Codependency: the formation of a personality prone to psychological dependence. What does our psychological help look like? Help for codependent parents, relatives and friends of drug addicts and alcoholics in Kaluga

A 19-year-old girl, a successful student, very pretty, well-mannered, was looking for a psychologist “for any money” (with a plea for help in her eyes she came to me for a consultation) who could help her understand what was happening to her. The girl lives in a private house outside the city with her parents and two little sisters. Dating a guy, studying well, working part-time at free time, has an interesting social circle, friends, loves his mother and sisters, helps his family with housework with pleasure. Makes an impression happy person. What's the problem? Stepfather, a very good doctor, a respected man... drinks heavily. And when he is “tipsy,” which happens very often lately, terrible things happen: screams, scandals, he raises his hand to his wife and adopted daughter, my client who is trying to protect her mother. Binges have become the norm in the life of his stepfather, a doctor; he does not go to work during periods of binges. And what does a family do, cover for its breadwinner, since it is very shameful to “wash dirty linen in public.” “I’m ready to give up my life, to do everything to make my mother feel good. What should I do to save my mother and sisters?” - this was the request for therapy. And then there was a story about a guy with whom a girl is dating, there is a problem in the relationship - he often drinks. The girl doesn’t like this at all, but “I love him so much and I’m ready to fight for him...” says the client. Probably, everyone knows many such and similar stories, but few people know that codependency, like addiction, is a chronic, serious, fatal disease. And in this story there are four codependents - a mother, my client and two little preschool sisters who automatically become codependent, because... their father is an alcoholic...

The problem of codependency is very relevant all over the world, particularly in Ukraine. In our society, which depends on a certain mentality, codependency is a part of society that negatively affects the life of a particular person and society as a whole. Codependent relationships interfere with a person’s full life, depriving him of the opportunity to feel joy and pleasure, love, realize himself and improve himself.

Correcting codependency is a long process, since it is necessary to significantly change the usual way of life. Liberation from codependency encounters resistance from society due to relevant traditions and stereotypes.

The concept of “codependency” in modern psychology

Codependency has not yet been sufficiently studied in the world and is not classified as an independent nosology, but is interpreted as a complex personality disorder.

V. D. Moskalenko describes a codependent personality as a person who is completely focused on managing the behavior of another person, without thinking about satisfying his own needs. Codependent people are those who are married or in close relationships with people with chemical dependency, individuals who were raised in emotionally repressive, dysfunctional families where there was addiction or a strict upbringing where the natural expression of feelings was prohibited. Growing up in such a family creates conditions for the formation psychological characteristics which become the basis for codependency.

Feeling dependent on others.

Being in a controlling relationship that demeans the individual.

The need for constant praise and support from others in order to feel that everything is fine.

A feeling of powerlessness that anything can be changed in a destructive relationship.

The need for alcohol, food, sex, work, and other distracting stimulants to distract from problems and worries.

Uncertainty of personal boundaries.

Feeling like a victim, a jester.

Inability to feel true intimacy and love.

Codependency is not only a secondary phenomenon associated with alcohol or drug addiction close, this is also a violation of personality development, which was formed in early child-parent relationships.

A standard example of codependency is the family relationship of an alcoholic and his wife, where she has been unsuccessfully trying for many years (0 years...) to save her life partner from an addiction and, thus, depriving herself of her own life. She carries her own and someone else’s cross, but this burden is beyond her strength, and she will fall under the unbearable load.

Codependent relationships often arise between mother and child, father and child, brother and sister, and even close friends. Therefore, every person has the risk of falling into the trap of codependency.

Codependents are those who react incorrectly and ineffectively to alcoholism, drug addiction or other addiction of loved ones and build relationships with them according to the Karpman triangle, acting simultaneously as a persecutor, a rescuer and a victim.

The goal of the codependent is to receive negative attention, relieve oneself of responsibility, stabilize self-esteem, implement negative children's programs, etc. The adult state is absent in these roles.

Behavior: passivity, constant complaints, demonstration of one’s unviability, no resources or someone needs to change for “me” to be happy.

Goal: to be saved or punished.

Emotions: self-pity, resentment, melancholy, suffering...

Cognitions (thoughts): “I cannot solve my problems, my situation cannot be solved, I was treated unfairly,” etc.

The psychology of codependency is the psychology of an eternal victim who opposes the injustice of the world, wants everyone to pity and protect her, and at the same time makes no attempts to change her life.

Behavior: aggressive, constant accusations, acts solely in his own interests; constantly looks for flaws in others, is in a negative position towards people, criticizes, controls.

Goal: to seize someone else's territory, to punish others.

Emotions: anger, powerlessness, superiority, hatred, anger.

Cognitions: “Everyone owes me - others must do as I see fit, people must be controlled, and those who are guilty must be punished.”

Codependents constantly use various methods of manipulation to get help and sympathy from others.

Passive-aggressive behavior, excuses, actions are aimed at saving others (at the same time the Victim forgets about himself), does more for others than he wants to do, salvation occurs in such a way that in the end everyone remains dissatisfied, problems are not solved.

Goal: building barriers.

Emotions: guilt, righteous anger, irritation, pity, resentment.

Cognitions: “I must save, prevent trouble at any cost, they won’t be able to cope without me.”

The “rescuer” feels responsible for the life of a relative and convinces himself that he must always take care of him, no matter what the cost. Especially in our country, many women have been putting up with drunken husbands for decades, not because of weakness of will, but because of the peculiarity of the mentality: “you should always help your loved ones,” “you can’t abandon a person in trouble,” our women imbibe with their mother’s milk. And, at first glance, what's wrong with that?

The life of the Rescuer depends entirely on the needs and desires of the addict. Rescuers do not know how to say “no”; they take on most of the addict’s responsibilities and adjust their lives to suit him. As in the story of my client: the wife practically raises the children on her own, does most of the housework, is the main breadwinner in the family, while resignedly putting up with her husband’s drunken antics and covering for him. A codependent quickly loses the ability to love himself, defend his desires, and denies himself the right to personal needs. Since they have very low self-esteem, they do not dare to declare their interests and needs, they are afraid of condemnation in society if they refuse the “rescue mission”.

Relationships built according to the Karpman triangle become a substitute for real intimacy.

A way out of this triangle is possible if you build a Partnership triangle, in which the roles will be distributed in this way: Teacher-Assistant-Student.

Codependency on an alcoholic or drug addict is shortcut to psychological disorders and destruction of personal life. The person stops living his own life and prioritizes responsibility and care for the addict. Therefore, they very quickly lose their social circle, forget about hobbies and long term plans and dissolve in the dependent person, not realizing that in this way they are ruining him too.

Constant stress, tension, anxiety, and low self-esteem negatively affect mental health; often, several years after living next to an addict, the codependent develops severe depression and other disorders, and suicidal thoughts may appear.

In addition to the danger to social and psychological health A codependent person has a high risk of becoming dependent: often the wives of addicts, out of despair, themselves begin to take a drink in order to better understand their husband, to become closer to him, and subsequently become patients of drug dispensaries.

Sleep disorders, eating disorders, and psychosomatic diseases are also life companions of a codependent.

In modern psychology there is no single approach to treating codependency. But it has been studied and argued that treatment should be aimed at, firstly, overcoming secondary codependency - expanding the behavioral spectrum of interaction with the addict through a clear understanding of the characteristics of one’s behavior, which contributes to or opposes the continuation of use and the development of the disease.

Secondly, the traumatic experience must be worked through at a conscious level: it is necessary to identify the origins of the development of codependency, reveal personal potential and resources, and work through the sphere of emotions and feelings. Those. cover multifactorial manifestations of codependency: cognitive-emotional, behavioral, psychophysical.

Thus, with my client we built our work at the following levels:

  1. Cognitive – identifying negative automatic thoughts, rules of life, working with inadequate behavioral strategies and their destructive impact on psychological processes and social life.
  2. Emotional - identifying emotional deficits, developing skills of conscious expression of feelings, developing empathy.
  3. Behavioral - changing or abandoning destructive forms of behavior, learning healthy forms of behavior
  4. Psychophysiological - developing the skills of relaxation and regulation of functional states using the Mindfulness technique.

There are Alcoholics Anonymous and Al-Anon groups all over the world - groups for codependents, where a person can get help and support for free. And also a “School for relatives” of addicts, where you can listen to lectures from specialists on this problem for free.

A complete recovery from codependency and addiction is hardly possible, but learning to live with it well is absolutely possible. In my practice large number codependents who cope very successfully with their problem and live a full life.

Work continues with my client and her mother, they are highly motivated, have a great desire to help themselves, so there is no doubt - we can do it!

I'll be happy to help if anyone needs help!

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Comments

Complete recovery from codependency and addiction is hardly possible

I understand that the past cannot be erased or changed as we want, and changing is not easy and takes a long time - from thoughts to behavior. In addition, a person cannot be completely independent in society. But still, please tell us what exactly, in your opinion, remains in us from this virus, and despite what it is possible to “live a quality life”?

Leaving an alcoholic or drug addict and replacing him with another is a common occurrence. This suggests that the person not only does not recover, but aggravates his codependent situation.

Codependents who have learned to live a full life are those who have realized the causes of their illness - the inheritance of destructive parental behavior patterns, the origins of their low self-esteem, understanding why I found myself an alcoholic husband, and accepted themselves with their strengths and weaknesses. These are those who got rid of the feeling of guilt “It’s my fault that he uses.”, learned to respect themselves, their needs and feelings, respect the boundaries of others and defend their boundaries. These are women who have learned to love themselves and have taken responsibility for their lives. They made a conscious choice: to continue saving, controlling, sacrificing, manipulating loved ones, or still start “educating themselves.” Recovering codependents stop provoking the addict to use with their behavior, do not give reasons for breakdowns, and change themselves. And a family is a system, in a system, if one of the links begins to change, the rest need to somehow adapt. At first there is terrible resistance from loved ones, but if you firmly follow the new behavior, the addict will have no choice but to adapt. (In America, they do not undertake treatment for addicts until the family has undergone appropriate rehabilitation. Because after treatment, the addict returns to his previous environment , will very quickly return to the bad habit). And here there are two options for the development of relationships: the addict stops using and begins to change his life. I know such cases, and they are not isolated. The second option is that a woman breaks up with her addict and begins to live according to her new beliefs and values. And can subsequently have a healthy family. Such “miracles” are possible if the codependent is very motivated and wants to recover and improves himself.

You are referring to Moskalenko. Yes, she wrote a good book, but there are also B. Wilson, M. Beatty, V. Novikova, E. Savina, who, unlike Moskalenko, have seen from their own experience the effectiveness of the 12 Steps program and the communities working on its basis.

But “what is too early is not healthy” - women who attend groups for years and do not recover, this is not mythical creatures, but real people.

I also enjoyed reading the authors listed above. I'll add Weinhold's "Liberation on Codependency" - one of my favorites! I “advertise” Al-Anon groups and tell people about them, because... Often codependents with their misfortune have no idea where to look for help. Thank you for not remaining indifferent to this topic!

How to overcome codependency. Psychological online help.

How often do you experience anxiety or depression in relationships? How often do you blame yourself for something or engage in self-criticism? Do you often see doctors about somatic diseases or disorders? If all your answers were the word “often,” then you can confidently add yourself to the group of people suffering from codependency on their partner (husband, wife or other relative living with you). In this case, you need psychological assistance online to break this vicious circle.

Codependency is:

One brief definition there is no codependency. But I’ll still try to give you a definition of codependency. A codependent person is someone who is completely absorbed in controlling the behavior of another person and does not care at all about meeting his own vital needs. Codependency in a certain sense is a denial of oneself.

  1. people who are married or in a loving relationship with someone who is addicted to psychoactive substances;
  2. parents of patients with addiction to psychoactive substances;
  3. people who have one or both parents with substance abuse problems;
  4. people who grew up in emotionally repressive families;
  5. people suffering from addiction before and after the active period of the disease.

What contributes to the emergence of codependency in relationships (according to V.D. Moskalenko)?

Son does not allow you to arrange your personal life - consultation with a psychologist

This is the main characteristic of codependents on which all others are based. Hence such a feature of codependents as an outward focus. These people are completely dependent external assessments, from relationships with others. Codependents do not know how to accept compliments and praise properly. It may even increase their feelings of guilt and inadequacy. Numerous shoulds dominate in their consciousness and vocabulary - “I must”, “you must”.

Low self-esteem can be a motivation for wanting to help others. Since they do not believe that they can be loved and valuable on their own, they try to “earn” the love and attention of others and become indispensable in the family.

2. The desire to control the lives of others.

Codependents believe that they can control everything in the world. The more chaotic the situation at home, the more efforts are made to control it. They think they can control their loved ones' alcohol or drug use.

Codependents are confident that they know better than anyone in the family how events should happen and how other family members should behave. To control others, they use persuasion, threats, coercion, advice, and emphasizing the helplessness of others (“my husband will be lost without me”). They instill in others a feeling of guilt (“I gave you my whole life, and you...”) or use gross dominance and manipulation.

The problem of personal venality in the professional activity of a psychologist

Trying to take control of uncontrollable events leads to depression. Codependents view the inability to achieve goals in matters of control as their own defeat, as a loss of the meaning of life. Other outcomes of the controlling behavior of codependents are frustration and anger.

Codependents take responsibility for others while being completely irresponsible regarding their own well-being. They eat poorly, sleep poorly, do not visit a doctor, and do not know their own needs. By saving the patient, codependents only contribute to the fact that he will continue to use alcohol or drugs.

The attempt to “rescue” never succeeds. This is just a destructive form of behavior for both the codependent and the dependent. Such “care” for others presupposes the incompetence, helplessness of the other, his inability to do what a codependent loved one does for him. All this makes it possible for codependents to feel constantly necessary and irreplaceable.

Many actions of codependents are motivated by fear, which is the basis of any addiction. For codependents, this is the fear of facing reality, the fear of being abandoned, the fear of losing control over life, the fear of the worst. When people are in constant fear, they have a progressive tendency towards rigidity of body and soul. Fear fetters freedom of choice. In addition to fear, the emotional palette of codependents is also dominated by anxiety, shame, guilt, lingering despair, indignation, rage, resentment, self-pity, and anger. These emotions are called toxic. They are used as defense mechanisms.

Personal qualities of a psychologist-consultant

Another characteristic feature of the emotional sphere of codependents is the nullification (clouding) of feelings or even a complete rejection of them, which helps to increase tolerance negative emotions. Gradually, codependents become more tolerant of emotional pain. Negative feelings, due to their intensity, can be generalized and spread to other people. Self-loathing can easily arise. Hiding shame and self-hatred can look like arrogance and superiority over others (this is a transformation of feelings).

Codependents use all forms psychological protection– rationalization, minimization, repression, projection and others, but most of all – denial. They tend to ignore problems or pretend that nothing serious is happening. For example, when parents observe a state of drug intoxication in their son or daughter, they can explain it with anything, but not drug use.

Codependents easily deceive themselves, believe lies, believe everything they are told if it corresponds to what they want. They see only what they want to see and hear only what they want to hear. Denial helps codependents live in a world of illusions, because the truth is very painful. Deceiving yourself is always a destructive process both for yourself and for others. Deception is a form of spiritual degradation. Codependents deny that they have signs of codependency. It is denial that prevents them from asking for help for themselves, prolongs and aggravates the patient’s addiction and keeps the entire family in a dysfunctional state.

Psychologist on Skype

6. Diseases caused by stress.

These are psychosomatic disorders in the form peptic ulcer stomach and duodenum, colitis, hypertension, headache, neurocirculatory dystonia, bronchial asthma, tachycardia, arrhythmia. Codependents get sick because they try to control something that is fundamentally uncontrollable (someone's life). They work hard and spend a lot of energy trying to survive. The emergence of psychosomatic diseases indicates the progression of codependency.

7. Defeat of the spiritual sphere.

Spirituality within the framework of the concept of codependency is defined as the quality of relationships with the subject (person) or object that is most important in life. The most significant and valuable are relationships with yourself, with family, society and God. If the patient, as the disease develops, these relationships and the values ​​associated with them are replaced by relationships with chemical, then for codependents – pathologically altered relationships with a sick family member.

How to get rid of codependency?

You need to get rid of old habits of behavior. They are the ones who can contribute to relapse. Psychological assistance in this case does not focus on one patient, it also includes his family. After all, addiction is a family disease, so treatment and prevention should also be family.

Psychological help for codependents gives them huge benefits in the form of improvement and personal growth, as well as their relatives suffering from addiction, and children growing up in the family. For children, this is an essential element in preventing the development of addiction. It should be recalled that children with addiction constitute a group high risk development of dependence on both psychoactive substances and its non-chemical forms - workaholism, gambling addiction, fanatical commitment to any activity, overeating, love addiction.

Involving the family in therapy speeds up and improves the recovery process of a patient with addiction, reduces the level of stress among relatives, and increases the level of family cohesion.

There is ample evidence of the greater effectiveness of treatment for alcoholism with the involvement of the social environment, in particular the family. The family can both contribute to the recovery of the patient and “get better” themselves.

Child psychologist - via Skype

How to overcome codependency. Psychological online help: 7 comments

I would like to know more, how to get rid of codependency, help, my daughter is growing up, how can she not get caught in the same networks in the future?

Hello, Tatyana! To get rid of codependency, you need to work with a psychologist. Since the roots of codependency run deep into the behavior of the codependent and into thinking, so it is difficult to identify, track and change everything on your own - resistance and psychological defenses will interfere. I work with this problem as a psychologist and am ready to help you! During my work, I give many questions for self-analysis and independent work, which speeds up the process of psychotherapy and makes it possible to achieve greater results in fewer sessions. The first changes can usually be noticed after the first consultation! To schedule a consultation with me, just email me

I would like to sign up for a consultation on this topic. How can I do this? And one more thing: the family will not go to “healing”. Can I handle it myself?

You can definitely do it! I'm waiting for you for a consultation!

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What is codependency? Self-test, ways to get out of co-dependent relationships

Codependent people are completely absorbed in the task of salvation loved one. In a certain sense, codependency is a denial of oneself, one’s desires, interests and feelings. But they don’t notice this, the importance of their own interests is lost.

Types of codependency, ways to get out, seven love languages

Codependent behavior is formed not in marriage with an addicted person, but much earlier - in the parental home. Codependents are characterized by feelings of self-doubt. The desire to receive love and increase the sense of self-worth is realized by showing “concern” for others. They are confident that another person will not love him simply for who he is; they believe that love must be earned.

Codependent people do not know how to define their own boundaries, where “I” ends and the other person begins. Problems, feelings, desires - they have everything in common, everything is shared between them.

The main behavioral traits of codependents are: the desire to “save” loved ones; hyper-responsibility (taking responsibility for another person’s problems); life in constant suffering, pain and fear (as a result of “freezing” of feelings - It is difficult for such a person to answer the question: “What do you feel now?”); all attention and interests are concentrated outside of oneself - on a loved one.

Dependent people, on the contrary, have a reduced sense of responsibility. Their existence is possible only in union with a codependent person who takes upon himself the solution to their problems.

Typically for codependency:

  • delusion, denial, self-deception;
  • compulsive actions;
  • “frozen” feelings;
  • low self-esteem, self-loathing, guilt;
  • suppressed anger, uncontrollable aggression;
  • pressure and control over another person, intrusive help;
  • focus on others, ignoring one's needs, psychosomatic illnesses;
  • communication problems, problems in intimate life, isolation, depressive behavior, suicidal thoughts.

There are three typical roles with dependent people(Cartman triangle):

Stages of codependency

How does codependency develop? After all, there’s no such thing: today everything is fine, but tomorrow morning you wake up and, bang... you’re codependent. Even if all questions with predisposition are included, then everything is still not that fast. Darlene Lancer, family therapist and a codependency specialist cites 3 stages of its development

Early stage

1. Formation of attachment to addiction. Offering and providing gratuitous assistance, support, gifts and other concessions.

Middle stage

1. Denial and minimization of painful aspects (yes, he stole money, but there was still little of it there, yes, it was lying under a fence, but the fence was good and there was no dirt around)

Late stage.

1. Constantly depressed mood.

A codependent is someone who has allowed another person's behavior to influence their own. A codependent is obsessed with controlling the behavior of the addicted (for example, alcohol) person.

The behavior of a codependent is a type of adaptation, the purpose of which is to satisfy one’s needs through caring for someone who, for some reason, is not able to take care of himself. As the savior role progresses, the codependent forgets about his own needs and problems. As a result, even if a physical breakup occurs with an addicted person, codependents transfer the virus of their “disease” to future relationships.

The behavior of codependents is manifested in too much guardianship, taking full responsibility for the financial and emotional well-being of another person, lying and hiding from others negative consequences behavior of the addict, in order to continue to remain in a relationship with him. In the long term, rescuers become completely responsible for their partners, and their own mental and physical health disintegrates. Helping people are also thought to have serious self-control problems.

  • You feel dependent on people, you have a feeling of being trapped in humiliating and controlling relationships;
  • See the meaning of your life in your relationship with your partner, focus all your attention on what he is doing.
  • You use relationships the way some people use alcohol or drugs, becoming dependent on the other person and thinking that you cannot exist and function independently.
  • If you tend to perceive other people's problems as your own, which indicates that you are not able to determine your psychological boundaries. You don’t know where your boundaries end and where other people’s boundaries begin.
  • You have low self-esteem and therefore have an obsessive need for constant approval and support from others in order to feel that everything is going well for you;
  • Always try to make a good impression on others. If you often try to please other people without trusting your own views, perceptions, feelings or beliefs.
  • Listen to other people's opinions and don't defend your own own views and opinions.
  • You try to become necessary to other people. If you are ready to “break yourselves” to do something that, in your opinion, only you can do for other people, although in fact other people can do it perfectly well for themselves.
  • You play the role of a martyr. You suffer, however, you do it nobly. You are ready to put up with situations that are unbearable for you, because you believe that it is your duty to do just that.
  • You are confident that you can control other people and are constantly trying to do this, without admitting to yourself that you never succeed “perfectly”.
  • If you don't understand what's going on with your feelings, or don't trust them, and only express them when you think you can afford it.
  • If you are gullible and often find yourself in situations in life where other people deceive you or do not meet your expectations.

Codependency Test

Read the statements below carefully and put in front of each item the number that reflects your perception of this statement. You should not think long about the answers to the proposed judgments. Choose the answer that most closely matches your opinion.

Test questions:

  1. I find it difficult to make decisions.
  2. It's hard for me to say no.
  3. I have a hard time accepting compliments as something I deserve.
  4. Sometimes I almost get bored if there are no problems to focus on.
  5. I usually don't do for others what they can do for themselves.
  6. If I do something nice for myself, I feel guilty.
  7. I don't worry too much.
  8. I tell myself that everything will be better for me when those close to me change and stop doing what they are doing now.
  9. It seems like in my relationships I always do everything for others and they rarely do anything for me.
  10. Sometimes I become so focused on the other person that I neglect other relationships and things I should be responsible for.
  11. It seems like I often find myself involved in relationships that hurt me.
  12. I hide my true feelings from others.
  13. When someone offends me, I carry it inside me for a long time, and then one day I can explode.
  14. To avoid conflicts, I can go as far as I want.
  15. I often have fear or a feeling of impending disaster.
  16. I often put the needs of others above my own.

To get the sum of points, reverse the point values ​​for points 5 and 7 (for example, if there was 1 point, then replace it with 6 points, 2 with 5 points, 3 with 4 points, 6 with 1 point, 5 with 2 points , 4 - by 3 points) and then add up.

Point amounts:

33-60 - moderately severe codependency,

61-96 - pronounced codependency.

If a person prone to codependency finds himself in a close relationship with an addicted person, be it alcoholism, drug addiction, gambling addiction, etc., then codependency becomes a disease. Without treatment, codependency progresses over time and deprives a person of the ability to build normal relationships with other people. Even if a codependent person manages to break off such a relationship, he is either forced to live alone, or, as a rule, builds a new relationship with the addict again.

Independent exit from codependency.

Giving up complicity in addiction is very difficult. Relatives of addicted people sometimes feel as if they are being asked to abandon their loved one. What it really means is that you need to return to yourself. It is important to take into account (just take into account) the feelings of a loved one in your actions and provide support to him, but at the same time you need to clearly delineate areas of responsibility (do not do for him what he can do himself, do not think for him, do not wish for him). Don't let others take advantage of your feelings and your love.

Codependent people also need the help of a psychologist. It is difficult to realize and accept the fact that you need to start helping yourself. But this is the only way you can learn to build warm and close relationships without compromising your own interests.

Is it possible to get out of a codependent relationship on your own (opinion of psychotherapist Anastasia Fokina):

I get asked these questions so often, and I answer them so often with comments on various posts, that it doesn’t help at all, since questions continue to be asked. Indeed, it can be quite difficult to finish reading the entire cloud of comments; often I myself forget where exactly I answered such questions in order to provide a link. So I finally decided to dedicate a whole post to answering it.

If you can’t get out of a codependent relationship (my note) on your own, then how can you?

With the help of a therapist?

And if there is only one partner in therapy, is there a chance? Because you can’t drag the second one there for anything.

Hopefully, changes in one thing will lead to a change in the dynamics of the relationship. What do you think about this?

So here's what I think about this:

Dependence, the formation of which is caused by an early traumatic situation in a primary relationship, is practically not processed by the psyche itself without the support of a therapist, and sometimes more than one. The fact is that the origins of the difficulties that an adult faces are often so deep that even their simple understanding, that is, bringing them to consciousness, can be very difficult. Moreover, you have to realize a lot again.

Your real relationship with your parents, what was it really like?

Did your parents love you and what kind of love was that?

Were your parents good or bad? What were they really like?

Are people, in principle, only bad or only good?

Did what happened to you in the past depend on you? And now?

What can you really change and what can't you? What are your limits? Your responsibility?

What are you really like? What is your contribution to your life difficulties? And many, many others.

But here it is clear that simply recognizing them will not lead to an improvement in the situation in life; you will have to rethink, experience, process and learn a lot in order for life to improve. Therefore, I’m not the only one who thinks that with such profound things you need to go to a specialist and be prepared to spend a lot of time on it. Those mental defenses that people with early trauma have can be very difficult not only for independent work, but also for working in therapy with a therapist.

In addition, you will need someone on whom you can now count, with whom you can restore lost trust. From whom it will be possible to learn something, including the fact that all people are dependent on each other in one way or another, that needing something from others and receiving is not a sign of weakness, and also receive the implementation of those functions which your personality was not enough for development at one time.

Of course, I don’t want to say that you can’t do anything on your own. This is far from true. Often people send me letters saying that reading my diary helped them a lot in solving their problems. Did the journal really help? Perhaps he provided just some direction, some insight, some outside perspective that the person needed. The work, of course, was done by the man himself. Sometimes the work is very big. But this suggests that he has developed those functions that another may not have, and his work alone will not be so successful.

In addition, codependency is the difficulty of being with someone, the difficulty of creating and maintaining relationships, the inability to receive satisfaction from relationships due to broken trust. Trauma often creates an impenetrable cocoon of protection around the core of a person’s personality from any encroachment by the love of others. Coping with serious forms of such protection on your own is unrealistic. Restoring trust in others alone is also an impossible thing; on the contrary, it is only strengthening the bastions of defense, strengthening the idea on which the life of a rejected child is often based. Namely: “I have to cope with everything alone.” Sometimes it is this statement that needs to be changed, and it can only be changed with the experience of trust.

Sometimes, in not so difficult cases, a person can do a lot for himself through reflection, cultivating awareness, bodily practices, and creativity.

I’m only saying that processing early trauma implies a very deep immersion into oneself, in which case a person needs a relationship with another both as a missing resource, and as an insurance and guarantee that it will be possible to return from there and this journey will not become so dangerous to be afraid to commit it.

Will one partner's movement towards recovery help the relationship as a whole? Because “dragging” the other into therapy ahead of themselves (and others generally see the root of all troubles in the other), trying in every possible way to save the partner, “explain” to him, “let him understand” and so on - this is just “it”, obvious a sign of your codependency.

Sometimes your recovery means your relationship does change, but not always for the better. If your partner is interested in your dependence on him or in his deep dependence on you, then your refusal to always serve as a “donor” to him, to be his soul mate, to complement him, to do something for him that he does not want to learn himself, can greatly upset, and he can break off the relationship and go look for a new “donor”-rescuer. It may happen that a relationship in which there is no development will bore you first, and then you will break it off, going to look for another, healthier and more relationship-oriented person.

Another scenario for the development of the situation may occur: your partner, seeing the improvement in the quality of your life, may begin to feel envy and feel his own interest in such an improvement. In this case, later, he can find himself a therapist.

In some cases, indeed, if your partner was more stable than you, the relationship can “get better” only thanks to your efforts in working on yourself. In such cases, you will begin to turn towards your partner in different directions than before, and you may also find him somewhat different than you saw him before.

Your relationship may still be codependent, but you may find it more satisfying. Therefore, not everyone and not everyone may need therapy. And not everyone considers it something useful for themselves.

You may remain traumatized, but your life may be good enough for you without therapy, which means you have had enough compensation.

THERAPY IS NOT NEEDED FOR ALL PEOPLE WITH SIMILAR PROBLEMS, CODEPENDENCY RELATIONSHIPS IS THE NORM OF TODAY, AND NOT EVERYONE WANTS TO CHANGE THIS. THIS (the fact that someone doesn’t want to change anything globally) IS NOT A PROBLEM, YOU CAN COMPLETELY LIVE WITH THIS.

In order to decide on therapy, you need strong motivation to really do something for yourself, create, change, or, on the contrary, accept what is available, which will also ultimately change something.

If a person says: “Well, I really want to go to therapy, but I just don’t have enough time, money, a good therapist, strength, or emphasize what is needed,” this means that it’s probably worth just taking a more honest look at your opposite desire. You're not there, you don't have it. This means that now you want something else. It is important to accept and respect your decisions, whatever they may be.

The secret of overcoming codependency (opinion of Mark Ifraimov)

Before you read this secret, I ask you to remember: reading deciphered secrets will never replace practice, action, in other words, body movements. Without practice nothing will happen. Use my gift. And if you are an arranger, my technique will very quickly allow your client to achieve the result for which he turns to you.

Codependency is a form of symbiosis

Codependency comes from symbiosis.

The child and mother are initially a single, integral being. Just like the heart or liver are an integral part of the body.

The child eats with his mother, breathes with her, lives with her. He is connected to her by an umbilical cord. The umbilical cord is for him a way of transmitting life from his mother to him.

We are so accustomed to this fact that we do not notice obvious things. Obviously, during 9 months of life through the umbilical cord, we get used to being part of our mother, part of her joys and sorrows.

For the sake of our larger part, we, as a small part, as the creation of our mother, are ready to make any sacrifice. For her sake, we will suffer, save, blame all our lives. Until she becomes happy.

Or until we understand that we made all these childhood decisions as a being in the stage of symbiosis, dependent through the umbilical cord on the one who gave life, gave food and the opportunity to breathe.

I want you to understand my words correctly: each of us loves our mother so much because we are part of her, but we do not realize that most of our decisions that make us suffer and not achieve our desires were made during symbiosis with our mother , who herself has not yet had time to self-realize as an integral personality.

When we cannot create the life we ​​dream of, we are codependent. We immerse ourselves in the role of victim, accuser or savior in order to make this role more happy mom and the one because of whom she suffers.

Mom may suffer because of our father, because of her father, because of her mother, because of someone. It doesn't matter who makes her suffer. It is important to understand that her suffering makes us limited in our ability to create, unfree, dependent on her happiness and mood.

We need a way out of codependency with her, from dependence on her condition.

The umbilical cord is the magic key to the gates of freedom

Cutting the umbilical cord at birth does not make us free. We are so helpless, weak and unconscious that immediately cutting the umbilical cord only worsens our situation.

By delaying cord clamping, you reduce the risk iron deficiency anemia in a child. Increasing evidence suggests that early cord clamping is not the best practice and can lead to health problems. Around the world, about a quarter of all children preschool age suffer from iron deficiency anemia, which can negatively affect the development of the child’s brain and nervous system.

Some more food for thought:

In the museum of Altai culture you can see strange ethnic bags that women tied to their belts and kept the umbilical cords of their children in them. They knitted bags during pregnancy. Then the umbilical cord was dried and was not removed from the belt. As soon as a child fell ill, they crushed small particles into a hot drink, gave it to him to drink, and the child recovered.

Scientists began studying dried umbilical cord and discovered that the immune components contained in the umbilical cord are unique and ideal for the child to whom the umbilical cord belongs.

The umbilical cord is the bridge between the child and the mother, which returns the child to health, vitality and independence, no matter how strange it may sound.

What should those who feel insecure, depressed, lacking the strength to achieve their goals, unworthy of being close to a cool, high-status life partner, dependent on other people’s opinions, do?

Answer: use the conditional umbilical cord to return to a state of symbiosis with your mother and, by consciously connecting with her, gain the opportunity to become a mature, independent person.

Firstly, what is a conditional umbilical cord?

The umbilical cord is a connection with the mother, synchronization with her. As your mother breathed, so did you breathe through the umbilical cord, being in her belly. What she ate was what you ate too.

Nothing has changed in principle. Now you have the same habits that your mother instilled in you since childhood.

But if you now consciously return to symbiosis with your mother, then, having completed your gestalt with her, having satisfied your unsatisfied needs, you will be able to get out of codependency.

To do this, you use an analogue of the umbilical cord - synchronized breathing.

Synchronized breathing is breathing where inhalations and exhalations are performed synchronously, without a pause. Inhalation is carried out consciously, with the use of effort, and as you exhale, you simply let go of the body and it itself, without effort, exhales.

Try right now to inhale through your mouth or nose, and then release your body and exhale (the same way you inhaled: if you inhaled through your mouth, then exhale through your mouth, if you inhaled through your nose, then exhale through your nose). And try to breathe like this for 10 seconds. Did it work? You see - everything is simple.

Secondly, what does it mean to use the conditional umbilical cord to return to a state of symbiosis with your mother?

This means using synchronized breathing in order to breathe together with your mother your state of unity with her.

Is mom's presence necessary at this moment? No, your presence real mom no need. But we need to put in her deputy instead and breathe with him.

Techniques for getting out of codependency

I think you are now ready for the complete technique for overcoming codependency.

Ask someone close to you, preferably female, for example, a friend, to become your mother for 20 minutes.

As in a normal arrangement, appoint her as your mother. Place your hands on her shoulders from behind and tell her: “Now you are not you (not Masha, for example), now you are my mother.”

Stand facing her, hug her and begin to breathe synchronously with her, adjusting to her pace and breathing rhythm. When you fully enter into synchronized breathing, remember everything that bothered you in your relationship with her and breathe out your feelings and thoughts.

The word “breathe” literally means: breathe at the moment when you think or feel something. Just breathe and stay in sync.

Breathe until you move from pain and heaviness to lightness and release. Your subconscious mind itself knows what it is to breathe through your feelings and thoughts. Your body will free itself from discomfort.

When you feel light, you can stop synchronous breathing with the deputy and remove him from the role of your mother, saying: “Now you are not my mother. Now you are you (Masha, for example).”

Why does this technique help you overcome codependency?

Any psychologist can explain to you the mechanism of human projection.

Projection is the tendency to make the environment responsible for what comes from the person himself (F. Pearls).

In other words, projection is the transfer of one’s attitude towards someone from one’s early childhood experiences onto one’s current environment.

And even simpler, the way you treat your mother is the way you treat all women. The way you treat your father is the way you treat all men.

When your umbilical cord was cut, you slowly forgot that you and your mother were once one, you began to consider yourself “I”, and her “Not I”.

In the world of individual objects, it seems to us that this is how it is: mom and I are different.

But the unmet needs that existed at the time the umbilical cord was clamped still force you to look for a way to make the parent happy. The main unsatisfied need at that time was and remains - the need for unity.

Your unity with your mother was broken at a time when you were not ready for it. Violation of this need could cause you to protest and lead you to another need - the need for reproach. You can read more about this in Stephen Wolinsky’s book “Love Relationships.”

The illusion that there is a Me and a Not Me is what makes people suffer, protest, be revolutionaries, go to war, fight against someone, condemn and kill. These are all forms of codependency.

And it all starts with one moment in life: with the observation that mom is unhappy.

When you, through synchronized breathing, merge into one being with the one you denied, the illusion of separation disappears, and you understand at the level of sensations that you can accept another person.

YOU AND HE ARE EQUAL. EQUAL.

This equanimity is the way out of codependency. And you no longer need to feel like an insignificant, unworthy person next to someone who is very dear to you. You are no longer a victim, an accuser, or a rescuer. You don't need burning huts and galloping horses to prove your love.

From now on, you can simply enjoy yourself, being at one with the world and life. Because mom is the world and life.

And you can do the same technique with your father. After all, the father, as Hellinger said, is the key to the world. Father is your strength, respect for you, and therefore material well-being, money.

I want you to have a good understanding of how your personal stability and well-being is achieved in all areas of your life. Just connect with your roots, mom and dad, stop separating them from yourself at the moment when you yourself have not yet established yourself as a person, and all their power will come to you and fill you with love that other people will want to be attracted to you. Like members of your family. Or like your customers.

The secret to getting out of codependency is real unification. As equal to equal.

Synchronized breathing is a tool for overcoming codependency. Believe me, until you include your body in this process, and only think about this concept with your mind, nothing will change.

You will still be looking for a soul mate (see the article Looking for a soul mate? You have codependency, after all!), the true purpose of which will be to find for yourself a resource for your own safety in the person of this half. So that this half does for you what parents, mom or dad should do: ensure survival, satisfy needs, give pleasure.

And the other half will always try to avoid fulfilling the parental functions assigned to her. As a result, he/she will either run away or begin to sabotage sex with you, because parents do not sleep with their children. And you will have no choice but to be disappointed in your other half or in yourself and start looking for a new one.

But when you complete your gestalt with your parents and are psychologically born, having realized and satisfied all your needs in relationships with mom and dad, you yourself will become that Source of satisfying the needs of other people, to which both “halves” and mature individuals will reach out.

There you will be able to consciously choose your life partner, your conscious love. With this person you will become not 0.5+0.5 = 1, but 1+1=3.

Why three? Because synergy will work. That is, your joint creativity will create something more in the world than just a union of two. You will be able to create global value. What will remain for your descendants after your life. This is what everyone wants. Something that makes you feel inspired and inspire those around you.

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Codependent people are completely absorbed in the task of saving a loved one. In a certain sense, codependency is a denial of oneself, one’s desires, interests and feelings. But they don't notice it the importance of one's own interests is lost.

Types of codependency, ways to get out, seven love languages

Codependent behavior is formed not in marriage with an addicted person, but much earlier - in the parental home. Codependents differ in their feelings self-doubt. Wish receive love and increase your sense of self-worth being implemented by showing concern about others. They have the confidence that the other person won't just love him for the fact that he exists, they believe that love must be earned.

Codependent people do not know how to define their own boundaries, where “I” ends and the other person begins. Problems, feelings, desires - they have everything in common, everything is shared between them.

The main behavioral traits of codependents are: desire to "save" loved ones; hyper-responsibility(take on yourself responsibility for another person's problems); life in constant suffering, pain and fear (as a result of “freezing” of feelings - It is difficult for such a person to answer the question: “What do you feel now?”); all attention and interests are concentrated outside of oneself - on a loved one.

Dependents people, on the contrary, have a reduced sense of responsibility. Their existence is possible only in union with a codependent person who takes upon himself the solution to their problems.

Typically for codependency:

  • delusion, denial, self-deception;
  • compulsive actions;
  • “frozen” feelings;
  • low self-esteem, self-loathing, guilt;
  • suppressed anger, uncontrollable aggression;
  • pressure and control over another person, intrusive help;
  • focus on others, ignoring one's needs, psychosomatic illnesses;
  • communication problems, problems in intimate life, isolation, depressive behavior, suicidal thoughts.

We can distinguish three typical roles of codependent people (Cartman’s triangle):

  • the role of “savior”;
  • the role of the “pursuer”;
  • the role of the “victim”.

Stages of codependency

How does codependency develop? After all, there’s no such thing: today everything is fine, but tomorrow morning you wake up and, bang... you’re codependent. Even if all questions with predisposition are included, then everything is still not that fast. Darlene Lancer, family therapist and codependency specialist, cites 3 stages of its development

Early stage

1. Formation of attachment to addiction. Offering and providing gratuitous assistance, support, gifts and other concessions.

2. Constantly trying to please (to turn out to be a “kind”, “good” person who deserves trust).

3. Concern with the behavior of the addict, how and what is happening in his life, how he behaves, why this is happening.

4. Rationalization of the addict’s behavior (there are explanations why he is addicted and that he has no other choice not to be addicted)

5. Doubts about what you see. (Even if the person is drunk, obviously went for a bottle, for a dose, or to play slot machines, the codependent refuses to believe and drives away the thought of what is happening. Gives himself explanations “in fact, this is ...”)

6. Denial of addiction (“in fact, he is not an alcoholic, he just sometimes drinks a bottle of vodka 7 days a week. This is only to relieve stress.” “In fact, he is not addicted to computer games, he just does what he loves, is distracted from everyday life)

7. Refusal of your own activity. (They stay at home so that the husband doesn’t get drunk)

8. Reducing social contacts (they communicate with those who understand which dependent partner is poor and unhappy and maintain a conversation on this topic)

9. The codependent’s own mood depends on the behavior of the partner and his mood.

Middle stage

1. Denial and minimization of painful aspects (yes, he stole money, but there was still little of it there, yes, it was lying under a fence, but the fence was good and there was no dirt around)

2. Covering up (if a person is engaged in the implementation of his addiction, “excuse” him, a white lie)

3. Anxiety, guilt, self-blame (I’m doing little or doing something wrong, since he continues to behave incorrectly)

4. Decreased self-esteem

5. Isolation from friends and acquaintances

6. Constant control over the addict

7. “Nagging”, accusations, manipulation (“I’ll kill myself if you continue…”, “you’ve ruined my whole life”)

8. Anger and confusion (after “everything has been done correctly”, behavior has been changed, conditions have been created, everything has been bought, everything has been sold, specialists, psychics and sorcerers have been involved, he still behaves incorrectly)

9. Understanding that you truly cannot control the life around you and are subject to the whims of the addict.

10. Constant mood swings no longer dependent on the behavior of the addict.

11. Removing responsibility from the addict (it is not his fault that he drinks, takes drugs, gambles)

12. Appearance " family secrets"(no one should tell outside the family that something is going on)

13. The emergence of addiction (the wives of alcoholics may start drinking themselves, some of them are motivated by “so that he gets less” or “so that he doesn’t leave the house”; the development of dependence on food is common)

Late stage.

1. Constantly depressed mood.

2. Developed dependence.

3. Feeling of emptiness and indifference.

4. Hopelessness

5. The appearance of stress-related diseases (hypertension, stomach ulcers, etc.)

6. Increasing attempts at control, even to the point of violence (all sorts of psychotropic drugs can be added to vodka, bandits can be invited “to teach a lesson”)

Based on these parameters, those who assess themselves as codependent can estimate the degree of development of the disorder in themselves.

Codependent– someone who has allowed another person's behavior to influence their own. A codependent is obsessed with controlling the behavior of the addicted (for example, alcohol) person.

Codependent behavior- this is a type of adaptation, the purpose of which is to satisfy one’s needs through caring for someone who, for some reason, is not able to take care of himself. As the savior role progresses, the codependent forgets about his own needs and problems. As a result, even if a physical breakup occurs with an addicted person, codependents transfer the virus of their “disease” to future relationships.

The behavior of codependents is manifested in too much guardianship, taking full responsibility for the financial and emotional well-being of another person, lying and hiding from others the negative consequences of the addict’s behavior in order to continue to remain in a relationship with him. In the long term, rescuers become completely responsible for their partners, and their own mental and physical health disintegrates. Helping people are also thought to have serious self-control problems.

You are codependent if:

  • You feel dependent on people, you have a feeling of being trapped in humiliating and controlling relationships;
  • See the meaning of your life in your relationship with your partner, focus all your attention on what he is doing.
  • You use relationships the way some people use alcohol or drugs, becoming dependent on the other person and thinking that you cannot exist and function independently.
  • If you tend to perceive other people's problems as your own, which indicates that you are not able to determine your psychological boundaries. You don’t know where your boundaries end and where other people’s boundaries begin.
  • You have low self-esteem and therefore have an obsessive need for constant approval and support from others in order to feel that everything is going well for you;
  • Always try to make a good impression on others. If you often try to please other people without trusting your own views, perceptions, feelings or beliefs.
  • You listen to other people's opinions and do not defend your own views and opinions.
  • You try to become necessary to other people. If you are ready to “break yourself” to do something that, in your opinion, only you can do for other people, although in fact other people can do it perfectly well for themselves.
  • You play the role of a martyr. You suffer, however, you do it nobly. You are ready to put up with situations that are unbearable for you, because you believe that it is your duty to do just that.
  • You are confident that you can control other people and are constantly trying to do this, without admitting to yourself that you never succeed “perfectly.”
  • If you don't understand what's going on with your feelings, or don't trust them, and only express them when you think you can afford it.
  • If you are gullible and often find yourself in situations in life where other people deceive you or do not meet your expectations.

Codependency Test

Read the statements below carefully and put in front of each item the number that reflects your perception of this statement. You should not think long about the answers to the proposed judgments. Choose the answer that most closely matches your opinion.

Test questions:

  1. I find it difficult to make decisions.
  2. It's hard for me to say no.
  3. I have a hard time accepting compliments as something I deserve.
  4. Sometimes I almost get bored if there are no problems to focus on.
  5. I usually don't do for others what they can do for themselves.
  6. If I do something nice for myself, I feel guilty.
  7. I don't worry too much.
  8. I tell myself that everything will be better for me when those close to me change and stop doing what they are doing now.
  9. It seems like in my relationships I always do everything for others and they rarely do anything for me.
  10. Sometimes I become so focused on the other person that I neglect other relationships and things I should be responsible for.
  11. It seems like I often find myself involved in relationships that hurt me.
  12. I hide my true feelings from others.
  13. When someone offends me, I carry it inside me for a long time, and then one day I can explode.
  14. To avoid conflicts, I can go as far as I want.
  15. I often have fear or a feeling of impending disaster.
  16. I often put the needs of others above my own.

To get the sum of points, reverse the point values ​​for points 5 and 7 (for example, if there was 1 point, then replace it with 6 points, 2 with 5 points, 3 with 4 points, 6 with 1 point, 5 with 2 points , 4 - by 3 points) and then add up.

Point amounts:

16-32 is the norm,

33-60 - moderately severe codependency,

61-96 - pronounced codependency.

If a person prone to codependency finds himself in a close relationship with an addicted person, be it alcoholism, drug addiction, gambling addiction, etc., then codependency becomes a disease. Without treatment, codependency progresses over time and deprives a person of the ability to build normal relationships with other people. Even if a codependent person manages to break off such a relationship, he is either forced to live alone, or, as a rule, builds a new relationship with the addict again.

Independent exit from codependency.

Disclaimer of complicity depending is very difficult. Relatives of addicted people sometimes feel as if they are being asked to abandon their loved one. What it really means is that I need to get back to myself . Important take into account (just take into account) feelings of a loved one in their actions and support him, but at the same time it is necessary to clearly delineate areas of responsibility (not to do for him what he can do himself, not to think for him, not to wish for him). Don't let others take advantage of your feelings and your love.

Codependent people also need the help of a psychologist. It is difficult to realize and accept the fact that you need to start helping yourself. But this is the only way you can learn to build warm and close relationships without compromising your own interests.

Is it possible to get out of a codependent relationship on your own (opinion of psychotherapist Anastasia Fokina):

I get asked these questions so often, and I answer them so often with comments on various posts, that it doesn’t help at all, since questions continue to be asked. Indeed, it can be quite difficult to finish reading the entire cloud of comments; often I myself forget where exactly I answered such questions in order to provide a link. So I finally decided to dedicate a whole post to answering it.

Here are the questions:

If you can’t get out of a codependent relationship (my note) on your own, then how can you?
With the help of a therapist?
And if there is only one partner in therapy, is there a chance? Because you can’t drag the second one there for anything.
Hopefully, changes in one thing will lead to a change in the dynamics of the relationship. What do you think about this?

So here's what I think about this:
Dependence, the formation of which is caused by an early traumatic situation in a primary relationship, is practically not processed by the psyche itself without the support of a therapist, and sometimes more than one. The fact is that the “laying” of the origins of the difficulties that an adult already faces is often so deep that even their simple understanding, that is, bringing them to consciousness, can be very difficult. Moreover, you have to realize a lot again.

Your real relationship with your parents, what was it really like?
Did your parents love you and what kind of love was that?
Were your parents good or bad? What were they really like?
Are people, in principle, only bad or only good?
Did what happened to you in the past depend on you? And now?
What can you really change and what can't you? What are your limits? Your responsibility?
What are you really like? What is your contribution to your life's difficulties? And many, many others.

But here it is clear that simply recognizing them will not lead to an improvement in the situation in life; you will have to rethink, experience, process and learn a lot in order for life to improve. Therefore, I’m not the only one who thinks that with such profound things you need to go to a specialist and be prepared to spend a lot of time on it. Those mental defenses that people with early trauma have can be very difficult not only for independent work, but also for working in therapy with a therapist.
In addition, you will need someone on whom you can now count, with whom you can restore lost trust. From whom it will be possible to learn something, including the fact that all people are dependent on each other in one way or another, that needing something from others and receiving is not a sign of weakness, and also receive the implementation of those functions which your personality was not enough for development at one time.
Of course, I don’t want to say that you can’t do anything on your own. This is far from true. Often people send me letters saying that reading my diary helped them a lot in solving their problems. Did the journal really help? Perhaps he provided just some direction, some insight, some outside perspective that the person needed. The work, of course, was done by the man himself. Sometimes the work is very big. But this suggests that he has developed those functions that another may not have, and his work alone will not be so successful.

In addition, codependency is the difficulty of being with someone, the difficulty of creating and maintaining relationships, the inability to receive satisfaction from relationships due to broken trust. Trauma often creates an impenetrable cocoon of protection around the core of a person’s personality from any encroachment by the love of others. Coping with serious forms of such protection on your own is unrealistic. Restoring trust in others alone is also an impossible thing; on the contrary, it is only strengthening the bastions of defense, strengthening the idea on which the life of a rejected child is often based. Namely: “I have to cope with everything alone.” Sometimes it is this statement that needs to be changed, and it can only be changed with the experience of trust.

Sometimes, in less difficult cases, a person can do a lot for himself with the help of reflection, cultivating awareness, bodily practices, and creativity.
I’m only saying that processing early trauma implies a very deep immersion into oneself, in which case a person needs a relationship with another both as a missing resource, and as an insurance and guarantee that it will be possible to return from there and this journey will not become so dangerous to be afraid to commit it.

Will one partner's movement towards recovery help the relationship as a whole? Because “dragging” the other into therapy ahead of themselves (and others generally see the root of all troubles in the other), trying in every possible way to save the partner, “explain” to him, “let him understand” and so on - this is just “it”, obvious a sign of your codependency.

Sometimes your recovery means your relationship does change, but not always for the better. If your partner is interested in your dependence on him or in his deep dependence on you, then your refusal to always serve as a “donor” to him, to be his soul mate, to complement him, to do something for him that he does not want to learn himself, can greatly upset, and he can break off the relationship and go look for a new “donor”-savior. It may happen that a relationship in which there is no development will bore you first, and then you will break it off, going to look for another, healthier and more relationship-oriented person.

Another scenario for the development of the situation may occur: your partner, seeing the improvement in the quality of your life, may begin to feel envy and feel his own interest in such an improvement. In this case, later, he can find himself a therapist.
In some cases, indeed, if your partner was more stable than you, the relationship can “get better” and only thanks to your efforts in working on yourself. In such cases, you will begin to turn towards your partner in different directions than before, and you may also find him somewhat different than you saw him before.

Your relationship may still be codependent, but you may find it more satisfying. Therefore, not everyone and not everyone may need therapy. And not everyone considers it something useful for themselves.
You may remain traumatized, but your life may be good enough for you without therapy, which means you have had enough compensation.
THERAPY IS NOT NEEDED FOR ALL PEOPLE WITH SIMILAR PROBLEMS, CODEPENDENCY RELATIONSHIPS IS THE NORM OF TODAY, AND NOT EVERYONE WANTS TO CHANGE THIS. THIS (the fact that someone doesn’t want to change anything globally) IS NOT A PROBLEM, YOU CAN COMPLETELY LIVE WITH THIS.

In order to decide on therapy, you need strong motivation to really do something for yourself, create, change, or, on the contrary, accept what is available, which will also ultimately change something.
If a person says: “Well, I really want to go to therapy, but I just don’t have enough time, money, a good therapist, strength, or emphasize what is needed,” this means that it’s probably worth just taking a more honest look at your opposite desire. You're not there, you don't have it. This means that now you want something else. It is important to accept and respect your decisions, whatever they may be.

The secret of overcoming codependency (opinion of Mark Ifraimov)

Before you read this secret, I ask you to remember: reading deciphered secrets will never replace practice, action, in other words, body movements. Without practice nothing will happen. Use my gift. And if you are an arranger, my technique will very quickly allow your client to achieve the result for which he turns to you.

Codependency is a form of symbiosis

Codependency comes from symbiosis.

The child and mother are initially a single, integral being. Just like the heart or liver are an integral part of the body.

The child eats with his mother, breathes with her, lives with her. He is connected to her by an umbilical cord. The umbilical cord is for him a way of transmitting life from his mother to him.

We are so accustomed to this fact that we do not notice obvious things. Obviously, during 9 months of life through the umbilical cord, we get used to being part of our mother, part of her joys and sorrows.

For the sake of our larger part, we, as a small part, as the creation of our mother, are ready to make any sacrifice. For her sake, we will suffer, save, blame all our lives. Until she becomes happy.

Or until we understand that we made all these childhood decisions as a being in the stage of symbiosis, dependent through the umbilical cord on the one who gave life, gave food and the opportunity to breathe.

I want you to understand my words correctly: each of us loves our mother so much because we are part of her, but we do not realize that most of our decisions that make us suffer and not achieve our desires were made during symbiosis with our mother , who herself has not yet had time to self-realize as an integral personality.

When we cannot create the life we ​​dream of, we are codependent. We immerse ourselves in the role of victim, accuser or savior in order to use this role to make the mother and the one for whom she suffers happier.

Mom may suffer because of our father, because of her father, because of her mother, because of someone. It doesn't matter who makes her suffer. It is important to understand that her suffering makes us limited in our ability to create, unfree, dependent on her happiness and mood.

We need a way out of codependency with her, from dependence on her condition.

The umbilical cord is the magic key to the gates of freedom

Cutting the umbilical cord at birth does not make us free. We are so helpless, weak and unconscious that immediately cutting the umbilical cord only worsens our situation.

By delaying cord clamping, you reduce the risk of iron deficiency anemia in your baby. Increasing evidence suggests that early cord clamping is not the best practice and can lead to health problems. Globally, about a quarter of all preschool children suffer from iron deficiency anemia, which can negatively affect the development of a child's brain and nervous system.

Some more food for thought:

In the museum of Altai culture you can see strange ethnic bags that women tied to their belts and kept the umbilical cords of their children in them. They knitted bags during pregnancy. Then the umbilical cord was dried and was not removed from the belt. As soon as a child fell ill, they crushed small particles into a hot drink, gave it to him to drink, and the child recovered.

Scientists began studying dried umbilical cord and discovered that the immune components contained in the umbilical cord are unique and ideal for the child to whom the umbilical cord belongs.

The umbilical cord is the bridge between the child and the mother, which returns the child to health, vitality and independence, no matter how strange it may sound.

What should those who feel insecure, depressed, lacking the strength to achieve their goals, unworthy of being close to a cool, high-status life partner, dependent on other people’s opinions, do?

Answer: use the conditional umbilical cord to return to a state of symbiosis with your mother and, by consciously connecting with her, gain the opportunity to become a mature, independent person.

Synchronized breathing

Firstly, what is a conditional umbilical cord?

The umbilical cord is a connection with the mother, synchronization with her. As your mother breathed, so did you breathe through the umbilical cord, being in her belly. What she ate was what you ate too.

Nothing has changed in principle. Now you have the same habits that your mother instilled in you since childhood.

But if you now consciously return to symbiosis with your mother, then, having completed your gestalt with her, having satisfied your unsatisfied needs, you will be able to get out of codependency.

To do this, you use an analogue of the umbilical cord - synchronized breathing.

Synchronized breathing is breathing where inhalations and exhalations are performed synchronously, without a pause. Inhalation is carried out consciously, with the use of effort, and as you exhale, you simply let go of the body and it itself, without effort, exhales.

Try right now to inhale through your mouth or nose, and then release your body and exhale (the same way you inhaled: if you inhaled through your mouth, then exhale through your mouth, if you inhaled through your nose, then exhale through your nose). And try to breathe like this for 10 seconds. Did it work? You see - everything is simple.

Secondly, what does it mean to use the conditional umbilical cord to return to a state of symbiosis with your mother?

This means using synchronized breathing in order to breathe together with your mother your state of unity with her.

Is mom's presence necessary at this moment? No, your real mother's presence is not necessary. But we need to put in her deputy instead and breathe with him.

Techniques for getting out of codependency

I think you are now ready for the complete technique for overcoming codependency.

Ask someone close to you, preferably female, for example, a friend, to become your mother for 20 minutes.

As in a normal arrangement, appoint her as your mother. Place your hands on her shoulders from behind and tell her: “Now you are not you (not Masha, for example), now you are my mother.”

Stand facing her, hug her and begin to breathe synchronously with her, adjusting to her pace and breathing rhythm. When you fully enter into synchronized breathing, remember everything that bothered you in your relationship with her and breathe out your feelings and thoughts.

The word “breathe” literally means: breathe at the moment when you think or feel something. Just breathe and stay in sync.

Breathe until you move from pain and heaviness to lightness and release. Your subconscious mind itself knows what it is to breathe through your feelings and thoughts. Your body will free itself from discomfort.

When you feel light, you can stop synchronous breathing with the deputy and remove him from the role of your mother, saying: “Now you are not my mother. Now you are you (Masha, for example).”

Thank your deputy.

Me and Not Me. What's the trick?

Why does this technique help you overcome codependency?

Any psychologist can explain to you the mechanism of human projection.

Projection is the tendency to make the environment responsible for what comes from the person himself (F. Pearls).

In other words, projection is the transfer of one’s attitude towards someone from one’s early childhood experiences onto one’s current environment.

And even simpler, the way you treat your mother is the way you treat all women. The way you treat your father is the way you treat all men.

When your umbilical cord was cut, you slowly forgot that you and your mother were once one, you began to consider yourself “I”, and her “Not I”.

In the world of individual objects, it seems to us that this is how it is: mom and I are different.

But the unmet needs that existed at the time the umbilical cord was clamped still force you to look for a way to make the parent happy. The main unsatisfied need at that time was and remains - the need for unity.

Your unity with your mother was broken at a time when you were not ready for it. Violation of this need could cause you to protest and lead you to another need - the need for reproach. You can read more about this in Stephen Wolinsky’s book “Love Relationships.”

The illusion that there is a Me and a Not Me is what makes people suffer, protest, be revolutionaries, go to war, fight against someone, condemn and kill. These are all forms of codependency.

And it all starts with one moment in life: with the observation that mom is unhappy.

When you, through synchronized breathing, merge into one being with the one you denied, the illusion of separation disappears, and you understand at the level of sensations that you can accept another person.

YOU AND HE ARE EQUAL. EQUAL.

This equanimity is the way out of codependency. And you no longer need to feel like an insignificant, unworthy person next to someone who is very dear to you. You are no longer a victim, an accuser, or a rescuer. You don't need burning huts and galloping horses to prove your love.

From now on, you can simply enjoy yourself, being at one with the world and life. Because mom is the world and life.

And you can do the same technique with your father. After all, the father, as Hellinger said, is the key to the world. Father is your strength, respect for you, and therefore material well-being, money.

I want you to have a good understanding of how your personal stability and well-being is achieved in all areas of your life. Just connect with your roots, mom and dad, stop separating them from yourself at the moment when you yourself have not yet established yourself as a person, and all their power will come to you and fill you with love that other people will want to be attracted to you. Like members of your family. Or like your customers.

The secret to getting out of codependency is real unification. As equal to equal.

Synchronized breathing is a tool for overcoming codependency. Believe me, until you include your body in this process, and only think about this concept with your mind, nothing will change.

You will still be looking for a soul mate (see the article Looking for a soul mate? You have codependency, after all!), the true purpose of which will be to find for yourself a resource for your own safety in the person of this half. So that this half does for you what parents, mom or dad should do: ensure survival, satisfy needs, give pleasure.

And the other half will always try to avoid fulfilling the parental functions assigned to her. As a result, he/she will either run away or begin to sabotage sex with you, because parents do not sleep with their children. And you will have no choice but to be disappointed in your other half or in yourself and start looking for a new one.

But when you complete your gestalt with your parents and are psychologically born, having realized and satisfied all your needs in relationships with mom and dad, you yourself will become that Source of satisfying the needs of other people, to which both “halves” and mature individuals will reach out.

There you will be able to consciously choose your life partner, your conscious love. With this person you will become not 0.5+0.5 = 1, but 1+1=3.

Why three? Because synergy will work. That is, your joint creativity will create something more in the world than just a union of two. You will be able to create global value. What will remain for your descendants after your life. This is what everyone wants. Something that makes you feel inspired and inspire those around you.

This is the main characteristic of codependents on which all others are based. Hence such a feature of codependents as an outward focus. These people are completely dependent on external assessments, on relationships with others. Codependents do not know how to accept compliments and praise properly. It may even increase their feelings of guilt and inadequacy. Numerous shoulds dominate in their consciousness and vocabulary - “I must”, “you must”.

Low self-esteem can be a motivation for wanting to help others. Since they do not believe that they can be loved and valuable on their own, they try to “earn” the love and attention of others and become indispensable in the family.

2. The desire to control the lives of others.

Codependents believe that they can control everything in the world. The more chaotic the situation at home, the more efforts are made to control it. They think they can restrain or drug their loved ones.

Codependents are confident that they know better than anyone in the family how events should happen and how other family members should behave. To control others, they use persuasion, threats, coercion, advice, and emphasizing the helplessness of others (“my husband will be lost without me”). They instill in others a feeling of guilt (“I gave you my whole life, and you...”) or use gross dominance and manipulation.

The problem of personal venality in the professional activity of a psychologist

Trying to take control of uncontrollable events leads to depression. Codependents view the inability to achieve goals in matters of control as their own defeat, as a loss of the meaning of life. Other outcomes of the controlling behavior of codependents are frustration and anger.

Codependents take responsibility for others while being completely irresponsible regarding their own well-being. They eat poorly, sleep poorly, do not visit a doctor, and do not know their own needs. By saving the patient, codependents only contribute to the fact that he will continue to use alcohol or drugs.

The attempt to “rescue” never succeeds. This is just a destructive form of behavior for both the codependent and the dependent. Such “care” for others presupposes the incompetence, helplessness of the other, his inability to do what a codependent loved one does for him. All this makes it possible for codependents to feel constantly necessary and irreplaceable.

4. Feelings.

Many actions of codependents are motivated by fear, which is the basis of any addiction. For codependents, this is the fear of facing reality, the fear of being abandoned, the fear of losing control over life, the fear of the worst. When people are in constant fear, they develop a tendency towards rigidity of body and soul. Fear fetters freedom of choice. In addition to fear, the emotional palette of codependents is also dominated by anxiety, shame, guilt, lingering despair, indignation, rage, resentment, self-pity, and anger. These emotions are called toxic. They are used as defense mechanisms.

Personal qualities of a psychologist-consultant

Another characteristic feature of the emotional sphere of codependents is the nullification (clouding) of feelings or even a complete rejection of them, which helps to increase tolerance of negative emotions. Gradually, codependents become more tolerant of emotional pain. Negative feelings, due to their intensity, can be generalized and spread to other people. Self-loathing can easily arise. Hiding shame and self-hatred can look like arrogance and superiority over others (this is a transformation of feelings).

5. Negation.

Codependents use all forms of psychological defense - rationalization, minimization, repression, projection and others, but most of all - denial. They tend to ignore problems or pretend that nothing serious is happening. For example, when parents observe a state of drug intoxication in their son or daughter, they can explain it with anything, but not drug use.

Codependents easily deceive themselves, believe lies, believe everything they are told if it corresponds to what they want. They see only what they want to see and hear only what they want to hear. Denial helps codependents live in a world of illusions, because the truth is very painful. Deceiving yourself is always a destructive process both for yourself and for others. Deception is a form of spiritual degradation. Codependents deny that they have signs of codependency. It is denial that prevents them from asking for help for themselves, prolongs and aggravates the patient’s addiction and keeps the entire family in a dysfunctional state.

Psychologist on Skype

6. Diseases caused by stress.

These are psychosomatic disorders in the form of gastric and duodenal ulcers, colitis, hypertension, headache, neurocirculatory dystonia, bronchial asthma, tachycardia, arrhythmia. Codependents get sick because they try to control something that is fundamentally uncontrollable (someone's life). They work hard and spend a lot of energy trying to survive. The emergence of psychosomatic diseases indicates the progression of codependency.

7. Defeat of the spiritual sphere.

Spirituality within the framework of the concept of codependency is defined as the quality of relationships with the subject (person) or object that is most important in life. The most significant and valuable are relationships with yourself, with family, society and God. If in a patient, as the disease develops, these relationships and the values ​​associated with them are replaced by relationships with a chemical substance, then in codependents - by pathologically altered relationships with a sick family member.

How to get rid of codependency?

You need to get rid of old habits of behavior. They are the ones who can contribute to relapse. in this case, the focus is not on one patient, it also includes his family. After all, addiction is a family disease, so treatment and prevention should also be family.
Psychological assistance to codependents provides enormous benefits to themselves in the form of health improvement and personal growth, as well as to their dependent relatives and children growing up in the family. For children, this is an essential element in preventing the development of addiction. It should be recalled that children with addiction constitute a high-risk group for developing addiction to both psychoactive substances and its non-chemical forms - workaholism, gambling addiction, fanatical commitment to any activity, overeating, love addiction.
Involving the family in therapy speeds up and improves the recovery process of a patient with addiction, reduces the level of stress among relatives, and increases the level of family cohesion.
Psychological counseling is recommended for women who are in partnerships with men who are addicted to alcohol. Counseling can develop into long-term productive psychotherapy.
There is ample evidence of the greater effectiveness of treatment for alcoholism with the involvement of the social environment, in particular the family. The family can both contribute to the recovery of the patient and “get better” themselves.

45 clergy and volunteers of the Kamensk diocese took part in a two-day seminar “Codependency: theory and practice.” The purpose of the classes is to help parishioners whose loved ones suffer from alcoholism and drug addiction.

The seminar was organized by the Coordination Center for Combating Drug Addiction Synodal Department for Church Charity and Social Service and the Saint's Charitable Foundation righteous John Kronstadt.

Codependency is a topic that is close and understandable to everyone. To the question of the presenters, “Are there anyone in the audience whose relatives do not suffer from any kind of addiction?” Only one hand went up. Moreover, most often it is not the addicts themselves, but their mothers and wives who go to the priests with their troubles...

To help addicts, you need to start with codependents. This idea was initially tried to be conveyed to the participants of the seminar by its presenters - psychologist-consultant of the department for prevention and rehabilitation of addictions of the Krasnoyarsk diocese, Deacon Rodion Petrikov and psychologist charitable foundation“Diakonia” (St. Petersburg) Nikolai Ekimov.

Very often, without realizing it, it is mothers, fathers, wives, grandmothers who, with their codependency, “feed” the addiction of an alcoholic or drug addict - they pity, indulge, protect, deprive of responsibility, and allow manipulation. As a result, they do not allow you to begin to recover. The realization of this fact was a real discovery for many of the seminar participants.

“It’s not me who has problems, it’s him...”

When asking for help, relatives of addicts are often sure that they themselves do not have problems, the whole problem is with their drinking husband or son. “Do something with him,” is what they say most often.

However, drunkenness or drug use is only the visible part of the problem, the tip of the iceberg, so to speak. Psychologist Rodion Petrikov clearly showed that it is based on disharmony family relations, which, in turn, is based on the spiritual crisis of the family. It turns out to be a triangle-pyramid.

The presenter gave an example. At the reception, the woman says that 3 years ago her husband began using hashish. This happened after “we coded it.” Along the way, it turns out that the man is also cheating on his wife, although he has no intention of leaving her. “He’s behind me like behind a stone wall,” the woman explains. She is the breadwinner in the family, and her husband practically does not work.

“There is disharmony in this family,” explains Father Rodion. – After coding, the man stopped drinking, but the addiction itself did not disappear, because its support remained. And, like the Serpent Gorynych, in the place of one severed head another grew... The woman does not give her husband responsibility, and his dissatisfaction seeks outlets in alcohol, drugs, infidelity...

Both relationships between spouses and between parents and children can be disharmonious in a family. The origins of disharmony in a future family are laid in childhood. In our example, the woman was also brought up in a disharmonious family: the father drank, and the mother alone took care of everything...

– But is it really just a matter of who is more important in the family and earns more? – one of the priests asked a question. – The main thing is that there is no love, no responsibility in this family...

“Exactly right,” agreed Rodion Petrikov. – The spiritual crisis (the basis of our triangle) is the deep basis of all troubles. Life without God, outside the church sacraments. If we change this foundation, everything will get better. St. Augustine said back in the 4th century: “If God is in first place, then everything else is in its place.”

According to the presenters, it is necessary to work on all three “fronts” of the triangle - at the level of addiction itself, at the level of relationships in the family and at the level of spirituality.

What is codependency?

Codependency is not just a close relationship with an alcoholic or drug addict. Codependency is the behavior of loved ones that is completely subordinate to the life and actions of the dependent person.

A codependent mother focuses all her thoughts only on her drug-addicted son, forgetting about her husband, other children and grandchildren, about rest and her other needs. Such a woman constantly feels mental pain, guilt, shame, hatred, indignation. She cannot think rationally and soberly. She once again believes her son, who is begging for money under some plausible pretext, or even simply gives it for drugs - in order to avoid a scandal, for fear of making the family misfortune public... There may be other manifestations of codependent behavior.

“Codependency has its origins in a dysfunctional family, where one of the parents was either chemically dependent or an alcoholic, and this illness was hidden,” added Nikolai Ekimov. – A family is a system: if one member is sick, then the whole system is sick. In such families, lying is encouraged and use is covered. There is a lot of shame, dishonesty and it is not customary to talk openly about your feelings. Children from such a family, when they become adults, also choose dependent people as husbands, whom they need to look after, who need to be controlled...

Codependency is based on three pillars: 1) low self-esteem, 2) a compulsive desire to control the lives of others, 3) a desire to take care of others, to save others.

Why is it necessary to work with codependents?

The presenters gave several arguments why it is necessary to work with codependents.

Argument 1: The retinue plays the king. This has, in fact, already been said above. It is the wrong behavior of loved ones that is fertile ground for addiction to flourish. They feed, give money, wash, settle affairs, turn a blind eye to many things, etc.

– When parents or wife realize that they are behaving incorrectly, they will knock out the ground for addiction. The addict, left alone with his illness, will be forced to begin to recover,” the presenter noted.

Argument 2: There are several codependents, but there is only one dependent. And the more codependents “sober up,” the more successful the recovery of an alcoholic or drug addict will be.

A specific case: the parents moved their son, a drug addict, to another apartment and stopped giving him money for drugs. But, as it turned out, only his mother stopped financing his addiction, and his father, having lost all hope and fearing other problems, secretly transferred money to his son.

Often the grandmother is the “malicious agent”. Wanting to be in demand and having a false understanding of love and care, she fuels her grandson’s addiction.

Argument 3: Codependency is older than addiction. As a result of family disharmony, codependency is formed - and addiction grows on the soil prepared for it.

Nikolai Ekimov gave an interesting example: sometimes grandmothers who are raising grandchildren whose parents died from heroin come to see him. At first, the subject of women’s codependency was dependent children, now – dependent grandchildren...

Argument 4: Codependency kills. If codependency is not treated, everything can end in disaster.

Psychological illness can lead to heart attack, stroke, stomach ulcers... and even suicide. Here are the words of one woman, approximately 45 years old: “My son uses heroin. He lives separately, but every morning, when my husband is already at work, he comes to our house - eats and washes himself. This has been going on for 2 years now, and I don’t have the courage to close the door in front of him... If I commit suicide to get out of this system, maybe at least then my son will somehow change..."

How the priests fed the “elephant”

The seminar format was very lively. The participants showed concern and activity - they asked questions and expressed their opinions, shared their experiences, sometimes even interjecting themselves into the presentations of the presenters. They also enjoyed participating in discussions and games. One of them is the “Elephant Menu”. The goal of the game is to understand and feel what codependency feeds on.

First of all, we assigned the roles: Dependent (in our case it was an alcoholic), Hangover, Aggression, Lies, Loneliness, Isolation, Denial, Laziness, Parasitism, Indifference... Alcoholic (played by Irina, a representative of a public teetotal organization) and all the vices that followed with their tails, wandered around the hall, made their way between those sitting, touched them, disturbed them, made noise... Naturally, everyone had few pleasant sensations.

This sketch is an illustration of what happens in a family where there is an addict. In the “second act of the play,” the Alcoholic and all his baggage surrounded Mom. Volunteer Larisa, who played this role, shared her feelings: “It was stuffy, they all got in my way, got in the way, annoyed me. I was angry, but I felt sorry for Alcoholic, because he is my son. I wanted to cut off his entire unpleasant tail..."

Why don’t parents cut off the “tail” and what do they continue to feed the “elephant” - codependent relationships? Participants had to find and justify answers to this question, breaking into groups of 5-6 people.

As a result, the “elephant” menu included: material support for the addict, food and shelter for him; pity for yourself and for him; fear of publicity; fear of saying “no”; guilt; life series in the form of scandals; fear of the addict's aggression; misunderstood parental responsibility; certain benefits due to the addict’s feelings of guilt... The last point is, for example, when a wife receives some kind of gift from her husband, who has recovered from binge drinking.

Say no and face the truth

The discussion about the “elephant” menu was very heated. Nikolai Ekimov commented in detail on some of the “dishes”, giving examples from his practice.

About the fear of publicity. Codependent people live in a feeling of shame. They do not know how and are afraid to ask others for help, for example, their neighbors. When parents create such a shell - a facade of visible well-being, children begin to grow up in madness: they see that dad drinks, but mom says that dad is fine and is just sick. It is important to convince codependent people to open up - it will become easier for them.

About the feeling of guilt. Codependent people are characterized by low self-esteem and insecurity stemming from childhood. Addicts take advantage of this by manipulating a loved one. “It’s your fault that I was raised this way” - such a phrase disarms the unfortunate mother. But she must understand that her dependent son is simply skillfully “cheating” her.

About fear of aggression. Mothers often come to groups for codependents, whose children raise their hands against them, bring company home and arrange “jazz kvass”. At this time, mom sits like a mouse and waits for it all to end. After about ten lessons, people change: the mother, who used to be a mouse, now first warns and then calls the police. And the son begins to feel this and is forced to change.

About the fear of saying “no”. The word “no” is one of the key skills for codependents. Addicts often cheat and extort money supposedly for dental treatment, to pay off loans, or because “otherwise they will kill me.” The word “no” should be tough, without any justification (“I can’t, I don’t have money”). There can be only one explanation: because I don’t want to support your illness. You need to stand your ground, no matter what manipulations the addict comes up with. When a codependent learns to face the truth, when he learns to say “no,” then he will achieve sobriety and codependency will disappear.

– What if a mother gives money so that her son doesn’t kill anyone for money? – one of the priests asked a question.

– One of the problems of codependency is intrusive thoughts, which are constantly spinning in my head. They appear due to severe anxiety. Thinking that something terrible might happen, the mother justifies her wrong actions...

You can look at the situation this way: if a criminal comes to you and says “give me money, otherwise I will kill the person,” will you give the money? Of course, anything can happen. But by saying “no,” we surrender it to the will of God and the will of this person. And we pray that everything will work out...

– Is the phrase “Better to drink than to inject drugs” codependency? – another question from the seminar participants.

- Certainly. Sometimes they say this in their last breath from powerlessness, from being involved in controlling an addicted person.

– What words can help an addict?

“I’m sincerely sad about what’s happening to you. I see that you are suffering from your addiction, I can give you addresses and contacts of centers where they can help you. But, unfortunately, I can’t do more for you, because your illness is beyond my competence, I cannot cope with your illness.” These will no longer be the words of a codependent, but of a recovering person.

“Rope”: the essence of codependent relationships

The discussion of the short film “Rope” was held with great interest. The 10-minute plot is as follows. Two people have their backs turned to each other and are tied with rope. The man drags the girl on him: at first she resists, screams, but then resigns herself. Along the way, this strange couple, wandering near some slums, comes across vicious individuals who insult the girl. And when suddenly she meets a person who decides to help her and unties the rope, the girl herself begins to tighten it again...

It is unlikely that this film left anyone indifferent. One of the women cried while watching...

During small group discussions, seminar participants had to answer the following questions: Why don’t the characters talk? Who is dependent and who is codependent? What can a rope symbolize? What is the goal of the heroes? Who or what do the characters you meet along the way symbolize? What does a person who does them good do to the boundaries of a couple?

Each of the participants understood the film-metaphor about the essence of codependent relationships, recognized as the best at the Seattle International Film Festival, in their own way. But the essence of the exercise was not a single correct interpretation seen, but to feel, realize, hear the opinions and some experience of others...

The priest is on the “throne” of the addict

Another interesting one role play. In the main role (Dependent) is Archpriest Igor Smolin. His task is to swing while standing on a chair. He can afford this because he is surrounded by a Mother, a Wife, a Friend, a Priest, a Chief, who, with their arms outstretched, do not allow him to fall. Father Igor got so into the role that the other “actors” needed great physical effort to keep him from falling. As a result, the violent Addict was picked up by a Friend, played by Priest Igor Aksenov, to the general laughter of the seminar participants.

The point of this game is to clearly demonstrate how codependents support drug addiction or alcoholism of a loved one. It seems to them that by preventing them from falling, they are saving their husband or son. In fact, they contribute to the progression of addiction.

“As soon as I stood on the “throne of the king,” I determined the rules of the game,” he shared his feelings main character Igor Smolin. “I realized which of my loved ones I can rely on more reliably.” And I felt the right to use these relationships with impunity...

“This is how a drug addict very clearly traces his surroundings - who can help with money, who will be sorry, who will feed him,” commented Nikolai Ekimov.

The main character was asked:

– And if everyone moved away, would you continue to swing?

- Of course not.

The presenter noted:

– For some reason, all codependents are sure that if they stop controlling the addict, he will break his nose. But this is unlikely to happen. And if it does happen, the person will feel what a broken nose is. And then he will make a decision: to go for treatment or continue using. But while he is surrounded by support and control, he has no opportunity to feel the risk zone and his fall. By delaying adverse consequences, codependents aggravate the disease.

Rodion Petrikov presented the following universal recommendations to the seminar participants:

1. Start with yourself. The meaning of this rule is in the words of the Savior: “...first take the plank out of your own eye, and then you will see how to remove the speck from your brother’s eye.”

The validity of this rule is confirmed, for example, by the following story. Once a woman came to Father Rodion asking for help: the eldest son was a drug addict and alcoholic, the middle son was a drug addict, the youngest was a slacker... The mother was asked to start with herself and overcome some of her problems. bad habit. It turned out that there is such a problem - smoking. The woman gave up cigarettes and joined the spiritual life... Seven years have passed. Today the eldest of the sons has his own production, he is married and has children. The middle son works for his older brother until he is married. A youngest son became a clergyman...

“This rule also applies to those who help codependents,” added Rodion Petrikov. – When we start with ourselves, we look at a person not with alienated professional interest, but with the understanding that this is the same person as you.

2. Reach agreement. We are talking about the agreement of all family members in understanding the addict’s illness and ways to overcome it. If there is no such agreement, then the situation resembles a fable about a swan, crayfish and pike.

And at the same time, if at least one person in the family begins to recover, then gradually, albeit slowly, the whole system will change.

3. Stop freeing the addict from the negative consequences of behavior. The presenter recalled the parable about prodigal son: the father allowed his beloved son, who accepted half of the inheritance, to squander it, reach the bottom and, having come to his senses, return to his father’s house. Consequences are the only resource to understand that a person is going the wrong way.

4. Provide the addict with information about help. Stopping being codependent does not mean brushing aside the problems of your husband or son. Stepping aside, it is important to give contacts - to build a bridge to the recovery of a loved one. Moreover, it is important to give not just one telephone address of a rehabilitation center or specialist, but several: the effect of choice is triggered.

By the way, Rodion Petrikov gave his phone numbers and other contacts to the participants of the seminar - anyone who wants to recover can contact them.

5. Prayer.“This is the last on the list, but the first in importance,” noted Father Rodion. – It is not possible to bring a problem to the height of spiritual understanding right away: first, it is important to answer the queries that people consider their “daily bread”...

The presenter noted that praying parents should not only repent of their own sin (that they did not raise their son as a Christian and sinned themselves), but also thank God for the trouble that came. After all, it is thanks to this that a person finally begins to grow spiritually. So Blessed Augustine said: “The Lord calls to himself three times: with a whisper of love, with the voice of obstacles, with the scourge of suffering”...

Wonderful words have been said about the power of a mother’s prayer: a mother’s prayer will reach you from the bottom of the sea, a mother’s prayer is higher than the prayer of the elders... Often, having learned about the importance of a mother’s prayer, a woman gains new strength.

And one more recommendation. It was not mentioned in this presentation, but it was discussed in another topic. The main priority in a family where there is an addict should be his recovery. Neither work, nor the opinions of others, nor anything else. For example, it happens that an addict suddenly refuses to go to a rehabilitation center for the reason that he was offered money job. “I’ll work on a rotational basis, earn money, and then I’ll pay for rehabilitation,” he explains. And the parents... agree. They motivate him: otherwise he will lose his job! Such a shift in values ​​cannot be allowed.

Learn pastoral sense...

A lot of interesting and useful things were said at the seminar. It’s simply impossible to tell everything. In addition to the knowledge gained during the classes, the clergy received reading lists, Internet links and various contacts. We also talked to each other and shared our experiences. Almost everyone was unanimous - the seminar was very useful.

Certificates were solemnly presented to the participants of the seminar “Codependency: Theory and Practice” by Bishop Methodius of Kamensk and Alapaevsk. He noted the main point of the seminar: the knowledge gained should help clergy communicate with this category of parishioners.

– In spiritual educational institutions They teach liturgy and dogmatics, but they practically do not teach how to be a shepherd or lead a parish. And working with people is the hardest thing. We need to learn pastoral instincts...

– When you become imbued with such a problem, you understand that you don’t have to rely on just three pieces of advice: confess, take communion and observe fasting. Our task is to help a person stand correctly before God.

Opinions about the seminar of participants

Archpriest Nikolai Trushnikov, rector of the parish in the name of the holy vice of Elijah in Artemovsky:

– I didn’t even expect that the seminar would be so interesting and useful. Although after the classes I was left with a feeling of “undernourishment”: I want to learn even more deeply about the problem. But the important thing is that the seed has been given, the stimulus and ideas have appeared. What I couldn’t decide for myself before can now be solved.

I started working with alcohol addicts about 20 years ago. Lately When the groups were recruited, few addicts came - mostly codependents. But there was no knowledge to work with them. Now they have appeared. In the fall I want to start leading small groups for codependents...

Priest Alexander Kropotukhin, rector of the parish of the Nativity of John the Baptist in the village of Kochnevskoye, Beloyarsk deanery:

– The problem is very relevant, but there was not enough knowledge. Now they are. I have already received tangible benefits from the seminar. There are specific problems in my environment for which I have not seen solutions before. He hesitated, not knowing how to act. Now I have a clear vision - I know where to go, to whom and what to say.

Archpriest Nikolai Neustroev, rector of the parish in the name of St. Nicholas the Wonderworker in Zarechny:

– The seminar is a very useful thing. Unfortunately, we mostly stew in our own juices, and problematic issues when communicating with parishioners, in particular with codependents, they hang in the air. Often we are not able to deal with these problems in a qualified manner. The nature of communication with the parish homeless people, who skillfully press for pity, showed that I, too, are codependent... But after the seminar, knowledge appeared and my mood lifted. I wanted to bring all the information received into the system. The presenters provided links, direct telephone contacts - this is a help and an incentive... Now I am looking closely at advanced, educated young parishioners: perhaps someone could work with codependents.

Priest Nikolai Reshetnikov, rector of the Holy Trinity Bishop's Compound in Irbit:

– The problem of codependency is understandable, but for our work we lacked the exact language – the correct explanation of the situation... At the parish we tried to put the lives of such people on a spiritual basis – so that through confession and the sacraments of the Church they would calm their inner state and look at the situation with different eyes. This helped many women. And they made tough decisions regarding their drinking husbands: they decided to live alone. As a result, over time, the husband took a vow of sobriety and tried to live correctly... Now, having received new knowledge, we will be able to help more...

I would also like to note this point: many problems can be avoided if children are raised from a very early age. After all, we begin to be codependent from the birth of a child: we are ready to do anything to stop crying. The state should be aimed at improving society not only in terms of drug addiction, but also in terms of raising children.

Priest Alexy Lebedev, rector of the Pokrovsky parish in the village of Lugovsky, Talitsa-Tugulym deanery:

– Excellent and very popular seminar. I often encounter the problem of codependency: people come to church, but do not want to accept help. You tell them that they need to work on themselves, too, and they answer exactly as they said at the seminar: they say, it’s not me who has the problems... Or such an example. A woman comes: her husband is drinking. I’ll let you read the book “Codependency” by Zaitsev. “Yes, father, this is about me,” she admits. The advice helps, my husband hasn’t drunk for two months. But then - all over again. It turns out that a wife can drink herself in front of her husband. “But I’m on holidays, little one...”

A very important question - a codependent needs to start with himself. And clergy involved in helping addicts and codependents also need to start with themselves. Otherwise, people will not have trust... We decided to make our parish sober. And in 2 years, 16 parishioners - addicts and codependents - have taken a vow of sobriety.

I am very grateful to the organizers and presenters for the seminar. By acquiring new knowledge, we will “grow for the glory of God, for the consolation of parents, the Church and the Fatherland for the benefit.”

Archpriest Evgeny Taushkanov, rector of the Intercession parish in the village of Volkovo, dean of the Kamensk city deanery:

– I learned a lot of new and useful things at the seminar. I had the opportunity to combine theory with practice on the very first day: I left classes a little early - I had to participate in the commission on juvenile affairs. Among the “patients” there were two drug addicts - 14 and 15 years old. The knowledge I gained during the day of the seminar was very useful to me in conversations with parents. He explained: you need to start with yourself, destroy the child’s power over you. And at the same time begin building a spiritual foundation...

Unfortunately, our experience in working with drug addicts, from the 90s to the 2000s, was not entirely successful. And only now, after this seminar, did we realize the mistakes we had made. Our main mistake is that we paid more attention to the drug addicts themselves, but we missed the codependents. But it is in the family that people spend most of their time. The main task is to teach parents how to behave correctly. Now the problem of drug addiction is rising again, and now it is important not to miss the parents...

However, the phenomenon addictions and codependencies much wider than it might seem. It applies not only to families of alcoholics; moreover, in order to become a codependent family member (the husband or wife of an addict, to develop codependent relationships with children in your family), certain prerequisites are required. We will talk about them in this article.

Navigation through the article “Codependency: the formation of a personality prone to psychological dependence”

Prerequisites for the formation of a personality prone to addiction and codependency

By about 3 years of age, a child must move from the stage of a symbiotic relationship with his mother to independent movement in understanding the world around him. But this can only happen if the mother has given the child a sufficient sense of security and safety.

And in order to give it, you need to be confident enough in yourself, in your abilities, to feel fundamentally protected in this world, which, alas, not all mothers have. Often exactly the opposite happens: a mother, afraid of not being able to cope with the situation for one reason or another, overloaded with fears both for herself and for the child, constantly generates anxiety.

As a result of this anxiety, she tries to satisfy the child’s needs “proactively,” “worries” endlessly, is afraid of any manifestation of his displeasure, etc. She is constantly in terrible tension about the topic “my child should always be fine.”

As a rule, inside this is “otherwise I - bad mother“or “otherwise something irreparable will happen to my child.” Most often, both installations are available.

As a result, the child does not feel safe due to the mother's chronic anxiety and gets used to the fact that the mother is constantly trying to satisfy his every need, without allowing him to sort them out on his own.

Let me give you a simple example. Let's say a child woke up at night because he had taken some uncomfortable position in his sleep. His first reaction is to cry. But if you give the child a little time, he himself can find a comfortable position and calm down.

An anxious mother almost never gives the child time to decide for himself whether the problem is serious or not, whether the problem is worth calling the mother, or whether it can be solved on its own. This is how he gets used to it as he grows up: the older he is, the more problems his mother solves. And not vice versa, as, in theory, it should be: the older he is, the more independent he is.

Do you remember this expression: “Little children are little troubles, but when the children grow up, they grow up into troubles”? This is a reflection of our Russian mentality of anxious mothers. And a reflection of the process of formation of psychological dependence, and sometimes not only psychological.

All this leads to the fact that in those very three years when the personality, his own “I” begins to actively awaken in him, he is not able to gain enough psychological freedom. He cannot switch to understanding the world, leaving his mother somewhat on the sidelines (which is already possible for him due to his age).

After all Mom is constantly worried about him, constantly trying to solve his problems, in fact, she cannot allow him to act on his own, her anxiety creates control, and does not allow the child to grow up. So the child becomes partially stuck in this stage of development. and the feeling of his own “inadequacy” become a familiar and even vital background for him.

After all, being dependent, he receives a strong return in the form of maternal love, support and approval. The equal sign between love and addiction becomes more and more clear every year.

Developing in such conditions, a child does not become an integral person; he grows up with the feeling that there must always be someone nearby who “helps” him be integral. But by itself he cannot be complete - he is accompanied by constant maternal “what if he does something wrong”, “what if he falls and hurts himself”, “what if he makes a mistake”, etc.

And the child himself gets used to believing this, but at the subconscious level, because few people remember how his relationship with his mother proceeded at the age of 2-3 years, and even more so before. He gets used to believing that he cannot live on his own. That he always needs someone who will be responsible, manage, control, worry and care.

Psychological dependence and chemical dependence: men and women

But with all attempts to offer a person meanings, solutions for relaxation or receiving, the addict protests: after all, if he switches to self-sufficiency, he will lose his sense of integrity, which for now is only achievable for him through merging with another, with someone who will be firmly attached to him fears and anxiety, who will be completely focused on him.

Women are more likely to fall into the trap of psychological dependence. She often needs not just a man, but someone who cannot do without her, who will constantly confirm to her that she is needed. And, as a rule, these are men who are prone to addiction. After all, they “will be lost without her,” “they won’t cope without her,” etc.

The scheme here is the same: a woman tries to at least temporarily eliminate the anxiety implanted by her mother, and most often actualizes it through the “rescue” of a man. And thereby creates for himself a feeling of integrity, which was previously experienced in a relationship with an anxious mother.

They complement each other in this system: a man’s dependence makes him helpless, not sufficiently independent and in need of “supervision” from a woman.

And a woman prone to psychological dependence cannot imagine a relationship with an independent and independent man - because then she will not feel so needed, there will be nothing to constantly worry about and worry about. And this is exactly how she is used to perceiving and showing love.

It happens, of course, the other way around, when a woman becomes dependent, and a man takes on the role of a rescuer. But in our country it is more often relevant classic scheme, in which a woman “rescues” an addicted man.

Illustration for the picture of codependent relationships

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