Good Life Project - How to Stop Caring Too Much (and Leaving Yourself Empty) | Terri Cole
Episode Date: October 14, 2024Are you a high-achiever who feels overly invested in the outcomes of others? In this insightful episode, psychotherapist Terri Cole dives into the concept of "high-functioning codependency" from her b...ook Too Much: A Guide to Breaking the Cycle of High-Functioning Codependency. Discover whether you exhibit signs like over-functioning, auto-advice giving, and excessive self-sacrifice. Terri provides powerful strategies to find balance, set boundaries, and reclaim your inner peace without compromising your caring nature.You can find Terri at: Website | Instagram | The HFC Toolkit | The Terri Cole Show podcast | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode you’ll also love the conversations we had with Terri about boundaries.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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when you're raised to be a good girl, when you're an over-functioner, when you're a perfectionist,
it's like you do not want to disappoint other people. It really feels bad. And yet,
what I really invite you to do in this book is dial into all the ways that you're disappointing
yourself if you are constantly prioritizing other people's wants, needs, and desires over your own.
So have you ever felt like you're just constantly putting out fires for other people in your life?
Like you're so focused on managing their feelings and situations and outcomes,
making them happy, helping them out and making sure nothing goes wrong,
that you've lost touch with your own internal peace and wellbeing.
So where's the line between caring and caring too much?
We're tipping into what today's guest calls high-functioning codependency.
So my guest, Terry Cole, is a licensed psychotherapist, relationship expert,
and author of the new book, Too Much, A Guide to Breaking the Cycle of High-Functioning
Codependency.
And for over two decades, she's helped clients from all walks of
life, international pop stars, athletes, CEOs, and more learn how to establish healthy boundaries and
overcome dysfunctional relationships. And in our conversation, you'll learn the telltale signs
that you might actually be a high-functioning codependent and how to break free from patterns like over-functioning and endless
self-sacrificing. And Terry shares the huge costs of codependency from burnout to bitter resentment
and how it can limit your potential in all areas of life. And you'll also discover some powerful
mindset shifts and practical tools for developing greater emotional resilience, self-compassion,
and the ability to finally honor
your own wants and needs.
And you'll hear Terry's wisdom
on what she calls true self-care, surrendering control,
and living with more expansion and joy
in this season of life.
So if you've ever felt overly invested
in other people's outcomes
and burned out from chronic self-sacrificing,
or just realized you've kind of lost touch with your own wants and needs,
this conversation will be really eye-opening and take a different look at how to break that cycle.
So excited to share it with you. I'm Jonathan Fields, and this is Good Life Project.
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We were just catching up and you were saying like, yeah, you just turned 60 and using your words, it's fucking great.
It's fucking great. It's fucking great. And I felt like I had like five years prior to where I was like deciding, like, how am I going to do this aging thing?
Because really, I don't even feel like I noticed that I was aging for decades before that when
other people felt like they were.
I really didn't feel like I was.
And then I just made a decision.
I was like, I'm not going to chase youth because I have wisdom and I don't need to.
And I'm not ashamed of the way that I look or anything that I've done or who I am.
And I'm not going to let society tell me that I'm less valuable because I'm 60.
I know I'm not.
I know what I'm bringing to the party and to my life and to my relationships and to
my books and all the shit that I do.
Like, I feel like this is a lot of postmenopausal women. It's like you really, I mean, there's a physiological change, like your
brain actually changes. So the part of you that really needs people pleasing starts shifting and
changing to the part that is more seeing, like we see things from a more macro point of view.
And there's something about going into this phase of being, you know,
this is the last third of my life, let's say, if I live another 30 or 35 years. And it's like,
this is amazing. I don't want to chase my 28-year-old ass because my 60-year-old ass is
just fine. I love that. And it's interesting, you and I are similar ages. I'm like a little
bit behind you. So I'm pushing up against that number myself shortly. And I've actually shared recently on the pod that
I'm sort of in the middle of this two-year window that I call my two by 20 when I turned 58.
I started asking myself, what would I learn, do or build the next two years to set up the next
20 years around simplicity, significance and joy? Like those were the three things that I want to really center because who knows if we have
another day or another decade or another 30, 40 years, God willing.
But I just started asking myself, am I okay with where I am, what I'm doing, who I'm doing
it with, and the state of my mind and body now?
What parts of it am I in?
What parts of it would I like to see different for the next season that
I'm about to step into. And I'm coming to a similar pace to you saying that like, I'm actually
good. You know, we've all done dumb things. I've all done all the yada yada. And yet like where I
am right now, I'm cool with that. And I'm really focused forward. I'm like, okay, so how do I step
into this next season? Whatever is given to me in a way where I'm really
being intentional about the feelings that I want to center in it. So with you, I also think that
you get to this point in life and we have a lot of evidence of the way that we've lived in having,
in our relationships, in our physicality, in our, you know, and I think that for years and years
and years, you put in work, you have a long-term relationship. Vic and I just celebrated 25 years. We've been together 27 years. And those things are intentional, as is my health to the best of my ability. I also got cancer in my 30s, and I don't think I gave that to myself. So it's not to say that we can control everything we can't. But I do think that your choices and your privilege and
your lot in life, all of those things are evidenced in what did you do for the past 30 years? You know
what I mean? Yeah, no, no doubt. So we started on a completely different tangent than where we're
going to land in this conversation. But I just think it's, I mean, and you and I have known each
other for years also, so it's nice to catch up a little bit. You spent the last chunk of time diving into a topic that I would imagine, while I know has been something that
you've experienced personally, but also as a psychotherapist who's been in practice for a
substantial amount of time, I know you've also seen in so many different situations with clients.
And it's this notion of what you call high-functioning
codependency. Take me into this. Well, the why of high-functioning codependency,
why did I coin and trademark this phrase? How did this book become that? Is that I've had a
private therapy practice for 27 years, and I have very highly capable women is like the bulk of my practice. And I would point out and
say, Hey, what you're describing, this is a codependent pattern. And immediately they would
reject the notion. Immediately they would be like, uh, no way, man, I'm not dependent on squat,
Terry. You know that everyone's dependent on me. I'm making all the money. I'm making all the
decisions. I'm managing all the people I'm getting the shit done. I am not dependent on me. I'm making all the money. I'm making all the decisions. I'm managing all the people. I'm getting the shit done. I am not dependent on crap. And what I realized is that
my clients didn't know what a codependency actually is and that they were being influenced
by the so many misconceptions, but it was the Melody Beatty codependent no more,
got to be enabling an alcoholic to be a codependent is what they were going on.
So I knew I needed to educate them.
But then I started looking and saying, hmm, what are the similarities between all of these
clients that I have?
Like there's a through line.
This is a new breed of codependency.
And it was eerily familiar to me because it was my own personal flavor of codependency
in my life.
Because I also would
not have ever, certainly in my 20s and even my early 30s, identified as codependent because I
was so forward motion. So what is it? I'll give you my definition. It's when we are overly invested
in the feelings, states, the outcomes, the situation, the circumstances, the finances,
the careers of the people in our lives to the
detriment of our own internal peace. Because as women and as lovers, obviously, as anybody,
as decent humans, obviously we're invested in our people being happy. This is what we want.
But when you are an HFC, as we call it, you're overly invested to the point of feeling responsible for. If we look at the
foundation of any kind of codependency, it's an overt or covert bid to control other people's
outcomes. And I think that that part of codependency is not talked about much. The
irony with high-functioning codependency is that the more capable you are,
the less codependency looks like codependency, but it still is codependency. So we still suffer.
So as soon as I sort of renamed it and re-identified it from this very high functioning
place, all of my clients without shame were able to say me on the problem. It's me, right? Not to
quote Taylor, but I will. And without shame being like, yes, I am doing all the things for all the people.
I am doing the emotional labor in my relationships. I am exhausted. I am kind of bitter because here's
the thing. We can only do the overgiving and over-functioning and even over-feeling for so
long. So why in your 20s,
you don't even really notice it. It's just the way you are. It's the way you think relationships
are, right? We all have a blueprint, right? A relational blueprint. I just call it your HFC
blueprint, but really it is a relational blueprint, meaning we learn in our families of origin,
culture, country, society, how we are supposed to be in relationship
to other people. And for women, so much of the time, we learned, be compliant, be pleasant,
smile, where's my happy girl, turn that frown around, if you don't have anything nice to say,
don't say anything at all. So we learn all of these things in childhood, that this is what it means to be
a woman and what it means to be a good woman. And it's just built on the back of self-sacrificing.
You hear people say, oh, you love Betty. She'd give anybody the shirt off her back.
I want to be like, keep your effing shirt on Betty. Like why are we giving anybody
our shirt? Where's the discernment and why is this celebrated in our society?
So that inspired me to do a whole bunch of research with my clients, basically. And I
actually was like, we need a book. People are suffering because how can I help my clients
if they don't see themselves in the problem, right? They kept thinking, no, it's not that,
if my boss would just change, if my husband was just change, if my, you know, and I'm like, no. So we can get into
what are the traits, what are the behaviors, what's the cost, what are the fixes, whichever,
however you want to look at it. Yeah. I mean, it's a really fascinating idea. And also I don't
want to skip over this, this subtler idea that when you were first broaching this with clients, that they would sort of summarily reject it.
Because there is this sort of shame-off-and-ride shotgun with the label of codependency.
Yes.
You know, it's like, oh, no, no, no, that's no, no, no.
I'm not that person. And that changing the identifier and sort of like naming this as high functioning codependency has this really interesting shift in the way that I would imagine it lands with people.
And saying, no, no, no, it doesn't, because I think a lot of people hear codependency and what they translate that to also is needy, not capable and competent, right?
Correct.
And you're saying, no, no, no, you're actually extraordinary.
You're performing at the highest levels. And that's, in fact, probably veiling the codependency that's underneath it, but it's
not eliminating the impact of it.
Did I get that right?
Exactly right.
Jonathan, you got the most important stuff, which is that we are still suffering.
And trust me when I tell you, nobody is checking in on an HFC. In my life,
people weren't like, I wonder if Terry's okay. They're like, she's always okay. There will never
be a time when she is not okay. And so what happens is that there's a hyper independence
that comes along with being an HFC, where one of our mottos is, I got it. Another is, it has to be me,
which also there's a self-aggrandizing piece to this, clearly, because obviously,
I got abducted by aliens tomorrow, all the shit I'm doing, someone else would do.
It actually doesn't have to be me. But there's this lack of trust that other people will step up,
or that if they do step up, they'll do it in the way that we want it done, or they'll do
it in the timely fashion that we want it done in. And so, I feel like HFCs, there can be a
perfectionism angle as well, but we've just learned in life that it's easier if I do it myself,
which of course is not true. That is a lie. It's easier in the short run, because you may not have
to have a hard conversation, or you may not have to have a hard conversation,
or you may not have to be vulnerable, because what it's really all about,
if we're looking at it, is this desire, there's a fear of being vulnerable,
that I've certainly had myself, when I was realizing my own codependent ways and just,
you know, going through my own therapeutic journey. And when Dick and I met, because he's
such a capable
person, I would be constantly blocking him from doing things for me. You know, he lived in Jersey,
I was living on the Upper West Side. And he'd be like, let me come scoop you up 20 minutes,
I'll just jump in through the tunnel, pick you up and then come back to the house. And I would
always be like, let me just go to Penn and take the train. It doesn't even make it so much more
efficient. right? And
my mother was like, Tara, why are you blocking this guy from doing nice things for you? He's
trying to make your life easier. He clearly wants to come and pick you up. And she's like, it's not
about efficiency, right? And she said, you know, and if you keep blocking the gifts, the generosity,
the offers, they start drying up because nobody likes to be
continually rejected. His offer of kindness and me rejecting it. And I remember talking about this
in therapy and my therapist was like, why don't you want, why is it hard for you to allow Vic to do
things for you? And I just spontaneously said, because he already has the power to annihilate me.
So weird. She was like, annihilate? That's an interesting choice of words. And it was like,
I'd already let my guard down. I was already in love. I already felt like, wow, this guy turns
out to not be who I think he is. I literally think I'll die. Now, of course, I wouldn't if he hadn't
been who I thought he was.
But it felt that scary.
It felt that life and death.
And I think I had never made myself vulnerable in that way.
And I think that's very HFC.
We don't want to be a burden, but really, we don't want to be vulnerable.
So if I'm in control of everything, even if it's the illusion of control, I had the illusion that I'm protected
from being hurt. Again, an illusion. Yeah. I mean, so powerful when you start to strip it away that
way. When you are in the space of being an HFC in a dysfunctional set of patterns and relationships
for extended period of time, talk to me about what the costs are of this that you have seen unfold.
I mean, you've described a little bit in your life, this could have led to the demise of a
relationship that now has become this gorgeous 25-year relationship. But what are you seeing
consistently across people? What is the path that it leads people down that takes away from the way
they want to live? Well, one thing is that a lot of burnout, people walk into my office, a lot of health problems from TMJ to autoimmune disorders to
insomnia. There's a lot of ways that being this hypervigilant about other people, it's exhausting
to your nervous system. And eventually, we become resentful. Eventually, we blame the other people, even if we've initiated these
behaviors, even if we are saying, I got it. There's a part of you that feels underappreciated
in your relationships, even if you're doing it. You are not fully self-expressed, right? Because
what we really want doing is managing everything sort of around us. And it constitutes what I call living life light,
like L-I-T-E, because you're not fully present. When we're endlessly thinking about some of the
behaviors of high function and codependency is auto advice giving, right? We just can't stop
having ideas for you. And you may not have even asked me for an idea, but I still have the right
person that you should go to, or I want to tell you about the right vacation you should take or
whatever. We also have auto-accommodating where we're in a situation because one of the
distinguishing factors is that for HFCs, it's not just the people in our lives that we can become
codependently attached to, or that we can interact codependently with. It can be people in
our surroundings. I opened the book with a story of me on a train platform in Long Island, taking
a train back to New York City at 1030 at night on a Tuesday, seeing this stranger I never saw in my
life, 19-year-old kid. And immediately my helper radar pinged and was like, hmm, I wonder what this
boy, I was probably 22, He was 19. I wonder what
this boy is doing out so late. Where is he going? I started chatting him up, found out he was
supposed to drive a car back to Indiana. The gig got canceled. He has a little blanket in his hand.
I go, oh, where are you going? He's like, where are you going to stay? He's like, I'm just going
to stay in Penn Station. I was like, no, you're not. Have you been to Penn Station, pal? And this was the late eighties where, you know, the city was rougher
than it is now. And he was like, well, I don't know anyone in New York. And I was like, yeah,
you do. You know me, you're coming home with me. And that's how a perfect stranger came to stay in
my studio apartment with my female roommate. I didn't even call her. I just came home with this
kid feeling so responsible that something were bad was going to happen to him,
and it was on me to make sure it didn't, which of course, in hindsight, is fucking ridiculous.
But at the time, it was so real. I didn't even feel like I had a choice. I was like,
that's what it is. And I see this over and over again in my practice, where we could get sucked
into causes. And listen, this is not a terrible thing, right? If you're going to the map for a
cause, great. But it's what are we doing it for? What is activating our behavior? Because people
will say to me, all the HFCs on the internet want to tell me that they're just being nice,
and that this is just the way they are, and they're a very hopeful person.
And all I can say is, if you can't not do it, it's not you being nice.
It's a compulsive behavior, just like any other compulsive behavior. And you're doing it for you.
Because the other person being in danger or being in pain or having a situation is making you so
uncomfortable, you feel compelled to fix it. So your own discomfort will stop, which will stop, which is a tough pill to swallow.
At least when I first wrapped my skull around it, I was like, oh, so I'm not Mother Teresa.
I really just want this person's dumpster fire for life to stop ruining my peace.
Yeah. And I mean, it seems like a big part of this also is what you described earlier when
you defined it, which is the last part of the definition, which is to the detriment of yourself in some meaningful way. It's like, okay, you're not saying don't give, you're not saying
don't be loving, don't support a friend in need, or an animal that you see that you want, but
inquire into what's really happening in there. And is it serving the other? Or is it serving you?
Is it serving both? And is it doing so in a way where in some way it's actually causing
harm to you? Maybe not immediately with one action, but as you're describing, if this is
actually a compulsion that represents the accumulation of nearly all the actions, the way
you step into your life over time, is the weight of that causing harm to you? Yes. Because at that point, there's something that you need to talk about.
And what is it doing to your relationships?
The over and under functioning dynamic is a big part of this.
And I would say, I say it kidding, but it's the truth.
In my 20s, I could take a perfectly capable boyfriend and turn him into an under functioner in two weeks or less.
Because I was so like,
I got it. I made the plan. No problem. You know, there's something about the over and
underfunctioning that happens. It's not just detrimental to the person overfunctioning.
It's detrimental to the person underfunctioning too, because they feel bad about themselves,
especially it's dehumanizing when you are centering every situation on you
and your great ideas and what you're doing and your capabilities. It's like you're the person
doing all the things, making all the choices. And even though it can be exhausting, the other
person is sort of out of the mix. And in the process, we're also self-abandoning to get it
done, whatever the it is. So I feel like the costs go on and on.
But when we think about children, if we are NHFC with our kids and we're constantly inserting
ourselves and our grade A advice into the middle of whatever crisis they're in, I'm not saying
we're going to stop giving our kids our thoughts. I am saying it sure as should not be
the first stop on the bus. So the first stop on the bus with any age kid, when they go, I have
this problem, the first stop is, all right, babe, what do you think you should do? It doesn't mean
we're going to let a seven-year-old decide, but we do need to teach them critical thinking
and deductive reasoning and that there's consequences for actions. We're teaching them to think. That's part of our job as parents. And I feel like a lot of what you see today, we talk about helicopter parenting, but it's the parent can't stop parenting, can't stop making their child's life about them. And I feel like
it's a disservice. If we think about, you know, the prophet, the book, The Prophet,
there's that beautiful poem he has in there on parenthood, on children. And basically, it's this
image, this understanding that as parents, we are the bows, and the children, they're the arrows, right? And our job is to
set them up to go far, whatever that means for them, but to not expect them to organize
everything that they do in their life around us when they're 50 and we're 80, is to allow them
to have their own family and let that be the center of their life. And then we are the family
of origin. And it doesn't mean we don't spend time and we love them, but it's like, there's a lot
of expecting this like hardcore loyalty to family of origin, which makes kids, it can make it
difficult for people to prioritize the family that they're creating with their partner.
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will vary. Part of what you're teasing out here also is this notion of like,
how do you differentiate between caring and high functioning codependence?
Yes. Because there's a line there, you know, it's not that stop helping your kids. It's not that stop
offering advice, like stop running out and like getting some chicken soup for a friend when
they're sick.
Sure.
And I would imagine the line is different for different people in different relationships.
And it probably changes over time where caring and loving and generosity crosses into something else.
And as you describe also, and I think maybe it's not apparent at first, but when you do it, you're not just taking something from yourself.
You're unwittingly taking something on the other side of it, or their ability to make decisions,
be wrong, and then figure out how to actually be right again and fix it, and then have the glow
of resilience and competence and confidence. We take that from them because we want them to avoid
the pain of having to go through that. But at the same time, what you're saying is we want to avoid the pain of us seeing them having to go through that. That's the deeper reason here.
It is. And it's painful to realize that. But think about how much more loving it is
to be willing to be in the foxhole with your friend who has a broken heart and not be hyper
positive and not say you'll find someone else and not
any of the platitude bullshit, not tell them anything other than I'm here. Ask them,
how can I best support you right now? If you want to talk, we can talk. If you don't want to,
we can just sit here. Like that's love. I'll be with you when it sucks for me to be with you
without compulsively trying to fix you because nobody likes to be.
People as projects doesn't work in long-term relationships. It really doesn't. People don't
like to feel. Do you ever have that? You talk to a friend and they immediately give you advice
and you're like, I don't fucking need that. I get so mad. My friends know they don't,
but back in the day when people would, and even
with Vic in the beginning, I knew his desire to help me problem solve was from love. But I needed
to teach him that it didn't make me feel loved. And that if I wanted to brainstorm, I would tell
him. But what I really needed was compassionate witnessing. And for him to just ask me, babe,
how can I best support
you right now? He says it to this day, and it always warms my heart because I can then say,
let's make out. Or I can say, would you make me a cup of tea? Or I can say, I want to talk this
out. Do you have time to do it now? But he's prospecting my autonomy to know what I need
instead of making assumptions about what I need. And I feel like
when we auto-advice give, we are making assumptions for our own, not to mention how much projection
happens in there. I don't know if when the last time I was on, we were talking about that situation
that happened with one of my sisters, because this was the beginning of this book, because I had one
chapter in Boundary Boss,
my last book, on high-functioning codependency, because there was so many people wanted me to write about it. And in there, I tell a story about one of my sisters. She was in an abusive
relationship, living in the woods. She was an active alcoholic. He was doing crack. They had
no running water, no electricity, and he was abusive. So that's like an HFC's nightmare.
Every day was a five alarm fire for me, being like, how can I get her out of there?
Like, what do I need to do to make this happen?
Crying to my therapist.
And my therapist said to me, Terry, what makes you think you know what your sister needs
to learn and how she needs to learn it in this lifetime?
I was like, okay, maybe.
But I think we can probably agree she doesn't need to do it with a crackhead in the woods. Like, can we agree on that at least,
Bev? And she was like, no. You know why, Tara? Because I'm not God. I don't know what your
sister needs to learn and how she needs to learn it, but do you know what's going on for you? And
I was like, obviously not. So fill me in. And she said, you've worked really hard to create a pretty harmonious life. And your sister's dumpster fire of a life is really fucking with your peace.
And you want your pain to end. And I was like, you are not lying. That is true. And I had to
really come to terms with the fact that what I thought was solely my motivation was only sisterly
love, loyalty and devotion was tinged with codependency.
And then she said, how about some boundaries? And I was like, wow. Keep in mind, I was in my 20s.
This was decades ago. And I was like, boundaries? What the hell is that? And it made, so I had this
conversation with my sister saying, hey, I cannot talk to you about this abusive guy. But if you
ever want to get out of that situation, I can. So I'm going to step back,
which was so hard to do. And she said, I understand. And then in, you know, we talked a few
times in the nine months that went by, she called me and said, are you still my person? If I want
to get out? And I was like, yes, I am. Got in my car, picked her up. And the PS on that story and
why that story even matters is that me forcing her to leave when I think she should
leave and do the thing I think that she should do wouldn't have stuck anyway.
So there's that.
Because my therapist said to me, she's like, Terry, I'm not saying you shouldn't save your
sister.
I'm saying you can't.
I'm saying it's a literal impossibility.
So why bash your skull against the brick wall?
But in the end of the end, my sister got to be the hero of her own story, not her youngest
sister being the hero of her own story, not her youngest sister being the hero
of her story. She got sober. She went back to school. She built the life. She decided she was
worth getting sober for. Not for me, for her. And that's also what we rob people for when we center
their situations on us. And yes, if my sister, if I thought she was going to die, I would have done
an intervention or whatever. I'm not saying we should never intervene because you'll have people
who will say, so do you just let someone die? No. If I thought she was going to die, I wouldn't have.
But I also, my therapist wouldn't agree with that either. So there comes a point where so much of
the time where we're inserting ourselves,
it's not a life or death situation. And we are robbing people of their autonomy and of their right to, as you said, people have a right to succeed and fail, to thrive and to flail,
to literally not know what they're doing, make mistakes. Isn't that how we learned? Is just
through these spectacular shitstorm mistakes that we made in life?
Because that's how we learn.
So we can't learn for other people.
Well, maybe other people learn that way, but of course we don't learn that way.
No, we don't.
So what's buzzing in my head right now is, how do we know?
How do we know if this is our situation?
How do we know if this is actually what's going on?
One of the things that you identified is,, you know, is my MO auto advice giving? What are
the other things that we can look for to start to say, huh, maybe there's something else happening
here? Over-functioning. So if you're doing more than your share, auto-accommodating,
and this could be in a public place where you're so dialed into your atmosphere.
These people want to sit together. You're like, oh, I'll move. You see someone who needs something.
You're just, instead of like being in your body, it's almost like you're hypervigilant about what's
around you. And auto-accommodating in other situations too. Let's say that you and Steph
both had to go to work and you had two cars and you walk out the door and there's a flat
tire in the car you normally use. And it would be her being like, just take the other car. I'll Uber
go. No worries. Right? Like auto accommodating. We want the situation to be handled right now.
Anticipatory planning is another one where, you know, you're going to be with someone who maybe
they're difficult. So you plan all the ways to avoid the pitfalls of them exploding about
something. So it's kind of like walking on, you know, getting your masters and walking on eggshells.
Being overly self-sacrificing is another way. So those are sort of the behaviors.
But the way, the easiest way, or maybe the fastest way for anybody listening to go,
oh, is this me, is to do a quick resentment inventory. Because this will serve as
a GPS to bring you to relationships where you might be over-functioning or over-giving or
enabling. Because that is part of codependency too, enabling. Am I over-functioning? Enabling
this person to under-function, whether it's constantly giving your
grown brother money for rent or whatever it is. So when you do the resentment inventory,
that'll at least be a place to start to look at the relationships. But I think the one that people
can work on the easiest and the fastest is the auto advice giving that you can just take the
next 48 hours to see how often were you going to insert your two cents into someone else's situation, whether they asked you or whether they didn't.
Because both are opportunities for you to do something different, which would feel different and also will change your relationships.
So instead of auto advice giving, we learn to ask expansive questions.
It's just a switch.
You're just going to flip the script.
And instead of immediately going into your grade A good advice, and I'm sure you do have
grade A good advice, people listening, so do I.
You know, that's why I want to tell you, because I want to help you fix your problem.
But instead, we're going to be devoted to being interested in the people that we're
talking to.
So the first thing is you ask them,
what do you think you should do?
If they say, I don't know, I want you to tell me.
You say, all right, in the end, I'll tell you.
But let's just explore
because nobody really knows better than you
what you should do in this situation.
You know the players, you know the circumstances.
So what does your gut say?
Let's just kick it around.
So we can learn to be with someone in there,
not knowing, and be a part of the solution
in a way that's like healthy and appropriate, helping them get to it. And even if they're
making the wrong choice, quote unquote, according to us, it's their choice to make. And realizing
it is not your side of the street to convince someone, a grown adult. It'll be more complicated
with children, even when they're grown, right? Because that's a hard position for us to shift
as parents, right? I do want to still give you my advice. It's funny, my kids are all therapized.
And so it's like, I'll be like, I have a thought about that. Do you want to hear it? I mean,
mostly they do want to hear it. And sometimes they're like, I'm good. I'm like, great. Okay.
Or they are not interested in my grade A advice.
And I have to respect their right to basically say, hey, I'm not looking for input right now on this.
And we can learn ourselves to get the interaction we need to by saying, hey, right now, what
I would love is compassionate listening.
That's all I need.
You knowing that I'm in pain helps so much. Just you knowing, just you caring that I'm struggling.
So it's not just a way for us to be more present and loving in our relationships. It's also a way
for us to get our needs met. And I feel like with HFCs, we really, in our own way, even if from
the outside, it looks good because we really do have it together. So the exterior really looks
good, but we're probably not taking the greatest care of ourselves because in a way we're last on
our own list. It's like there always someone else needs something. We're very comfortable giving up
what we wanted to do
for what someone else wants to do.
Because again, we are conflict avoidant in our own ways.
And part of this process of getting into recovery
is really learning ourselves, figuring out who we are,
what are my preferences, my desires, my limits,
my deal breakers.
What am I doing in this life?
Like, is this what I want to be doing?
Because the glass ceiling, what ends up happening is that when we're bleeding all this bandwidth,
having this external focus on others, there's this glass ceiling of our own making that happens in
our careers and in our relationships. Because you can't do both. You can't endlessly be pouring yourself into other people and still have the career that you want to have, or still have the deep intimacy in the relationships that you want to have. You really can't. So I think it's valuable to really look at what are the limitations that we put on ourselves if we stay in this high-functioning, codependent behavior. So many things in that. One, the notion of bubbling resentment being an indicator of,
this might actually be me.
Although advice-giving and the notion of,
before you ever open your mouth to say,
this is what I think you should,
start with something which is more akin to a question of,
how can I best support you right now in this moment? But that last thing
I want to dive deeper into also, this notion of, I don't know if you actually use the phrase
self-care, but there's, and this is one of the things that you write about in the book, like,
quote, you know, real self-care. So break this down a little bit for me, because I think so
many of us are like, oh, I do the self-care thing. I got it covered. I'm good. Right? And you're kind of like, maybe not so fast here, especially if you are an HFC.
Indeed. What an insightful question you have. I've actually sort of renamed the real self-care
as self-consideration because I find that when we think of self-care, we're like, get a mani-pedi.
So yeah, HFCs have that going on. The surface level self-care
probably is happening. But I'm talking about deeper consideration, which is having better
boundaries, which is surrendering to what is. That's the last chapter in the book. It's about
surrender, which when I was young, that would have been a dirty word. I would have been like,
never surrender. But this is surrender to
what is. How can I problem solve from this sort of hyper positive, silver lining detective place?
We have to deal with what is happening and surrender to what is my side of the street,
meaning my responsibility, and what is someone else's? Two other really important aspects
of getting into recovery for HFC is getting really comfortable with disappointing other people.
Cheryl Richardson has a book called Let Me Disappoint Him. So I love to quote that because
when you're raised to be a good girl, when you're an over-functioner, when you're a perfectionist,
it's like you do not want to disappoint other people.
It really feels bad.
And yet, what I really invite you to do in this book
is dial into all the ways that you're disappointing yourself
if you are constantly prioritizing other people's wants, needs, and desires over your own.
Mel Robbins has this funny thing that she says, that when someone's
about to do something, let's say your sister's doing something that you don't think she should
be doing, that in your mind, before you say anything to your sister, you just say, let them,
just let her, let her, right? It does something to your sort of central nervous system. I think
it's funny, because of course, again, it's an illusion, right? I'm not letting my sister do something or you're not letting your brother do something, but there's something about
relaxing into what that really says to me, the let them little technique that she has is it's
really saying that is not my side of the street. That is her right to discover this on her own. Again, what we're doing when we are
having more self-consideration is that we are, before we auto-yes anything, literally checking
in and saying, do I have the bandwidth to do this? Or more importantly, do I want to do this?
Because not wanting to do something is a perfectly good reason not to do it.
And you don't need to write a dissertation on your no. You could just not be into it. I give you lots
of scripts in here. It could just be like, hi, not my thing. I hope you guys have an amazing time at
that outside concert or whatever the thing is. The person who invited you to the outside concert
didn't invent outside concerts. We don't have to worry about offending them.
But I think the saying no, it taps into the desire to not disappoint people.
It's like literally as you're just sort of like talking through all these different things,
I'm like, there's a thought bubble building in my mind.
I'm like, check, check, check, check.
Like these, some of these behaviors are things that either have been a major part of my life or are currently a part of my life.
You know, you erect this sort of structure around you to feel like you can breathe moving through each day.
To feel like, you know, in a world that feels just like everything's spinning out of control.
And we have so little control over so much of what's happening in the world right now.
And that is true.
That is the reality.
I feel like we tend to look at the things closest to us and that oftentimes those things are the people, the relationships,
and say, can I exert control here without realizing that's actually what we're doing?
Because everything else I can't figure out how to control enough so I can breathe easier,
but maybe this, I can.
And we'll be right back after a word from our sponsors.
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Mayday, mayday. We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were going to be fun.
On January 24th. Tell me how compromised. The pilot's a hitman. I knew you were going to be fun. January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg.
You know what the difference between me and you is? You're going to die.
Don't shoot him! We need him!
Y'all need a pilot?
Flight Risk.
I don't want to just skip over. You sort of offered up this notion of surrender
and the role that that plays in a
process of recovery here. Because as you described, I think so many of us, especially when we're
younger, like this is a dirty word. You know, it translates in my brain to, oh, surrender means
you're just giving up, right? Yes.
So take me deeper into this concept and the way that you're actually articulating it.
Well, think of it as this, as a softening, as a softness, as an allowing,
right? Allowing other people to add value to your life, not being the only one who's doing anything.
Giving yourself permission to what is for you. If you used to be willing to do all the holidays at
your house, but you really don't want to anymore. Surrendering to
the truth of the shift in your desire and let your family know, you know, I'm going to do
Thanksgiving, but it's going to be potluck this year. And actually Christmas is up for grabs
because I don't want to do it. And actually they're going to are going away or whatever,
like surrendering to the truth of how we feel, surrendering to the truth of what is, having faith
that our relationships are more durable than we think, that we are not that fragile, that our
relationships are not that fragile. And I think the allowing, because the big thing that for HFCs
is hard to allow other people to help us, not just do nice things for us or give us gifts or
give us compliments, really to help us. With HFCs, when you're really in recovery,
you can actually reach out to people and be vulnerable enough to say, I need help. Can you
help me? Will you help me? Which is like the ultimate invulnerability when you're a doer
and when you're a high functioning person, that's the hardest thing
to do. So that's the way that I look at surrender. It's not a giving up. It's a recognizing the truth
of what is. It's really getting out of denial. When we surrender to the truth of what is,
right? I needed to surrender. When I was feverishly trying to get my sister out of that situation, I needed to surrender to the truth that it was her choice, and she needed to reach her bottom that she hadn't reached yet. That was so painful, that was so hard, but that's what I needed to do, and it is what I did. And I was able to step back because I did it. So that's sort of my lens on surrender and allowing and how incredibly important that is to the process
of getting into recovery. When you talk about surrender, I'm also wondering in this context,
is part of this the notion of surrendering the need to have a certain outcome happen?
Yes, great point. Yes, it is. But that's, again, when you back up feel is their side of the street.
And when you get into recovery from being an HFC, you start to become an actual expert on what you think and what you feel.
Probably for the first time in your life.
Because my clients, I would say, what do you want?
And you know what?
Across the boards, people want peace.
They want harmony.
They want everyone
to be happy. And that just can't be your goal in life. You can build a harmonious life. I have.
You certainly can. But it's like, what do you want for yourself? And I feel like a lot of times with
HFCs, we're so dialed into other people and their outcomes that we were not even positive. So it really is an exploration
of self-love, of figuring out who you are and what you want and being honest about it. Because
if you're just checking boxes, right, if we go through life, especially women, because we do so
many things, not that men don't, they do, but there's an expectation of children and aging
parents and friends and PTA and all this other stuff.
I feel like it's starting to even up with men and fathers as well. But forever, that's been
women's work. And to be the assuagers and the bridgers, we're like the line producers of life.
In that, you can literally never know who you are, which means that the people in your life don't know who you are.
And I've had women coming into my practice in their sixth and seventh decade of life being like, hey, I've done all the things.
We're successful.
We've got money.
I'm on these boards.
I go to SoulCycle three times a week.
My kids all went to Ivy League schools.
Hello.
Is this how I'm supposed to feel?
I'm like, well, how do you feel?
They're like, empty. And I'm like, yeah, because nobody knows you
because you built your whole life on checking boxes
that somebody else erected
and never always being willing to take one for the team.
There's got to be a point when we stand up for ourselves,
for what we want, for how we feel,
for what we really want in our lives.
And as HFCs, that can be hard to do.
Where does, not compassion, but where is
self-compassion center this conversation? I talk about it a lot in the book because HFCs have a
tendency to be perfectionists and to be hard on themselves. And once you realize, once you really
start doing the work, because I give you all exercises within the book, as you're going
through the book, you're sort of doing the exercises. It's all about the reader, right? Because nobody wants to read a theoretical book
on anything. I don't blame you, neither do I. It's like we're bringing it back to you and what it is
that you want. It's not judging, right? It's so easy when you realize, like I realized with my
sister, I was like, oh my God, I thought it was Mother Teresa, but it was really about me. Oh my God. Like I was humiliated at first. And then you have to go,
hello, where would you, your friend should be humiliated if she was in the exact same situation?
And the answer is no. And so I remind you throughout the book often to, this is all gentle.
It's just slow, slow, slow. We're doing it one baby step at a time. You don't have to change
anything. Even if you have realizations about at a time. You don't have to change anything.
Even if you have realizations about things, right?
You always have the choice of what is your next right action.
And I think that treating yourself the way you do a child that you love with the same
voice, same internal voice.
So much of the time we have this caustic inner mean committee.
We want to be really aware of them.
And you really want to become your own beloved because you have to be.
The relationship you have with yourself sets the bar for every other relationship that you have in your life.
And so if you treat yourself like crap, you never rest, you're exhausted, you insomnia, TMJJ, autoimmune disorders because you're so burnt out from overgiving
and overfunctioning.
You would never want your daughter to be doing that or your son.
You would never want that.
We want that self-consideration bar to be high because then we can bring that person
into our relationships instead of the frazzled, fried, kind of bitter person who we
become if we don't change these behaviors. It's that resentment bubbling up, right?
In addition to self-compassion, one of the things that you reference is mindfulness kind of under
the umbrella of emotional resilience. And emotional resilience is this thing that we've been talking
about more of that, like, well, what are we going to do about this? Like part of things and emotional resilience is one of these
things where it's like, we need to actually develop this ourselves. And I guess part of that from,
from what I understand is if we're going to do this thing of sort of like backing away from
controlling everyone and everything so that we feel like we can breathe, like as you described,
like everyone tells you in your practice,
I want peace.
You know, if we think that gives us peace
and then we're like, okay,
I'm going to let go of that.
I'm going to surrender.
Even if you take baby steps,
that means that at least for the near term,
if not a while or just for life,
the peace of having everything as controlled as it can be,
everyone as controlled as they can be, everyone as controlled as they can
be is going to go away. Correct.
Which means we're going to have a lot more things coming at us and into us that may well rattle us
and trigger us and make us feel things that we haven't felt in a long time. Which brings us to
this conversation of like, what do you then do once
you start to, how do you live in that space once you're starting to feel all these things that
you've kind of kept at bay by maniacally controlling everything and everyone?
Well, part of it is we take that control element and we sort of bring it into more of a emotional
self-regulation for ourselves. So we take some of that bandwidth that
we've been bleeding and we pour it into us, understanding our own triggers, our own activation
points. Why is it so stressful for me to let my friend suffer without thinking I can fix it? You
can still comfort your friend. You can put your, you can hug them, you can be with them, right?
So it's also realizing it's not the stark contrast of the unhealthy helping, and then the good luck, I don't care what happens to you, right? It's obviously there's gradations. But we need to become experts. And there's a whole, basically a chapter in the book about our own emotions, about deeply understanding ourselves, and why we react. We become radically curious about,
why am I reacting this way to this situation? And I can give you all kinds of tools and strategies
for you to sort of decode. What am I having a transference? Does this remind me of an earlier
situation that was similar? Huh, that's interesting. Oh my gosh, look, I'm reacting to my boss
like he was my
mean father because he reminds me of him because he golfs like him or he sounds like him, but he's
not him, right? So all of that takes time. It takes self-consideration to be interested in our
reactions and responses, and then we change them. And so meditation and mindfulness, actual like
discipline, like a daily action of something.
I mean, I have a daily meditation practice and have for many, many years. I think you do as well.
And it's like that for me created about two seconds of response time. So I could make a
different choice rather than just the knee jerk reaction, the compulsive fixing. I was able to breathe and say,
how can I best support you, babe?
Instead of giving my two cents
or instead of judging him for not doing
what I thought I should have done in the beginning
or whatever, there's a whole myriad of things that we do
when we feel like things are getting out of control
that we don't like.
And it's tolerating
that. It's learning to tolerate being uncomfortable. And once you start to realize that the earth does
not stop spinning on its axis and nobody spontaneously bursts into flames, when we do that,
it becomes so much easier to do because it's a child's fear, Jonathan. It's the child within us
that's like, if I don't do this, something really bad is going to happen. It's not necessarily true. I completely agree there. And my mindfulness practice
has brought me not only just greater awareness of what I feel is closer to what actually is
happening within me and around me, but also like you described, just that hot second or two
to notice and then be like, huh. And rather than
just autopilot reacting to something, be like, what's the intentional response here? How do I
want to step into this? And not saying that I always still can at that point, but at least it
gives me the window to be slightly more intentional about it. And maybe in another 15 years, that
window will expand from two seconds to four seconds for me, at least we'll'll see. But when you start changing, though, Jonathan, what ends up happening is that
we're creating new neural pathways with new behaviors. And the more you repeat the new
behavior, the smoother it is in that pathway, right? In the beginning, it's like you've got
a sickle and you're like chopping it out. But the more you do it, that becomes the new sort of set point is the
new behavior. So part of it is just staying really awake while we're doing the new behaviors. But
honestly, we are so resilient. And we're so adaptive as human beings, that before you know
it, because you're also on the other side, you're getting all of this stuff that's creating dopamine
and feel good hormones that you're not getting when you're in this controlling state. So on the other side, you're getting all of this stuff that's creating dopamine and feel good hormones that you're not getting when you're in this controlling state. So on the other side,
when you're in recovery, there's so much more expansion, more joy, less rushing, less productivity,
less controlling other people, more allowing, more surrendering. And I promise you, it is a
more joyfulering. And I promise you, it is a more joyful life.
It feels like a good place for us to come full circle as well. So I have asked you this question
a number of times now over the years, but time passes, we grow. So in this container of Good
Life Project, if I offer up the phrase to live a good life, what comes up? Expansion actually is the thing that comes up
is living a life, my life. I'm always, especially now in the past two years,
seeking to have more expansion, meaning more downtime, more playtime with Vic, more, you know,
trying to plan, doing something, even if it's just a staycation every
90 days, even if it's just three days of literally no work, no matter what for either one of us,
because we're both recovering workaholics for sure. So that's what it means to me. It's being
balanced physically, emotionally, but it's enjoying, it's realizing this is for me and Vic
too, because he's 10 years older than me.
This is the evening of our lives and I don't want to miss it.
Thank you. Hey, before you leave, if you love this episode, safe bet you'll also love the
conversation we had with Terry about boundaries. You'll find a link to that episode in the show
notes. This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive
producers, Lindsay Fox and me, Jonathan Fields, editing help by Alejandro Ramirez, Christopher
Carter, Crafted Air Theme Music, and special thanks to Shelly Adele for her research on this
episode. And of course, if you haven't already done so, please go ahead and follow Good Life
Project in your favorite listening app. And if you found this conversation
interesting or inspiring or valuable, and chances are you did since you're still listening here,
would you do me a personal favor, a seven second favor and share it maybe on social or by text or
by email, even just with one person, just copy the link from the app you're using and tell those,
you know, those you love, those you want to help navigate this thing called life a little better so we can all do it better together with more ease
and more joy. Tell them to listen. Then even invite them to talk about what you've both discovered
because when podcasts become conversations and conversations become action, that's how we all
come alive together. Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project. Mayday, mayday.
We've been compromised.
The pilot's a hitman.
I knew you were gonna be fun.
On January 24th.
Tell me how to fly this thing.
Mark Wahlberg. You know what the difference between me and you is? You're gonna die. Don't shoot him, we need him. Y'all need a pilot? I knew you were going to be fun. Tell me how to fly this thing.
You know what the difference between me and you is?
You're going to die.
Don't shoot him, we need him.
Y'all need a pilot.
The Apple Watch Series 10 is here.
It has the biggest display ever.
It's also the thinnest Apple Watch ever,
making it even more comfortable on your wrist, whether you're running, swimming, or sleeping.
And it's the fastest charging Apple Watch, getting you're running, swimming, or sleeping. And it's
the fastest charging Apple Watch, getting you eight hours of charge in just 15 minutes.
The Apple Watch Series X, available for the first time in glossy jet black aluminum.
Compared to previous generations, iPhone XS or later required,
charge time and actual results will vary.