The psychological pattern where shame about current economic status fuels endless aspiration for higher class position, which itself generates new shame when the goal isn't reached.
This concept names a self-perpetuating trap visible across class systems: shame about your present position motivates striving for higher status, but this aspiration is rooted in shame rather than positive vision. When the aspiration fails—as it often does—shame intensifies, generating more desperate striving. Yacob's emphasis on reason helps interrupt this cycle by making it visible. The pattern thrives on unreasoned emotion: the automatic feeling that where you are is insufficient, that you should be higher, that others are silently judging your position. By applying rational scrutiny to this cycle, you can ask: am I making this choice because it genuinely serves my flourishing, or because I'm fleeing shame? Is this aspiration mine, or have I inherited it? Breaking the shame-aspiration cycle requires both reason and courage—the courage to stop climbing when the climb itself is driven by internalized shame rather than authentic purpose.
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