Guilt
Guilt is a self-conscious emotion that emerges when a person believes they have violated a moral standard or caused harm to another. It operates as a response to one's own actions rather than to the self as a whole, distinguishing it from related emotions like shame. Where shame involves a negative judgment of the entire person ("I am bad"), guilt focuses on a specific behaviour ("I did something bad"). This distinction is psychologically significant because guilt's narrower scope makes it more likely to motivate constructive responses—apologies, restitution, or deliberate changes to future conduct.
Psychologists generally view guilt as an adaptive social emotion that supports cooperation and moral behaviour within communities. The discomfort guilt produces can serve as a signal that behaviour has deviated from personal or social values, prompting reflection and course correction. This function helps maintain trust and cohesion in relationships and groups. However, guilt exists on a spectrum. When guilt becomes excessive, chronic, or attached to situations beyond a person's control, it can shift from a useful signal into a source of prolonged distress that may benefit from professional support.
Understanding guilt as a behaviour-focused emotion rather than a character judgment allows individuals to respond to it more effectively—by examining what went wrong and how to repair it, rather than concluding something is fundamentally wrong with themselves.
Sources: American Psychological Association — APA Dictionary: emotion; Greater Good Science Center, UC Berkeley — Emotions. Educational information only — not medical or psychological advice. See our sources & fact-check policy.
Frequently asked questions
What is guilt?
Guilt is a self-conscious emotion that arises when a person believes they have done something wrong or caused harm. Unlike shame, which targets the whole self ('I am bad'), guilt focuses on a specific behaviour ('I did something bad'),…
What triggers guilt?
Guilt is typically triggered by believing one has done wrong or caused harm.
How is guilt expressed?
Guilt is commonly shown through lowered gaze, tension, apology, reparative behaviour.
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