A beautiful book that I have recommended to so many people since I've read it. Don't let the cover scare you, it's actually not as fluffy as the kite and clouds would suggest.
Sandra Wilson described shame as the feeling of having some unutterable flaw that separates us from the rest of humanity. She compared that feeling to feeling like you are a caterpillar in a butterfly world.
Throughout the chapters of this book, she examines the different avenues in which shame can enter our lives and points the reader to the truth and the hope of being released from that shame. She does mince her words regarding the intensity of the pain nor on the beauty of the healing work of Jesus.
Sandra is straightforward in how abuse brings high levels of shame even though abuse is not the victim’s fault. She tenderly reminds the reader that, “..nothing that anyone ever did to you is a statement about your intrinsic worth. And nothing that anyone ever did to you disqualifies you from receiving all that God has for you.”
A recurring theme throughout the book is the acceptance of flaws and failures. Shame would tell us that to have flaws or to fail is to be different from everyone else, but Sandra exhorts us to remember, “..failing doesn’t make us failures. It simply proves that we are exactly what the Bible says we are--imperfect humans.” and that, "He never promised to eliminate our weaknesses. Instead, God promises that 'the Holy Spirit helps us in our weakness' Romans 8:26"