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codependency

How Could You Hurt Me Like This?

by gloria on February 5, 2010

One of words we sprinkle our communications with that drive me up the wall is “hurt.” “How could you hurt your mother like this?”  “I was hurt when she didn’t remember my birthday.”  Or “You hurt me!” Most hurt feelings come from our expectations of others, what they should do or not do, say or refrain from saying. Hurt feelings are a result of magical thinking. Nowhere in the constitution or the law is it written that we must read another‘s mind and commit ourselves to carrying out all their wishes despite our own needs.

Eleanor Roosevelt told us that no one could hurt us without our permission, but we still persist in believing that we are at each other’s mercy when it comes to hurt feelings. We hold others to blame for those feelings, often punishing someone who has no idea what they have done to merit our anger or coldness.

Melanie often sits home and sulks because her husband has committed some hurtful act that Melanie has declared hostile or inconsiderate, yet her husband has no clue why she is in a bad mood when he comes home because Melanie is a grudge holder. She allows her resentment to fester until it becomes a bleeding wound. Then she feels justified in starting an argument or not wanting to have sex with him. Some spouses save up enough hurt feelings to convince themselves to have an affair or get a divorce.

A classic example of grudge holding took place when I was about two and my mother and I were walking along a busy street in our neighborhood. We saw my grandmother, my father’s mother, coming toward us. As we neared she crossed the street in order to avoid us. My mother never knew why she did that, only that it was done deliberately. My mother neither saw nor spoke to my grandmother for 20 years afterward and never found out why my grandmother took offense. Fortunately, in this case, my mother was secretly delighted since she didn’t particularly care for her mother-in-law.

When I was a child I was taught this rhyme, “Sticks and stones will break my bones, but names will never hurt me.” I think that is still true. I often tell my clients that no one can hurt them unless they have a knife, gun or other weapon of mass destruction. Even nasty words said in the heat of anger can’t hurt us unless we let them in. When your best friend says something that “hurts your feelings” you get upset, but if Osama Bin Laden said the same thing you would shrug it off. You are the one who decides what is distressing and what is not.

I have decided to go on a one-woman campaign to eliminate the phrase, “You hurt me.” I am tired of hearing it, and tired of challenging the concept. The other day I had an inspiration. Let’s substitute the word HARM or INJURE for HURT and see if it helps shed light on the situation. Instead of saying, “How could you hurt your mother like this?” say, “How could your harm your mother like this?”  Was mother really harmed when you didn’t visit her? Rather than “I was hurt when she didn’t remember my birthday,” say “I was injured when she didn’t remember my birthday.”  What did the injury look like? How would you feel if your spouse or best friend said, “You harmed me just now when you…?” It isn’t true, is it?

Playing the Hurt Game makes us victims of emotional blackmail. We are held hostage because someone else has the power to make us feel guilty or ashamed. Jenny, a newlywed bride, discovered that her mother-in-law’s birthday was on Christmas Eve day. Jenny came from a large and loving family that celebrated the holiday on Christmas Eve with a wonderful party. Jenny was concerned that if she went to her family on Dec. 24th she would hurt her mother-in-law’s feelings, and if she celebrated with her mother-in-law on her birthday she would hurt her own mother’s feelings.  Jenny was trying to read everyone’s mind and foresee how they would feel. That is impossible.

The key here is to examine our intent. Jenny did not want to hurt anyone. Her intention was to share happiness and love with family members. The problem was that both families had different plans. She realized that no matter what she chose to do, one or the other could take offense.  When Jenny decided to honor her own intention and let her mother and mother-in-law take responsibility for their reactions, she was free of guilt. Since she knew that no harm was meant.

Isn’t it interesting that so many of us have been brain washed to think that we have no power over words?

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Stop Me Before I Love Again

by Gloria on February 21, 2009

Do you fall in love with the same person over and over again? The name may change, but when the honeymoon ends you find yourself in the same old rut with the same problems you had before. Even if you have a PhD and tell yourself that you know better, there you go again. You can learn from your past if you are willing to look below the surface. 

After spending time in therapy as well as a twelve-step group for codependents, Christa divorced her deadbeat addicted husband Ted, who had also been unfaithful to her, only to take up with Andre, another man who was an unemployed compulsive overeater. She maintained that Andre was not at all like her ex, although all her friends tried to make her see how similar the two were. She and Andre set up housekeeping together, and after a while she discovered that he wasn’t looking for work very hard and he too was being unfaithful. 

Since Christa understood that she acted co-dependent, she knew that she tended to find men who needed healing. She enjoyed feeling wanted and needed and thought of herself as a helper, someone who fixed birds with broken wings so they could fly again. The trouble was that the birds she chose rarely flew. They mainly continued to limp through life. 

When Christa decided to break the pattern of unhappy love affairs, I asked her to perform an experiment. I suggested that she continue to socialize and go to places where she might meet eligible single men. I told her to look around the next time she was at a gathering and notice which man she would feel comfortable initiating a conversation with. I also instructed her to look for the man she was most intimidated by, someone she would hesitate to approach. 

The next step was for Christa to engage each man in a conversation and see what she discovered. She had no trouble communicating with the man she felt attracted to. The talk flowed easily, and after a while the potential date told Christa how impressed he was with her and how much he could learn from her. He was interested in taking her out. 

At first Christa felt flattered, but then she realized that he was another bird with a broken wing, and she had risen to the bait and turned on her helper personality full force. However, even with this awareness that she was “doing it again,” she gave him her phone number. 

The second candidate was a good-looking man who gave off an aura of confidence. Christa was nervous as she approached him and felt awkward talking to him. He wasn’t very interested in her and quickly found a reason to move away to talk to someone else. She felt embarrassed and rejected. 

When we discussed the outcome of her experiment, Christa realized that the reason she was uncomfortable speaking with the second man was because he appeared very confident. He didn’t need fixing, and he wasn’t attracted to someone like her who liked to fix people. Although Christa had accepted a date from the first man, she knew that if she went out with him she would just be repeating the situation with Ted and Andre. She would take care of men, but they wouldn’t take care of her needs, except her need to be needed. 

She broke the date and vowed that whenever she met a man like Ted she would run the other way. From then on, Christa was able to recognize the Teds that came her way in less than ten minutes. Although at first she felt at ease with them, she rapidly recognized their neediness, walked away and congratulated herself on now being immune to the charms of Teds and Andres.

With additional counseling she was also able to change her perception of herself from being someone who attracted only needy losers to a confident and capable woman who attracted men who were also capable and confident. If you are ready to break your pattern of unhappy over and over relationships, perform the same experiment and see what you find out about yourself.

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How to Live With a Compulsive Spender

August 24, 2008

Is there someone in your life who is spending compulsively, and you feel frustrated and angry with him or her? You don’t understand why they do what they do, and you can’t understand why they can’t just use a little more willpower. Perhaps you have tried bribery, threats, punishment, rewards, pleading, or trickery, to no [...]

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