Codependency
lives in each of us; the need for others to love us. Cornel West spoke of
integrity, honesty, and decency. All of these concepts ties into the foundational
principles of relationships. We must learn to first and foremost care for
ourselves. It is a lonely world out there if we do not find a way to feed our
own souls without other people approving our choices we will never be happy. We
will always be searching and begging to be noticed.
It is when we let go of the belief that we need other people we find people that can fill the
fundamental need. When we are in the throes of codependency we need to be reminded to cut our ties to renegotiate with ourselves. This means we take a breath instead blaming the other people in our lives for not meeting our needs even if it seems like it should be their job to do so. Step back, take a breath, and ask yourself “how can I, and I alone, meet this need?” I have found when I stop trying to force people to be my friend it works a lot better that way. People want to engage. Relationships look every shade of the rainbow.
There
is your best friend that you talk to at least once a week, the spiritual leader
that you share a heart connection with but rarely speak to, the friend you keep
in touch with via Facebook, and many more. They are not all the same and to
continue to place our relationships in a box is doing all of us a disservice.
It is time for us to keep open narrative and to start changing our stories. We
do not have to live by what the world told us when we were small. In order to
change the paradigm of codependency to independency and strength we MUST change
how we interact with our stories.
When we
change the story from I am being rejected by people to I am here to learn and
grown. From there you can choose ways to better yourself in your own unique way.
My biggest lesson in this was traveling to Portland last summer to stay with my
father’s business partner who I only met at my father’s memorial service. I did
not expect to spend much time with them as I knew a good friend in the area.
Unfortunately, or fortunately my friend had a family emergency. I found myself
crying in the middle of the San Francisco airport. The grief and loneliness was
overwhelming. I expected my friend to care for me and show me a foreign city. In
that moment I realized that I’d placed the relationship in a box that it did
not deserve to be in. It was yet another lesson in expectations and codependency.
Codependency
is difficult. It is probably one of the hardest and most shameful addictions on
the market. How do you give up on relationships? You don’t. You renegotiate how
you do relationships. You stop blaming those around you for your needs not
being met. You very actively choose not to be childish but instead empower
yourself to do things that feed your soul. What are your passions? Go do them
with people that enjoy what you do, but do not try to make them your best
friend simply enjoy the moment. If you continue to explore different
communities and ways of interacting you will soon find you do not need to
depend upon anyone specific. Community is built so that you feel loved, cared for
but not dependent on any particular individual. It time we step up and allow
the stickiness and the shame slide away.
Will
you join me and dismantling your beliefs about codependency, relationship, and
love? Are you willing to try on a new story for yourself and the world?