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Home Up Introduction Need to Control Intimidation Idealism Need to Fix Caretaker Powerlessness Let Go Detachment Unconditionality Overdependence Manipulation Helplessness Suicide Survival Masks Self-control
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Tools
for Handling Control Issues
Overcoming the Need to Fix
Content:
What is the need to fix?
The need to fix is:
-
Compulsively
driven behavior to rescue or help another person, place, or thing to be the
way you believe it "should be.''
-
Seeing
another person, place, or thing as "in need'' and the automatic
response pattern to this message.
-
Belief
that, unless everything is "just right'' for another person, then that
person can never fully be happy in life.
-
Obsessive
need to have every thing, person, and place "perfect'' or "correct''
in order for you to be comfortable enough to be relaxed and accepting of
them.
-
Inability
to accept people, places, or things the way they are and the chronic attempt
at changing them even if they are unchangeable.
-
Acting
on the belief that you have more knowledge than others as to what is good
for them so you strive to correct their thinking to "see the light'' in
your way.
-
Inability
to maintain emotional detachment from a person, place, or thing that is
hurting or in trouble. You proceed to fix them even if this means that they
are hindered from personal growth and accepting personal responsibility for
their own actions.
-
Inability
to not give advice, suggestions, or offers of help, even when you know in
doing so that it will hinder another person's growth and personal mastery in
life.
-
Interfering
in business and personal affairs "to help'' people even when they
haven't asked for your help or assistance.
-
Drive
to feel "needed'' or "wanted'' which leads you to become overly
involved and overresponsible in your relationships with persons, places, and
things.
-
Result
of a pattern of getting approval and recognition from others for "helping''
in the past with the belief that this is the only way you can have meaning
in life.

What are the negative effects of the compulsive need
to fix?
If your compulsive need to control others by "fixing" them is
not resolved, they you:
-
Run
the risk of developing a series of relationships with people, places, or
things who become overly dependent on you.
-
Run
the risk of becoming a caretaker to many with few people giving you the
healthy emotional support you need to be a fully functioning and coping
human.
-
Will
be unable to remain emotionally detached when you run across a person,
place, or thing which appears "helpless.''
-
Experience
people moving away from you if they no longer desire "to be fixed'' by
your advice, solutions, or insights.
-
Will
never take care of your own needs because you will have successfully avoided
focusing on self by diverting your focus to fixing others.
-
Become
guilt ridden if people, places, or things which you are trying "to
fix'' don't get "fixed'' and instead get worse.
-
Might
tie your identity into the "fixer'' role and never be able to enjoy a
truly healthy give and receive relationship with anyone.
-
Will
feign "wellness'' as a mask to convince others you have found the
answers "to fix'' them and thus remain static or reverse in your
personal emotional health.
-
Will
hand out a lot of "I owe you's'' to those you fix in hope they will be
there for you when you need them, unfortunately forgetting that your only
worth to them has been the fixing you perform and they will not "come
through'' the way you hope they will in your time of need.
-
Might
be the one who does all the work in a relationship and, once you "stop
the work,'' the relationship will die since you are no longer working at
fixing it.
-
Might
become hostile, angry, rageful, or hateful to those whom you have "fixed''
if they do not give you enough recognition in return for your efforts.
-
Might
have successfully used everyone else's problems to divert your attention
from yourself, the only one you have greatest odds of fixing because you can
have control and change yourself best.
-
Will
increase in your low self-esteem as you lose yourself in
"fixing'' others.

How is the need to fix a control issue?
The need to fix is a control issue because:
-
It
puts the "locus of control'' into your hands as the fixer rather than
into the hands of those being fixed where it correctly belongs.
-
If
you are a "fix it'' person, you end up trying to control every
situation, person, place, or thing to be "right'' or "perfect'' so
that you can feel sane, safe, and in control.
-
Fixing
is taking over the responsibility of another person, place or thing and
being sure that the outcome for them is positive and in accord with your
mental picture or ideal of the "way things should be'' in your world.
-
It
robs people, places, and things of their freedom to be themselves because of
your need to correct, change, or alter them to be the way you want them to
be.
-
Giving
advice, offering solutions, and directing choices puts you in a "power''
and "controlling'' position over those things you are trying to fix.
-
In
your enthusiasm to help, you run the risk of using threats, coercion, or
intimidation to get others to do what you believe will fix them.
-
In
your compulsive, addictive, or obsessive need to fix, you might be taking on
uncontrollable and unchangeable things which burn you out and leave you in
need of being "fixed.''
-
The
sense of over-responsibility which leads you to need to fix others is a
"de-powering'' of the others to take responsibility for themselves; it
puts the onus of accountability on you if the solutions do not succeed. It
also puts the recognition for their success on you rather than on those you
are fixing.
-
"Addicted
fixers'' do not allow those whom they are trying to fix to become
independent or to think and try things out on their own and create over-dependency
on themselves to make things right.
-
Being
a "fixer'' is a powerful position which gives you a sense of
importance, being special, and a reason for being.
-
Those
being "fixed'' often feel "out of control'' in terms of what is
happening in their lives and can become dependent on you the fixer to "do
for them'' rather than to "do for themselves.''
-
Although
"fixing'' looks altruistic, it is really a sef-centered behavior
because the outcome is not so much for the other's benefit but to make you feel good, relaxed, at peace in that
things are the way they "should be.''

What irrational thinking leads to the need to fix?
Examples of irrational thinking which leads you to the need to fix
other people, places, or things are:
-
When
you have the resources materially, emotionally, intellectually, and energy-wise, you should always be ready to share these
with others less fortunate than you whom you perceive to be in need of help
and assistance.
-
You
should never stand by and not get involved when you see someone hurting and
in need.
-
You
are rewarded in so many ways for the sacrifices you make to help others and
it is a straight path to heaven if you give to others without any
hesitation.
-
You
should give insights from your life experiences whenever you find someone in
a similar situation.
-
You
should never wait for a person to ask for help since so many people are shy
when it comes to admitting they don't know what to do with their lives.
-
You
must die to self if you are to gain eternal reward. To be focused only on
solving your own problems is so selfish. Therefore, you are sure to gain a
higher eternal reward if you dedicate your life to helping others no matter
what are the physical or emotional costs to yourself.
-
It
is impossible to ignore a plea for help especially when it comes from
someone who is obviously "helpless.''
-
It
is a real sign of your personal growth that, after a time in recovery, you
can have the insights, answers, solutions, and clarity of direction for
everyone with whom you come in contact.
-
You
can burn yourself out just focused on your own personal growth so to
revitalize yourself you should get involved with other people's problems to
give you a better perspective on your own problems.
-
What
will others think of you if you don't offer help to someone who is obviously
in need?
-
Your
meaning and purpose in life will be threatened if you are not needed to fix,
rescue, or help someone.
-
Being
a "fixer'' is not something which you want to avoid being because it is
the only way you have ever gotten people to recognize and to accept you.

Ways to overcome compulsive fixing
In order to overcome being a compulsive "fixer" you need to:
-
Accept
the belief that others must accept personal responsibility for their own
lives and actions.
-
Recognize
that being a "fixer'' is a way to control others. It places the
responsibility for the other's actions on you, which is not where it
belongs.
-
Establish
a healthy emotional boundary between you and those whom you desire to fix.
-
Develop
a philosophy of "helping'' which emphasizes that what people need is
emotional support and understanding of their feelings concerning a problem
rather than advice, direction, suggestions, or "content'' solutions.
-
Establish
healthy emotional detachment from the persons, places, things whom you feel
driven to "fix".
-
Find
your reinforcement, strokes, or "warm fuzzies'' from within yourself
and not get "hooked'' on the need for approval or recognition from
others for what you do for them.
-
Accept
that in "helping'' another the goal and purpose is to help the other to
help himself.
-
Recognize
that "doing for'' another is not helping another get strong, healthy,
or independent.
-
Recognize
when the compulsion "to fix'' arises so that you can use rational
thinking and feeling to develop strategies of helping which leave the others
free to "fix'' themselves.
-
Accept
that you can only fix one person, namely yourself, and that all others must
be responsible for "fixing'' themselves.
-
Give
permission to the people in your life to call you on it or to confront you
when you are caught up in the need to "fix'' them.
-
Gain
support from your support network as you let go of the people, places, and
things you feel compelled to fix.
-
Recognize
that the only way you can get significant others to recognize that they need
help is to be "squeaky clean and healthy'' in your relationship with
them.
-
Accept
that your fantasy or dream of how others would be if they changed is your
fantasy and dream and not necessarily theirs.
-
Identify
that, if another has a problem, then they have to own it if they are ever
going to fix it and that, if you try to fix the problem, then you are taking
on ownership of the problem as your own.
-
Accept
that, when a problem exists in your relationship with another, both parties
must work on it to fix it if they are to come to a compromise and healthy
"win win'' resolution.
-
Identify
that obligation and over-responsibility are not healthy enough reasons to
keep you in a "fixer'' posture with others.
-
Realize
that guilt as a motivator to keep you hooked into a "fixer-fixee''
relationship is unhealthy for you and the other.

Steps to overcome the "fixer" role
Step
1: In your journal, you first need to list and
identify all persons, places, and things with whom you are a ``fixer.''
A. The people I feel a need to "fix'' are:
B. The places I feel a need to "fix'' are:
C. The things I feel a need to "fix'' are:
Step
2: For each person, place, or thing identify the
following:
A. What are the issues that need fixing?
B. For whom are these issues a problem? Are they a problem for you, a
problem for the other, or a problem for both of you?
C. How openly has the other admitted these issues are problems and how
have they asked for your help to ``fix'' them?
D. How has the other tried to take steps to solve or "fix'' these
problems on their own? How successful have they been?
Step
3: You next need to identify what are the "hooks''
in your relationship with each person, place, or thing that keep you in your
addicted fixer role. For each person, place, or thing you identified in Step 1
now identify which of these twenty hooks exist for you and put an X next to
it..
Emotional Hooks Self Assessment
___
( 1) Your sense of guilt if they should
get worse
___
( 2) Your sense of over-responsibility
___
( 3) Your sense of obligation
___
( 4) Your fantasy of a change in the
relationship
___
( 5) Fear of losing them
___
( 6) Your need to be needed
___
( 7) Your need to control others
___
( 8) Your fear of going insane if they
don't change
___
( 9) Your overemotional enmeshment or
attachment with them
___
(10) Your need for approval and recognition
___
(11) Your need to be seen as a "helper''
who does good for others
___
(12) A martyr complex. This is your role in life to
clean up the messes which others make in your life
___
(13) A sense that they can't do it without
you
___
(14) A way of keeping the focus off your
needs by keeping the spotlight on help of others
___
(15) The others don't recognize that you
are an addicted fixer with them
___
(16) Your own low self-esteem and unhealthy way of
thinking, feeling, and acting
___
(17) Your inability to emotionally detach
from others who are in a toxic relationship with you
___
(18) Your competitive need to look more
knowledgeable, wiser, and more "together'' than the other
___
(19) Your need to ensure that your current
life is not as dysfunctional as your past life was
___
(20) Your "pride'' that only you can
correct or fix things for others
Step
4: Once you identify the "hooks'' in the
relationship with each person, place, and thing for whom you are an addicted
fixer, then you need to develop rational, healthy alternative beliefs which
allow you to "let go'' of the need to "fix'' them.
Step
5: You then need to get support from your own network of
support to "let go'' of the need to "fix'' these persons, places, and
things.
Step
6: You need to give back to each person, place, and thing
the responsibility for their own actions and solutions to their problems.
Step
7: You need to seek your Higher Power's strength as you
cease your "fixer'' role in the lives of these persons, places, and things.
Step
8: If you find yourself relapsing into the "fixer''
role again with any person, place, or thing, then return to Step 1 and begin
again.

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