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ction with them is a Hardy Boy mystery trying to figure out what the f**k they actually want from you. Exhausting.</p><p id="8330">Do you have any people-pleasers in your life? “Let me get that for you.” “Can I help with that?” “I went ahead and did that thing, even though you told me not to.” Always going out of their way to get in <i>your</i> way. Exhausting.</p><p id="1e7c">How about micromanagers? Are you blessed with an unyielding supervisor of every move you make?</p><p id="41d4">Did you fold the towels improperly? Stir the soup with the wrong spoon? Is there a better way you should be brushing your teeth? Maybe you set your keys down on an inappropriate side of the table? Exhausting.</p><p id="334f">There are innumerable types of codependency, but I think you get the point.</p><h1 id="4209">Parasites of Human Connection</h1><p id="7f76">Notice that codependency is soul-sucking for both the codependent <i>and</i> the individual that is trying like hell to keep the codependent in their own damn lane.</p><p id="f01d">Many codependents have a hollowness about them — an unrelenting neediness formed by childhood abandonment and perpetuated by the self-abandonment that ensued in a desperate attempt to reestablish human connection.</p><p id="4176">As Ernest Becker wrote in <i>The Denial of Death</i>,</p><blockquote id="a39c"><p><b>“One has so little personal ballast that he has to suck in an entire other human being to keep from disappearing or flying away.”</b></p></blockquote><p id="4995">Yup. It’s like that.</p><p id="7a04">Codependency is a malignant childhood wound that tends to bleed out on innocent bystanders for a lifetime of tragically ironic hurt-people-hurt-people-ing.</p><p id="44c2">It’s an unboundaried, emotional tug-of-war, waged by unsuspecting energy vampires without the foggiest notion of why people keep sprinting away from them in all directions.</p><h1 id="6068">Victimhood</h1><p id="8cbe">Again, codependents desperately crave human connection.</p><p id="90c4">This may come from friendships, romantic partners, acquaintances, work, recognition, achievements, accolades, prestige, or whatever.</p><p id="cb35">Therefore, loss of connection, reputation or positive regard from anyone is <i>absolute</i> kryptonite. They will avoid it at all costs.</p><p id="ae74">This explains why many codependents want to remain friends with their exes. The thought of someone not liking them is pretty excruciating, which is often the driving force behind their controlling habits.</p><p id="a290">But it’s exactly these behaviors that cause people to recoil from them.</p><p id="bfb1">Thus, many codependents feel as though they’re being unjustifiably wronged.</p><p id="623d">Can’t the world see how kind, g

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enerous, and wonderful they are?</p><p id="a1ab">They’re just trying to help. Isn’t it obvious they want what’s best for everyone? Why won’t the world cooperate?</p><p id="ec7a">Because the world isn’t responsible for your feelings.</p><p id="14a7">You are.</p><h1 id="ee79">Ghosting</h1><p id="d152">It’s generally accepted that “ghosting” someone — suddenly vanishing completely from their lives — is not upstanding human behavior. I’d like to present an unpopular perspective on that.</p><p id="6fbe">Not all, but perhaps some ghosters have felt as though they were being sucked into a codependent black hole from which they could never return.</p><p id="7f66">If some emotional interloper is trying to invade your soul, breathe your exhales, and move into your headspace, I think it’s completely acceptable to ghost the ever-loving sh*t outta that person.</p><p id="32cc">I call that self-preservation.</p><p id="8709">If you’re someone whose been ghosted repeatedly, there’s a strong possibility that people are literally terrified of the way you do relationships.</p><p id="ac5b">That being around you is suffocating, and the healthiest, safest thing they can think of is to amputate you from their lives completely.</p><p id="fc05">If that be the case, I truly hope you seek help.</p><h1 id="b9bb">Resources</h1><p id="8822">If you don’t know where to begin, just google codependency and see what happens.</p><p id="b4c9">Check out books like <a href="https://amzn.to/3kKveus"><i>Facing Codependenc</i>e</a> or <a href="https://amzn.to/3DKpiKF"><i>Codependent No More</i></a>.</p><p id="10f4">Consider talking to a therapist or a relationship coach.</p><p id="e20f">Drop-in on a few meetings of <a href="https://coda.org/">Codependents Anonymous</a>. Connect with a tribe of people who’re recovering from the same thing you got.</p><p id="7ffd">This shortlist of items is sufficient to launch you into a whole new realm of <a href="https://medium.com/@adam.murauskas/the-journey-of-self-awareness-25d58add4e4f">self-awareness</a> and healing. I promise.</p><p id="64ff">To sum it all up, if simply being alive seems terribly exhausting, you can do better.</p><p id="4351">And codependency just might be your problem.</p><p id="8295"><b>Adam Murauskas</b> is a relationship coach and Medium top writer. He and his wife <a href="https://medium.com/@rebecca.murauskas">Rebecca</a> abandoned their careers and moved to Panamá in 2019 to pursue passions for helping people heal. Take a free relationship quiz at <a href="http://fixyourpicker.com/">FixYourPicker.com</a> or find daily content on Instagram <a href="https://www.instagram.com/fixyourpicker/">@fixyourpicker</a>.</p><p id="13a0">*Article contains affiliate links.</p></article></body>

Do You Know Why Living With Codependency is So Damn Exhausting?

Many people haven’t the slightest clue.

Photo by Vladislav Muslakov on Unsplash

People toss the word codependency around all day, but few know what it really means.

I’m codependent on my mom because I always borrow money from her.

No, you’re dependent. She’s the codependent one.

Codependency is doing things for others that they could definitely do for themselves.

Unwarranted care-taking. Unsolicited advice-giving. It’s compulsive “helping” that usually has negative consequences for both you and others.

It’s managing, manipulating, mothering, and martyrdom.

There are type A codependents who always wanna drive the car and type B codependents eager to ride in the trunk with the luggage.

Codependency is a vast web of dysfunctional patterns and characteristics involving control, compliance, avoidance, low self-esteem, and denial.

It can take various forms, making it difficult to identify for many people.

But one thing’s certain: that shit is exhausting.

The Survival Brain

Being codependent is hard work.

The thing is, we don’t consciously make the commitment because codependency is a trauma response trapped in the limbic system — home to the fight, flight, freeze, or fawn reactions, far below the level of consciousness.

This is why codependency is so relentless.

It’s a neurobiological condition commonly resulting from unmet childhood needs. A maladaptive survival mechanism that won’t go away all on its own.

Codependency is the operating system we download from our dysfunctional family that continues running in the background of our lives, largely undetected for many.

It’s so persistent and all-encompassing that we, as well as others, just assume it’s our personality.

Spoiler alert, it’s not.

For Example

Do you know wishy-washy, kinda-sorta-maybe people who couldn’t communicate their wants and needs clearly if you paid them to?

Each interaction with them is a Hardy Boy mystery trying to figure out what the f**k they actually want from you. Exhausting.

Do you have any people-pleasers in your life? “Let me get that for you.” “Can I help with that?” “I went ahead and did that thing, even though you told me not to.” Always going out of their way to get in your way. Exhausting.

How about micromanagers? Are you blessed with an unyielding supervisor of every move you make?

Did you fold the towels improperly? Stir the soup with the wrong spoon? Is there a better way you should be brushing your teeth? Maybe you set your keys down on an inappropriate side of the table? Exhausting.

There are innumerable types of codependency, but I think you get the point.

Parasites of Human Connection

Notice that codependency is soul-sucking for both the codependent and the individual that is trying like hell to keep the codependent in their own damn lane.

Many codependents have a hollowness about them — an unrelenting neediness formed by childhood abandonment and perpetuated by the self-abandonment that ensued in a desperate attempt to reestablish human connection.

As Ernest Becker wrote in The Denial of Death,

“One has so little personal ballast that he has to suck in an entire other human being to keep from disappearing or flying away.”

Yup. It’s like that.

Codependency is a malignant childhood wound that tends to bleed out on innocent bystanders for a lifetime of tragically ironic hurt-people-hurt-people-ing.

It’s an unboundaried, emotional tug-of-war, waged by unsuspecting energy vampires without the foggiest notion of why people keep sprinting away from them in all directions.

Victimhood

Again, codependents desperately crave human connection.

This may come from friendships, romantic partners, acquaintances, work, recognition, achievements, accolades, prestige, or whatever.

Therefore, loss of connection, reputation or positive regard from anyone is absolute kryptonite. They will avoid it at all costs.

This explains why many codependents want to remain friends with their exes. The thought of someone not liking them is pretty excruciating, which is often the driving force behind their controlling habits.

But it’s exactly these behaviors that cause people to recoil from them.

Thus, many codependents feel as though they’re being unjustifiably wronged.

Can’t the world see how kind, generous, and wonderful they are?

They’re just trying to help. Isn’t it obvious they want what’s best for everyone? Why won’t the world cooperate?

Because the world isn’t responsible for your feelings.

You are.

Ghosting

It’s generally accepted that “ghosting” someone — suddenly vanishing completely from their lives — is not upstanding human behavior. I’d like to present an unpopular perspective on that.

Not all, but perhaps some ghosters have felt as though they were being sucked into a codependent black hole from which they could never return.

If some emotional interloper is trying to invade your soul, breathe your exhales, and move into your headspace, I think it’s completely acceptable to ghost the ever-loving sh*t outta that person.

I call that self-preservation.

If you’re someone whose been ghosted repeatedly, there’s a strong possibility that people are literally terrified of the way you do relationships.

That being around you is suffocating, and the healthiest, safest thing they can think of is to amputate you from their lives completely.

If that be the case, I truly hope you seek help.

Resources

If you don’t know where to begin, just google codependency and see what happens.

Check out books like Facing Codependence or Codependent No More.

Consider talking to a therapist or a relationship coach.

Drop-in on a few meetings of Codependents Anonymous. Connect with a tribe of people who’re recovering from the same thing you got.

This shortlist of items is sufficient to launch you into a whole new realm of self-awareness and healing. I promise.

To sum it all up, if simply being alive seems terribly exhausting, you can do better.

And codependency just might be your problem.

Adam Murauskas is a relationship coach and Medium top writer. He and his wife Rebecca abandoned their careers and moved to Panamá in 2019 to pursue passions for helping people heal. Take a free relationship quiz at FixYourPicker.com or find daily content on Instagram @fixyourpicker.

*Article contains affiliate links.

Mental Health
Relationships
Psychology
Self Improvement
Addiction
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