Codependency and the Enabler
When you were a child, did you grow up in a home where
your parents or caretakers took little to no responsibility for their
problems or behaviors? Did you witness a parent support the
behavior of the other regardless of how destructive it was? A parent
providing this support was an enabler. A parent bases his or
her enabling on manipulation and dishonesty that hurts others in
subtle ways. Children are robbed of their ability to see a relationship
clearly due to the inconsistent messages of the enabling parent.
Children are also reinforced for depending heavily on their
codependent parent, which robs them of their own development
in decision-making.
Angela Miller wrote about the enabler:
When not in check,
I will:
Pick up your shoes
Carry your pack
Pay your traffic ticket
Lie to your boss
Do your homework
Remove rocks from your path
And strip you of the joy
Of saying, "I did it myself!"
Do you possess codependent traits? Codependent personalities
evolve from attempts to keep some type of order in a hurtful
relationship. The term codependency refers to a relationship
where one or both parties enable the other to act in certain maladaptive
ways. Many times, the act of enabling satisfies a need
for the codependent person because his or her actions foster a
dependency from the other person or persons in the relationship.
Did your family have an alcoholic or drug-dependent parent? To
enable the parent with the addiction, the codependent parent
makes excuses and lies for the addict, which enables the addiction
to continue. Codependency is reinforced by a person´s need
to be needed.
The enabler thinks irrationally by believing he can maintain
healthy relationships through manipulation and control. He
believes he can do this by avoiding conflict and fostering dependency.
Is it rational for someone to think that he can maintain a
healthy relationship when he does not address problems and he lies
to protect others from their responsibilities? The way a codependent
person can continue to foster this dependency from others is
by controlling situations and people around him. As a child, you
may have been reinforced to comply with actions and decisions of
a parent instead of being afforded opportunities to challenge
those actions that you found to be wrong. Can you see how these
types of messages could foster the development of irrational
thinking? The ongoing themes in a codependent home are to
avoid conflicts and problems and to make excuses for destructive
or hurtful behavior.
Scott is a seventeen-year-old boy who knew that he needed to
be by his mother´s side in order to protect her from his father. His
mother told him how much she loved him and needed him. Scott
was a well-built boy who was popular in school. Many of the girls
in his class liked him. He grew fond of one of the girls and asked
her out on a date. Scott´s mother did not approve of him going out
with the girl. She went to his father and stated that he needed to
do something about his boy who wanted to have sex with girls.
Scott and his father got into a physical confrontation, resulting in
Scott having to go to the hospital to get a cast put on his broken
arm. Scott could not understand why his mother lied when the
doctor asked how his arm was broken. Scott and his mother´s
relationship improved once he stopped dating.
Can you relate to Scott? Over time, children develop a
dependency on their codependent parent to help them through
their life. Their codependent parent´s need to be needed makes
his relationship dysfunctional and filled with hurt. In many
instances, hurt can result from the codependent parent´s attempts
to keep the peace in the family. Over time, the only way a codependent
parent can accomplish this is by being manipulative and
controlling of relationships. He often controls these relationships
by provoking the abusive parent to carry out undeserved punitive
action to further promote the child´s dependency on the codependent
parent.
Why does enabling cause so much hurt in a relationship?
What is the harm with trying to keep the peace? Part of this was
answered in the previous example. The power afforded to the
codependent person in a relationship reinforces his need for control
even if he uses inappropriate means to fulfill his need to be
in control. A second and overlooked reason centers on the inconsistent
messages and unclear expectations presented by someone
who is codependent. These characteristics contribute to a relationship
filled with irrational thoughts and behavior. This kind of
relationship has no clear rules to right and wrong behavior.
There are circumstances within a family´s composition that
leads a parent to act in irrational ways. This, in turn, can contribute
to the child´s irrational thought processes. Did you know
that close to sixty percent of families were headed by a single
parent in 1994? Did you also know that 75 percent of families
with children had both parents working? These numbers demonstrate
the various roles and challenges parents take on today. Did
your parents take on job and social roles that took their attention
away from you? Many parents are forced to work because of the
costs to raise a family. In some families, both parents work in the
pursuit of more material wealth. Each endeavor is admirable as
long as the family is grounded in a morality that places importance
on the relationships within the family unit. A child who
experiences rejection from his parent due to these factors will
make attempts to redirect the parent´s attention. If this fails, the
child will find other means to meet his needs, many times acting
in maladaptive ways to cope with the stress in his life. He
may demonstrate addictive behavior, social withdrawal, or
even violence.
Copyright 2002 Jay Krunszyinsky
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