– (You wish, hope “they” or “something else” will
change…)
Those who care, give, help too much… rescue, do, comfort, expect, speak
too much.
Is having “someone to love/serve/rely on” or “a
problem to solve” the most important thing to you?
Is loving/doing/helping/comforting harmful to
or painful for YOU? Are you often giving
more than YOU can give?
Do you constantly believe that if YOU were
loved/helped/rescued by “someone” YOU would no longer feel depressed/ lonely/frustrated/sad/angry/hurt/afraid/crazy/depressed?
Do you tend to be bored? Do you find boring/pass over “nice folks”
who are sensible, open, honest and dependable?
If loving or helping someone means YOU are continually in pain or shortchanged,
this document may be useful.
Focus and change your patterns of
thought and behaviour which have resulted in you being in pain –
You are among those precious, generous-hearted
ones who developed the condition called “loving too much” –
You give or rescue more than you have present
capacity and skill, and reach “empty” “irrational” “depleted.”
Do you feel all, or several, of these listed below
-
Do
you obsess or fantasize (negatively or positively)?
Do
you feel helpless as you recognize the real extent of your problems?
Are
you too “nice?” Do you lie to cover up
and smooth over what is happening?
Do
you avoid, or neglect, some of your primary people to hide your stress, abuse, pain or problems?
Have
you repeatedly try to “fix it” – solve, direct, or control, the events, or people,
around you?
Are
you frequently frustrated, moody, sad, hurt, afraid, tearful, or out of control?
Are
you frequently angry, depressed, guilty or resentful?
Do
you catch yourself saying or being irrational, or desperate, or dramatic?
Do
you sometimes feel tempted to be violent? (DO you
resort to bullying or violence sometimes?)
Do
you feel spaced out? Are you preoccupied? Do you stumble as you walk, or have
accidents?
Do
you feel self-hate, or loathe yourself? Do you FEEL defeated
or outwitted? ARE you defeated or
outwitted?
Do
you justify or excuse yourself, your intentions, and your periodic, or regular, irrational
behavior?
Do
you think you know the answers, you see
the real picture, you can solve the
problem?
Are
you mentally or physically in pain or ill, due to your stressful circumstances?
Here are some RESEARCHED and TRUSTED aspects you
might choose to work on - starting NOW:
Admit
your pain and difficulty in controlling yourself. YOU can’t control others around you either.
Cease
blaming yourself, anyone else, or any circumstances,
for your pain. Change YOUR focus - for
now.
Focus on healing
and managing yourself. Work primarily on YOUR OWN actions – for now.
Seek
help from carefully selected professionals and peers
- for YOUR support and gradual up-skilling over time.
Acknowledge all
YOUR feelings – don’t avoid, don’t deny, don’t wallow. Get the help YOU need.
Build a close
and reliable circle of more mentally and
relationally healthy mentors you can counsel with.
Develop your own skills, talents and interests
– become more fully yourself, your smarter precious, unique self.
These steps below (to
achieve the above) are simple.
They are not easy. They are worthwhile.
These steps will help you along to
greater spiritual, mental, physical, vocational and relational balance and
health.
These steps are all equally
important. They are listed in the most typically
chronological order:
1 Get the help you need - from
trusted and wise professionals and peers.
Research “Mental Health.”
2 Make your own recovery your
first priority – for now. Gain and regain
sanity, balance, rationality.
3 Find and create a support group of
seasoned, safe, wise, gentle and non-judgmental people.
4 Develop your spiritual side
through reasonable, frequent, meaningful, regular spiritual practice.
5 Stop “managing” “controlling” or “helping”
others – for now. (Except for the
safety of the frail or young)
6 Learn to recognize and avoid “bait”
offered to you by others – don’t get “hooked” – ‘swim’ away.
7 Courageously face, and deal with, your
unskilled-ness in this area and your challenges. Be honest.
8 Cultivate the knowledge and skills you need to develop in yourself –
become more resource-full.
9 Become “self-managing” – be
responsible, most of the time, only for how you behave, wherever you are.
10 Share
with others, what you wisely and reasonably can, of what you are
experiencing and learning.
“Work every day on your own
healing.” “Mind your own business.” (Do
your work.)
Strengthen
others only as you are able to - without neglecting yourself.
“You can stay
as you are for the rest of your life… or you can change…”
Adapted from - Robin Norwood 7/08
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