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Home Up Inventory Low Esteem Model Root Sources Looking Good Acting Out Pulling In Entertainer Troubled Person Enabling Rescuing People-Pleasing Nonfeeling Old Self-Scripts
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Laying
the Foundation
Enabling Personality
Content:
Appearance to the world of the enabling personality
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Protect others from the consequences of their own
actions
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Deflect the hand of fate and soften its blow for
others
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Attempt to save others from feeling intense
emotional pain
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Delay the day of reckoning for troubled persons by
averting social and financial difficulties for them
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Prevent crises for troubled persons which, in fact,
prolongs the problems
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Pinch hit for troubled persons, hiding their
mistakes with alibis or lies to others
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Act out of a sincere, if misguided, sense of love
and loyalty
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May act out of shame to protect their own and their
environment's self-respect
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Are motivated by the fear that they may share the
unfortunate consequences of the troubled person's problems
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Take on responsibility for the troubled person
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Begin to doubt themselves and doubt their own sanity
or "rightness,'' often seeing themselves as failures
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Feel guilt and self hatred and begin to turn off
their feelings toward the troubled person and others
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Use a lot of projection and blaming on the troubled
person
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Vent a lot of anger against the troubled person
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Become known as sarcastic naggers and blamers
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Deny and conceal the problems of the troubled person
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Make decisions for the troubled person, decisions
that are best left for the troubled person to make for themselves
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Minimize the problems of the troubled person
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Feel trapped in the problems of the troubled person
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Develop an emotional shell and resist penetration

Feelings inside persons with the enabling personality
traits
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Powerless to change the situation
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Serious about the situation
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Self blaming for the troubled person's problems
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Fragile in the face of the troubled person's
problems
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Self-pity for the situation they are in
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Manipulation is the only method left them to get
their way to correct the troubled person's problems
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Super responsible for the situation and solving the
troubled person's problems
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Guilt over the troubled person's problems and the
troubled person's inability to solve them
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Pain from the hurt resulting from the troubled
person's problems
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Fear that the troubled person's problems will never
be solved and will ultimately consume them
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Anger that they can't fix or solve the troubled
person's problems

Typical statements from enabling
individuals
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I'm going to give him another chance.
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I want to give him the benefit of the doubt.
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I'm not clear what I should expect of him.
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I'm not convinced that he has that problem.
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I love him; I can't leave him.
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I don't want him to fail.
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I don't want him to suffer any pain or hurt.
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I don't want him to think that I don't love him.
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I'm beginning to suspect that I'm the reason for his
problems.
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I don't want to be mean.
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It's hard to say no.
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I could never forgive myself for not taking steps to
prevent him from getting hurt.
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He'd never forgive me if he got hurt or failed.
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I've made my vows for life; I could never leave him.
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It only hurts for a little while.
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Look at all the trouble he's causing for me and the
family.
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I want him to get help, even if I have to drag him
in.
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What have I done wrong? Where have I gone wrong?
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He doesn't care how much he hurts us by his
behavior.
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I feel so unappreciated.
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Just this one time only.
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Let's not be hasty in our
judgment.

Negative consequences of enabling behaviors
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Low self-esteem
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The problems of the troubled people, addressed by
enablers, usually become worse rather than better
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Become discouraged about the lack of progress or
change in the troubled people and ultimately sabotage their own efforts to
reform these people
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Become angry and resentful at those in their life
who fail to improve
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Become resentful, bitter, antagonistic and vengeful
toward those who fail to improve
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Become martyrs who look for others' sympathy for
their plight in life
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Become enmeshed in the very problem behavior traits
they resent, such as drinking, overeating, overworking, drug abuse, etc.
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Often become unappealing people and find the non-troubled
people in their lives have turned against them
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Become so adamant about a cause that they seek to
reform everyone they come into contact with, sometimes obsessively
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Lose focus as to how embittered and single focused
they have become; they get confused by the rejection and lack of approval
they receive from the non-troubled people in their life
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Protect others from the truth about the problems of
the troubled people, suffering the anger, resentment, and hostility of the
non-troubled people after they find out that the enabler has sheltered them
from the truth
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Often wear themselves down so much that they suffer stress related
illnesses, like cancer, heart disease, ulcers, gastrointestinal problems,
high blood pressure, and others
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Often become troubled people who are so caught up in
denial that they become difficult and resistant to getting help for
themselves
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Often refuse to get help for themselves if they have
been successful in getting their troubled people into treatment
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Often become immobilized by fear, insecurity, and
mistrust if they are not successful in getting help for the troubled people
in their lives
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Often spend their lives seeking revenge against the
troubled people whom they tried to reform and couldn't
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Usually end up depressed, anxious, and tense

Irrational beliefs of people with the enabling
personality traits
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I must do something to help this person stop his
problem behavior.
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I can help this person stop his problem behavior.
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Everyone should want to change if they have a
problem behavior.
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My efforts will result in reforming this person.
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The harder I put effort into addressing this
problem, the more easily it will be solved.
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The larger the threats I make, the better chance
that he will change.
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If a person has a problem, the only way you can help
him is to stay with him.
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My efforts to lead a good life will pay off in the
reforming of this troubled person.
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I have the key to the answer for this person's
problems
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I must put all my energy into helping this person if
I expect him to change.
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Only losers give up.
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Protecting a troubled person is one way of helping
that person to get help.
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The troubled person's behavior is the only problem
our environment has.
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If I deny or hide the problem from the members of
our environmment, they won't be affected by it.
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Things are never as bad as they seem.
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God never gives you a burden too great to carry on
your own.
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I know what's best for this person.
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I must never complain about this person's behavior
in public.
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I must never let this person get in trouble because
of his problem.
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I must carry the burden of this person's problems on
my own shoulders.

Turning negative enabling traits into positive
potential
|
Negative Enabling Behavior |
Positive
Potential |
| Minimizing problems |
These
people can be given assistance to recognize the magnitude of the problems
in which they are enmeshed. They can be given information about the nature
of "family'' illnesses and the "sick'' roles that each family member takes
on and how their enabling behaviors are "sick'' and can lead to their own
physical or mental illness if left unchecked. |
| Protecting the troubled person from negative
consequences |
These
people can be taught "tough love'' technology. This assists enablers to
redirect their efforts to help troubled persons recognize and accept the
consequences of their own troubled behavior. In this way the enabler will
let the troubled person "face the music'' for their problems early on, let
them "hit a brick wall,'' and recognize the need to get help for the
problem on their own. |
| Self blaming |
When
they have learned that there is virtually nothing they can do in reforming
a troubled person, they can take themselves off the hook of blame and
place the responsibility for the problem back into the hands of the
troubled person. |
| Manipulation |
When
they realize that most of their efforts exacerbate the problems, they can
stop using threats, bribes, ultimatums and trickery to reform people. They
can use honesty, assertiveness, openness, confrontation in getting help
for themselves, and then address the troubled behavior of others. |
| Super responsible |
By
handing the responsibility for the problem back to the troubled person to
handle, and by viewing the problem more rationally, they can encourage the
troubled person to seek help and assistance for himself, to address his
problem, and to be open and vulnerable to change. |
| Acting out of loyalty |
Enablers
need to be guided in their feelings of loyalty to avoid protecting
troubled people from the negative consequences of their actions.
Redirected loyalty is to encourage the troubled persons to face their
problem honestly and to get timely help, preventing the problems from
becoming uncontrollable. |
| Powerlessness |
They
can be helped to recognize that practicing "tough love'' and helping
others accept personal responsibility for their own actions is a powerful
behavior, with a more productive outcome than the enabling behavior used
previously. |
| Denial |
Enablers need to hit their own "brick
wall'' and get help for themselves before they can effectively help
others. Such brick walls as the troubled person getting sicker or getting
into trouble on the job or with the law is a way to force enablers to give
up their denial of the problems forcing them to take corrective measures
to alter their enabling strategies. |
| Sarcasm, nagging, blaming |
Once
they are able to let go of super responsibility for others' problems,
enablers are also able to let go of chronic reminding and reprimanding the
troubled persons for having the problems. Enablers can be helped to
recognize that this verbal "garbage'' is the very behavior that gives the
troubled persons the excuse for indulging in the troubled behavior in the
first place. |
| Low self-esteem |
Once
enablers are able to let go of the need to solve the problem no matter
what, they are able to view themselves in a healthier, more rational way.
They can love and respect themselves more and pursue avenues that will
make them feel good, allowing them to have fun. |

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