co-dependency
Co-Dependency is an unhealthy reliance on another person for
every thought, action, and feeling. It consists of people who seem to
be defined by another other person. One person relies so much on
another person's opinion -- that the daily functions they once had as
an individual are lost. That individual is no longer capable of making
his or her own choices.
A person who is co-dependant is constantly striving to please
another person and have made them selves so self-less that they begin
to lose who they are. Their life becomes a sacrifice for another
person.
A person who is co-dependant ceases to be them self and
becomes part of two. A person's want for someone else in their life is
overcome with the need to have someone else in their life in order to
function. The person feels the need to spend every waking moment
thinking about that other person, being with them, talking to them, or
thinking of ways to make that person happier.
While a marriage should strive to do those items, there is a
happy medium and for a lack of a better term, co-dependency could be
considered as 'stalking'. The constantly calling them, seeing them,
thinking about them, giving them things -- are traits of stalkers who
feed their need off the presence of the other person.
If a person doesn't feel happy unless they are with their
significant other, this is where the problem begins. To only gain a
feeling of happiness by someone, an outside factor that you can't
always control is unhealthy. A person must be happy with them selves
and love them selves as a person, if you don't love yourself, how do
you expect someone else to?
During the honeymoon stages of a relationship, it seems
reasonable to want to always be with that person, talk to them, or
think about them ? but it is important to know that your life doesn't
revolve around them.
My grandparents have been married 60 odd years. Their secret
is that she gives the orders and he carries them out, this doesn't work
in all relationships. If one were to die, the other would soon follow.
Every leader needs a follower and every follower needs a
leader. But in relationships, there needs to be a bigger 50/50 balance
of respect and understanding that for the first 18+ years of your life,
you have lived as an individual and you have your own habits, both bad,
as well as good. These habits aren't easily changed. While we strive to
make ourselves better, there will always be something that drives the
other person nuts.
As a couple, each person must live their own lives -- pursue
their own jobs and hobbies.
I dated a girl I worked with, bad idea. Since I was in upper
management, work was my life and I always wanted to talk about it. She
on the other hand didn't. She couldn't figure out why I didn't focus
more on school. Our priorities conflicted each other and shortly our
relationship ended. We both have degrees now, but I have experience and
after I left that job, she was let go.
One weekend after she and I had been dating, I was watching a
movie at my apartment. Usually she went home (from college) on
weekends, but had stayed in town that weekend. We had spent the past
week together and I needed to take a break and be myself. She stopped
by on Saturday and wondered if I was going to call her since she was in
town that weekend. I hadn't planned on it, it would have been good to
hang with her, but I didn't need to. She couldn't understand why I just
sat there and watched a movie while she was in town and we could spend
some time together. Watching movies was one of my favorite things to
do, she usually studied, read, or slept.
My parent's relationship is a good example of a
non-codependent marriage. They work overlapped hours, so they aren't
together 24/7. My mom is usually busy with stuff for church, my dad is
busy with other stuff for church and a community service club. At home,
she works in her office and he works out in the sunroom. They are both
home and happy that they know where the other person is. Every day at
noon they call each other, it is more of a tradition than a need. They
wouldn't be lost of the other person didn't call, it was just part of
their daily routine. Every Friday night they go out to eat and maybe
see a movie, after all, remember that they are friends. Sure mom does
some things for dad that a mom would do. But that is her nature and it
works.
They match as friends to the affect that her strengths are his
weaknesses and vice versa. They compliment each other and have a happy
relationship in which they are dependent on each other for love and
shared memories and the wanting to spend their lives together. They can
go days without the other person. But usually don't.
The couples that call each other six times a day and wonder
where the other person is and why they aren't with them is where it
becomes unhealthy.
A friend of mine was dating one girl who was very
co-dependent. When he'd home from work, she would call just a minute or
two after he walked in and would ask where he was. He would simply say
that he just walked in the door and was resting and this would upset
her. She expected him to spend every moment of his spare time with her.
She didn't give him any freedom to be himself. She lived in
the fear that if he leaves, her life is nothing. Her needs in the
relationship were based on a set of unrealistic expectations. She was
so selfish in wanting her needs to be filled that she didn't consider
his past and his needs. This was the basis for that relationship
ending.
People need their alone time. Time to be by them selves to
think. You shouldn't stress yourself out about the other person so much
that you can't live as an individual. A relationship can bring
happiness, but happiness shouldn't be grounded in another person.
I've been single for quite some time -- maybe by an
unconscious choice, maybe conscious, maybe chance, or maybe by a Higher
power. Being single has given me the opportunities to do what I want to
do, be who I want to be, and discover myself. My plate is so full with
wanting to write a book, to finishing a movie, to making short films,
to getting my finances in order, building credit, getting in shape, and
eating healthy -- that would be a lot to handle and try and maintain a
relationship at the same time.
Aside from relationships, people can become co-dependant on
drugs, alcohol, sex, painkillers, food, and so many more things. If it
is considered bad to be dependant on those, then I would venture to say
it would be bad to be co-dependant in a relationship.
That is another article.
Chad J. Bring is a rising author who just published his first
novel, Left
Standing in addition to co-writing a screenplay for an
independent film through their RoomMate
Productions film production company.
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internet dating,
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