You know that your spouse has a problem and needs your help and support. And you have always prided yourself on being there for him (or her). But now you have come to realize that maybe this isn\’t a good thing. Maybe you have become dependent on his need of you?
Codependence just used to refer to those linked to alcoholism or drug abuse sufferers. However, today’s psychologists have a broader definition. “It really is about how unhealthy emotional people can be obsessed with the pain and suffering of the other person\’s dependencies,” says Carol Cannon, MA, a counselor and program director at The Bridge to Recovery in Bowling Green, Kentucky.
The Six SignsÂ
So are you a codependent? How can you tell? Here are six signs that might suggest you are in a codependent relationship.
Reading the above signs, you think you may be in a codependent relationship, so now what?
Should you leave? Get counseling? It may be hard to think of yourself and your needs after focusing on your spouse\’s needs for so long and fitting yourself around their issues, their demands, as well as their moods. But it is time to put yourself back in the center, take control and think about what is good for you.
Like any problem, you need to understand what’s at the root, says David A Baron, MSEd, DO, chairman of psychiatry at Temple University Health System. “Often the enabler feels guilty about the situation. They care about the other individual in the relationship; [they] know there is a good side to this person. They’re hoping against hope that they can go back to the good times- even when it’s blatantly obvious nothing will change. At some point, they have to realize that the situation has to change,†he says. “They have to get beyond their emotions and look at the history of behavior. This has been a pattern. When you can get past the emotions and examine facts, write them down. Do a little timeline or a score card of bad behavior.”
Where to turn for help?Â
Getting professional counseling from a mental health professional, psychologist, or family physician can give you the strength to break away from a codependent relationship, Baron says. Twelve-step programs also help and are free. Group therapy also works well. You will meet people who have been through what you have, who can offer advice at a grass roots level rather than approaching you as an authority figure.
Jeanne McKeon, EdD, a psychologist at the Center for Addictive Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, suggests short-term family therapy which can be very effective. “You don’t have to get into years of analysis. You’re looking at the family, how it’s affecting everybody, what the game plan should be. Getting everybody together equalizes things so no one feels blamed.”
There is so much information and assistance out there for those suffering from codependency; all you need is to gain the knowledge of that information and the strength to ask for help. And of course, the more you understand codependency and how it affects you, and your relationships with your family and friends, the more you can cope with its effects.
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