community drastically different from the one in which we were raised.  Or, if the home is a toxic place, one’s journey may not permit them to return home often.  Theological, societal and familial shame are not springboards for hope.   In this case, maybe a healthy home is more psychological than physical. Perhaps this was the case for the prodigal son. Perhaps this (realization) is the place from which growth can occur.