Editor’s Note: Resource Perspectives features articles written by members of Lovefraud’s Professional Resources Guide.
Re-thinking identity as a giver when giving too much can hurt
By Fannie LeFlore, MS,LPC,CADC-D
Fannie LeFlore profile in the Lovefraud Professional Resources Guide
If you’ve been victimized by someone, chances are the positive qualities you possess were viewed as an opportunity to take advantage of you — often by someone who lacks caring and concern, consciousness or character, usually in combination.
Being un-thoughtful and even callous in our stressed, hurried and often competitive and conflict-oriented society can become as easy as brushing one’s teeth. Taking time to listen or give comfort to another requires the kind of care and empathy that many good people demonstrate routinely, but later question the value of these qualities in the aftermath of being targeted, left confused or possibly devastated by an encounter with a sociopath.
If you’ve taken pride in being a decent, ethical, loving, conscientious and considerate individual, chances are you never contemplated in depth that dire consequences could result from being a giver — whether giving others the benefit of doubt or money, or otherwise offering a helping hand.
As someone inclined to give, you’ve likely taken pride in but rarely considered the costs in a world with many different people who have different motives and operate from different values and perspectives. Due to ignorance and ill will, toxic people generally view kindness as weakness — even though it actually is a strength.
People who embody empathy, who are accustomed to giving and sharing positive qualities with others in personal and professional relationships, may be tempted to turn away from these strengths after a bad experience or series of negative life-changing events. Instead, refining these positive traits throughout life — by challenging assumptions and setting boundaries — is a more productive approach for avoiding ongoing victimization, rather than taking a simplistic, cynical and bitter stance that inherently deflates the good and dismisses the beauty of life.
When you’ve been a giver in relationship with someone who feels entitled, you learn through painful experience that what you give can be taken for granted and squandered. It can be turned against you by toxic people who call what is good bad and what is bad good. It can become difficult to know how to balance innate empathy and also maintain a sense of well-being when another person or others around you are always ready to take or even exploit what you value in yourself.
Obligation to give
If you grew up influenced by Christian teachings, you’ve heard that it’s better to give than to receive. Others may have advised that you shouldn’t expect blessings to sprout from people you assist through investments of time and energy, because reciprocation or appreciation is likely to come from elsewhere. There’s also an embedded belief that, “To whom much is given, much is expected.” This can be interpreted to mean if you are financially well-off, have an abundance of understanding, intelligence, empathy and valuable experiences, you should willingly help and share your resources and resourcefulness with others whether they deserve it or not.
When taken to extremes, these and other admonitions can set people up for exploitive and abusive relationships, not just with sociopaths but with a garden variety of users and abusers, takers and fakers.
You might feel obligated to be more of a giver because you’re been trained from childhood for this role, and it’s habitual. You may feel guilty saying no to requests from even people who do not deserve your time or loyalty. You may tolerate extremely toxic situations and try to improve them single-handedly since people expect you to problem-solve while they go their merry way engaging in other activities or distractions. If you’ve complied so much that you no longer feel you have a right to object, or fear resentment from others if you attempt to change the circumstances with takers who willingly absorb all that you offer and yet are ungrateful, you are likely to become unfulfilled and depleted.
Boundaries are key
The best way to avoid being victimized again, even if you choose to continue giving, is to develop a more balanced approach by becoming more open to receiving and giving, and by practicing boundaries that become as routine and natural as brushing your teeth.
Boundaries involve defining what is and is not okay for you. You need to be flexible at times and rigid at times, even though practicing boundaries can become difficult since each situation may require a different response and different people may require a different approach. Some people, as the late author M. Scott Peck has written, can be invited into your kitchen to sit down and eat, while others should not be allowed past your front door. Among ways to determine this is whether the person you’re dealing with lacks boundaries himself, or whether she demonstrates respect for your concerns and needs without requiring constant vigilance and reminders.
Since we cannot control what others choose to do, the most important component is to re-think our own identity, which will allow changes for developing new boundaries and maintaining both self-awareness and integrity as life unfolds. Whether you take a lot more than you give or give a lot more than you take, it’s crucial to ask why and make a conscious effort for more balance. Too much giving or taking create problems when relating to others or seeking personal happiness. A proper amount of both give and take promotes less stressful and healthier living, according to various research on psychological and social well-being.
Out of balance
A very self-centered partner, friend or family member is likely to accuse you of engaging in tit-for-tat when you start expecting them to give back. They might say that what they receive from you is something they’re entitled to, or that you voluntarily offer what they gladly accept.
Over time, the erosion of your energy from takers and fakers, users and abusers, can make you feel so out of balance that your life feels less about your needs than catering to others — whether it’s what they want, what they expect or what they think you should do. This essentially is what feeling victimized amounts to: Somebody takes all you give and leaves you with little to nothing, or feeling used or abused.
Often, when you keep giving so much of yourself, it’s not simply to please and make others happy. Underlying factors also reflect a lack of self-awareness about your own needs, lack of honesty about what you really feel, not believing that you deserve things you want, and a lack of clarity about your own boundaries.
Time to change
When you’ve been burned in personal and professional relationships by users and abusers, takers and fakers, you’d be doing a disservice to yourself if you didn’t change. There are in fact toxic people and situations in life that do not serve your best interests. Even if the new knowledge feels threatening, it forces you to challenge previous assumptions. It demands understanding that a sense of personal safety and security can no longer depend on a just world theory or be based on whether you are considered a decent person or not.
Re-thinking the foundations of your identity as a giver require giving yourself permission to seek a more balanced approach in how you relate to not just others but yourself as well.
If you’re in conflict over past assumptions about what it means to be good, a giver, it’s important to redefine yourself — without needing permission from others. Making adjustments in your identity requires integrating new lessons for renewal of self-awareness. What others from your past told you, and how they defined you, needs to be challenged, despite hoping for understanding or wanting approval from others.
Own your reality
Start by owning, without apology, your present realities. You may have enjoyed accolades and other benefits from being viewed as primarily unselfish or a giver, but these roles may no longer fit. You may no longer have the same level of energy, time, money and other resources to share with family, friends and significant others. Even if you do, you have a right to change how you handle things when being a primary giver no longer works well for you. You have limitations and needs like others, or maybe you simply want something different in relationships, including more reciprocity.
While you share commonalities, you also are separate and so are others. You are different and so are others. To assume that someone else thinks and feels exactly how you do is a set-up for assumptions and coming to inaccurate conclusions. That’s why questions are important for clarification, since one person’s meaning may vary from another’s. Seeking clarification also helps us get a better picture of where others are coming from and, coupled with their actions, can provide clues about whether someone is more a giver, taker or combination of both.
Questions to ask yourself
Ask yourself these kinds of questions: Who says a good person or someone who considers herself a giver has to always give? Who says you shouldn’t challenge others’ perceptions of you, especially when they attempt to manipulate you in being someone they can take advantage of? Who says you have to be predictable in every way to prove to others they can trust you? Who says being loveable requires you to behave with consistency — as in (fill in the blank) would never do that, such as saying no? Who says you’re being phony if you don’t always agree with what others expect of you? Who says that someone who gives also should never receive anything back from those whom she gives to?
Here are some approaches to prevent feeling victimized or otherwise overwhelmed by potential takers and toxics:
- Tell them that if they have expectations of you, you’ll have expectations of them.
- If they hint about something, don’t focus on drawing them out. Let them find courage to ask directly for what they want from you.
- Practice saying no more often, especially when someone has become overly needy and doesn’t know when to stop asking for help or favors from you.
Enforcing boundaries
Be prepared for what can happen when you start enforcing boundaries. Some people will no longer like you, nor want to interact with you as much. Learn to be okay with this. Embrace that you have a right to take care of yourself, redefine yourself and decide what is okay for you. You can determine when and what to give of your time, attention, money and other positive qualities and resources.
Keep in mind that whenever an individual no longer wants to deal with you because you’ve set boundaries, it is indicative of progress because you no longer have to engage in wasted time and energy. If someone cannot tolerate you saying no once in a while — despite knowing that you are cooperative and supportive otherwise — it’s likely they had their own agenda and less interest in reciprocation or other mutual benefit anyway.
Ask yourself what are you really losing? Remind yourself that your positive qualities have value. Just as you can appreciate good things about others, what you offer should not be viewed as license to exploit, devalue or take for granted. And if someone else chooses to view things otherwise, your evolving boundaries will make it possible for you not to participate in their distorted perspectives.
About the author: Fannie LeFlore, MS, LPC, CADC-D is an Entrepreneur, Journalist and Licensed Professional Counselor. These combined career areas are the foundation of the expertise and quality professional services provided by LeFlore Communications, LLC in Milwaukee, Wis. Areas of Expertise: Communication Skills, Codependency Issues, Counseling of Diverse Populations, Crisis Intervention, Abusive Relationships, Sociopathy and Narcissistic Personality Disorder, General Mental Health and Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Issues. Fannie also was Co-writer/Editor of The Road Less Traveled and Beyond by M. Scott Peck, MD.
“Having expectations of the other person: I recognized this when I was asked to work on a project recently. I asked for a clear deadline, and a clear scope for the project. They decided right then not to involve me; obviously, they were more interested in playing around with my mind than in getting something done. They knocked on that door, and I didn’t answer according to their script.”
I’ve been through the same pattern. Asking for deadlines and a clear scope for a project definitely helps to figure out how serious the organizers are. If they’re not serious about getting something accomplished, then why bother to involve oneself? Better to wish them luck then to get involved.
I don’t think that poor organizers are always trying to “play with participant’s heads”. Often they simply have a goal in mind other than the stated one. To some nonprofits, just generating a group of excited, motivated people to draw from as a resource pool is a goal in itself. Unfortunately, that ulterior motive can really PO the more driven, results oriented volunteers.
Well Oxy,
Right now I’m blessed with a lot of very productive labor. If I give time and energy to someone, I take it away from someone else. Sometimes that someone is me. I need a few hours a week to unwind, or I get cranky.
Someday I’ll give to strangers again. My kids will grow up, our parents will pass on and my husband isn’t a particularly needy guy. There will be some to spare when I’m not focused on my golden-years career.
The thing is, no strangers. I mean it. Oh, I still change a flat, offer up my jumper cables, give to charities, donate to thrift stores and the like. I just don’t want to work with virtual strangers in a non-profit any more. I’d rather start something with a friend or two, people who I know for a fact are mentally stable and sincere.
In a for profit business, I don’t mind strangers so much. After all, a for profit business has a bottom line and goals that can be readily defined. Success and productivity are easier to define in such situations.
“the road to hell is paved with good intentions” and we all know that. There are lots of really “nice” but INCOMPETENT ORGANIZERS in various organizations….they are not “goal oriented” or “driven to accomplish” something. Just like at work, I had to work with people who just weren’t able to organize themselves out of a paper bag, but that is part of the challenge is to work with these people and still accomplish something toward the goal. I finally saw that and realized I couldn’t change these people into goal directed, organized folks. So if I wanted to accomplish the goal, I had to do it in spite of their resistence sometimes.
Depends on how important to me that the goal is…and how set upon accomplishing it that I am.
I worked on a volunteer group after a tornado once and we spent our time (most of it) sorting through RAGS and DIRTY clothing that people had “donated” to the cause to find the fewer items that were worth giving to the people who lost their homes. I swear it made me so tooth grinding mad that people would be so….well, whatever word you want to apply!!!!!
The last tornado collection that was taken up here (I donated to but didn’t organize) was well done, they inspected what they took in, and things that they had too many of they either turned it away, or collected it for another group (DV shelter) Clothing and household and other items were organized and put out like a store in our community center where people could “shop” easily and pick out what they needed or wanted. WELL done.
after this last tornado a couple of years ago, I took in a homeless horse that ended up being a problem because the owner a) didn’t know how to take care of a horse b) couldn’t afford to adequately feed and pay vet costs for the horse c) the horse was DANGEROUS (bit her owner’s breast nearly OFF!) and I actually had to load (a BIG job for an adult horse that did not know how to even lead) and transport this horse to the next place for it to “live” before it hurt its owner again, her children or other animals here on the farm.
When extending a helping hand some people interpret that to mean you are taking responsibility for providing for them for the rest of their lives. I about did that with the horse! But we have to learn to set boundaries in our helping so it does NOT become “enabling.” That’s not always an easy “call” but it is what we need to work on I think, expecially the “WE that includes ME!”
…about those PO’d driven and results oriented volunteers:
A friend of mine just gently recused himself from a political action group because they kept holding pointless and unproductive “emergency” meetings.
Unlike the organizers, he was an educated, well traveled professional with many commitments to his family and friends. He joined the group not to talk about doing things, but to actually get things done. If they weren’t going to get anything done, then he felt he needed to pour his time, talent and resources into another group.
Needless to say, I heartily agreed with him. So did the rest of his friends. The stated cause of the organization was something we all agreed with, but no one among us felt we had time to waste. We would have done the same thing he did.
Dear EC,
Ah yes, I agree with you there. That’s for sure!
I am learning to say NO to people who try to recruit me for things that I don’t want to do, too. Even when they try to “guilt” me into giving in. I wish I had learned to set boundaries a lot sooner, but “better late than never” I guess.
GREAT ARTICLE! Thank you so much for this! I found that when I started changing my boundaries, it DID have an affect, not just on my ex-spath, but on others around me as well. I was raised in a home where what you had, you shared. It was that simple. When I started saying NO to my ex, I found that I also had to start saying NO. His game was to go to those around me and paint me as this person who was cold and selfish. At one point, I quit communicating with anyone who had contact with him. It wasn’t healthy it crossed my boundaries.
Two simple little letters with such a powerful message! NO. It was hard for me to learn how to say it, but I use it now when I need to and I find that the more I practice saying it, the easier it becomes.
Ox, the “guilt” thing can be hard, but I’m learning on that one too! I pay close attention to the one pulling that on me and that’s a very helpful factor!
Hi Everyone
But what do you do if you dont want to lose the person in your life who is using you?
Surely if you change your behaviour and stop giving them what they want they will leave and find someone else who will.
I would rather be used than lose the people in my life I care about – but I guess thats why I’m messed up
:(I want to jump in commando style and kid-nap you …send you to Nepal and make you walk back…then you’ll see reason.xxx Sigh.
HeightofConfusion,
What about the person who is using you and you giving them everything they want, leaving you anyways when they find someone with something more to offer? What then? They will leave when they choose to leave, regardless of how you let them use and abuse you.
That is the thing about an abusive realtionship. You give. They take. And when he is done, he is done. Moves on. If he doesn’t kill you first.
Height are you still seeking therapy? You really need someone in real life to help you through this as well as venting here.
Your addmitance to let him use and abuse you, rather than “loose” him, is really disturbing and heart wrenching at the same time.
I hope that you are being as raw and honest to your therapist, as you are on this forum.
I wish there was something that someone could say to REACH you, so that you would UNDERSTAND that you are allowing yourself to be used and abused, by having the mind set that you have….And thinking this is “ok”. When it is NOT ok.
You deserve better. Even if you don’t think you do you do.
What keeps you there? Fear of him or fear of being alone? Can you answer this question?
Dear Hight, that is the state we all have been, I guess, at least I have been there. It is like going cold turkey with a drug being an addict to said drug, as they occupy the same region in our brain!! Stay here, blog and read BUT DO NOT RECONNECT!!! He/she is pure evil poison for you, you are in confusion and in the fog. Be nice to yourself, get out, do a walk, clean the windows, work out at the gym, BUT PLEASE STAY NC (NO CONTACT)!
Try to think something nice, what would you like to GET instead of GIVE! That you are a wonderful lovable and marvellous person who simply deserves the very best and not being sucked up and spat out at the discretion of a jerk at best.
Try to think of a special nasty moment when you had this feeling of a hot burning stone in your stomach, when he devalued you, maybe in front of people? You were embarrassed but put a happy face seemingly not noticing it because you deserved not any better because you never ever will meet his standards of the pedestal he put you in the first place, as hard you can ever try.
You are far better, and your thoughts of him are noble. But he is not worth your thoughts, because he does not care about your thoughts. He cares about food, shelter, sex, maybe accompaniment; business it is for him! (in exchange you are allowed to walk in HIS shadow and HE gracefully accepts your presence every once in a while until he gets tired of your existence and then you have to transform into a … enter favourite passtime without you).
When he wants to use somebody, there are services for a fee for every job. And you want to do it for free and get bad treatment??
Just say once the magic word “NO” and see what happens. The ones who like YOU will continue to show up and care for your wellbeing and vice versa, and for the others: I refer to this wonderful blog entry!
The bad thing is when my self esteem was low I could not allow myself to use the word NO, but it is vital to overcome this fear of using the magic word “NO”. Just think about when HE is using it (constantly, am I right?) The wonderful thing is that you can say it NON VERBAL! Just show NO REACTION! If you are in treatment maybe you can rehearse the situations with your therapist, or can you try to use the word NO in harmless everyday situations. Example: If someone is trying to force you to buy at the groceries something you do not REALLY want but you are too embarrassed to say no? Been there done that!
I wish you all the best and send you a big cyberhug! (((((( 🙂 ))))))