Codependency: How to Recognize the Signs
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By:
Alex Herrera
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Editor:
Phyllis Rodriguez, PMHNP-BC
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Clinical Reviewer:
Dr. Ash Bhatt, MD, MRO
Fast Answer: What is Codependency and What are the Key Red-Flag Signs?
Codependency is a relationship pattern where one person becomes excessively focused on another person’s needs, problems, and well being—often at the expense of their own. It’s not a formal diagnosis in the DSM-5, but it describes a painful dynamic that many people instantly recognize in their own life.
At its core, codependency involves an excessive emotional or psychological reliance on another person, frequently someone struggling with addiction, mental illness, or chronic problems. The codependent person’s sense of self becomes wrapped up in caretaking, fixing, and controlling the other person’s circumstances.
Here are the common signs of codependency to watch for:
- Chronic people-pleasing and inability to say “no” even when exhausted
- Intense fear of abandonment or rejection that drives your decisions
- Panic at the thought of upsetting the other person
- A compulsive need to “fix” or rescue them from consequences
- Making excuses or covering up their substance abuse, lies, or failures
- Feeling empty, lost, or purposeless when you’re not needed
- Basing your mood entirely on how the other person is doing
These patterns commonly show up in romantic relationships, parent-child dynamics, and close friendships. Typically, one partner over-functions (managing, rescuing, controlling) while the other under-functions (avoiding responsibility, staying dependent).
The term gained widespread recognition in the 1980s through Melody Beattie’s work and peer support groups like Co Dependents Anonymous, though its roots stretch back to 1970s research with family members of people with alcohol use disorder.
If you recognize yourself in some of these signs, you’re not alone. Many people discover codependent patterns only after years of exhausting themselves in relationships. Keep reading to understand where these patterns come from, how to identify them clearly, and what steps you can take toward healthier relationships.
What is Codependency?
Codependency is a learned relationship pattern characterized by over-responsibility, self-neglect, and an excessive focus on another person’s needs, emotions, and problems. It develops over time, shaped by psychological, environmental, and interpersonal factors that influence how someone relates to others.
In codependent dynamics, one person’s self worth becomes tied to being indispensable. Their purpose derives from fixing crises, smoothing over conflict, or managing the other person’s life. As therapist Darlene Lancer describes it,
“The codependent person becomes unable to function from their innate self—their thinking and behavior organize entirely around another person.”
This is why codependency is sometimes called relationship addiction. The caretaker role and emotional intensity can feel compulsive and difficult to leave, even when the relationship is clearly harmful. The codependent person may know intellectually that the situation isn’t working, yet feel unable to step back.
The concept emerged in the late 1970s within U.S. addiction treatment programs. Initially, it described spouses and family members of people with alcohol or drug dependence—those who enabled and covered for the person’s addiction while neglecting their own needs. Through the 1980s and 1990s, the term expanded to include other dysfunctional family dynamics beyond chemical dependency.
It’s important to note that codependency is not an official diagnosis in the DSM-5-TR as of 2024. Some clinicians debate whether the term pathologizes normal caregiving. However, many people find it useful to describe painful, one-sided relationships where they’ve lost themselves.
The core issue isn’t caring “too much.” The problem arises when someone loses their own boundaries, own needs, and sense of self in the process of caring for another person.
Who Does Codependency Affect?
Codependent patterns can appear across generations, cultures, and relationship types. They’re especially common where there is addiction, chronic illness, or emotional immaturity in the family system.
Common relationship contexts where codependency develops include:
- Romantic partners who misuse alcohol or drugs
- Adult children of alcoholics or parents with mental health conditions
- Parents of teens or adults with substance use disorder or severe mental health issues
- Siblings who “parent” the family or constantly manage crises
- Friends or co worker relationships where one person constantly rescues the other
Consider this example: A spouse repeatedly calls in sick at work for a partner who is hungover. They cover financial debts, make appointments, and lie to family members about the severity of the drinking. With good intentions, they believe they’re helping—but this enabling keeps the unhealthy cycle going and prevents the partner from facing natural consequences.
Many codependent adults grew up in homes affected by alcohol or drug use, severe depression, or unpredictable caregiving. Children in these environments had to take on adult responsibilities too early, learning that their role was to manage the chaos around them.
People in helping professions—nurses, therapists, teachers, clergy—may be especially vulnerable to codependent patterns. Caretaking is both expected and rewarded in these roles, which can blur the line between professional helping and personal over-functioning.
Cultural expectations also play a role. Messaging directed at mothers, eldest daughters, or certain family roles can reinforce the idea that self-sacrifice is noble and that prioritizing your own wants is selfish. These beliefs lay the groundwork for codependent behaviors.
How Dysfunctional Families Lay the Groundwork
Codependency usually doesn’t “just happen” in adulthood. It often begins in childhood within dysfunctional families, where children learn survival strategies that later become problematic patterns.
Dysfunctional family dynamics share common traits:
- Secrecy about addiction, violence, or mental illness
- Unspoken rules like “don’t talk, don’t feel, don’t trust.”
- Constant walking on eggshells to avoid conflict
- Children taking on adult roles (mediating fights, caring for siblings, managing a parent’s emotions)
- Conditional positive regard—children feel loved only when meeting caregivers’ expectations
Children in these environments learn to ignore their own feelings—fear, sadness, or anger—in order to keep the peace or manage a parent’s mood. This becomes a template for adult relationships.
Here are specific examples of how this develops:
A child in the 1990s covers for a parent’s hangovers, telling teachers their mom “has the flu.” A teen in the 2000s stays home from social events to monitor a depressed caregiver, believing it’s their responsibility to prevent crises. A young adult in the 2010s spends all their savings bailing out a sibling with a gambling problem, unable to watch them suffer consequences.
The long-term impact shows up in adulthood as difficulty identifying what they actually feel or want, intense guilt when they set boundaries, and a belief that love means “taking care of everything.” Emotional development gets stunted when a child’s primary job becomes managing other family members rather than exploring their own identity.
These patterns are learned survival strategies, not character flaws. They were often adaptive in an unsafe or unpredictable environment. The child who became hyper-attuned to a parent’s moods was keeping themselves safe. The problem is that what worked in childhood creates dysfunction in adult relationships.
Common Behavioral and Emotional Patterns in Codependency
While everyone occasionally people-pleases or overhelps, codependency involves a consistent cluster of behaviors and emotional responses that define how someone relates to others.
Behavioral patterns
Typical behaviors in codependent relationships include:
| Behavior | What it looks like |
|---|---|
| Chronic caretaking | Handling tasks the other adult could do themselves |
| Overfunctioning | Managing their schedule, finances, health appointments |
| Controlling | Monitoring or directing the other person “for their own good” |
| Enabling | Bailing them out of natural consequences (paying rent after relapses, making excuses for missed work) |
| Covering up | Hiding a person’s addiction or unhealthy behaviors from other family members |
Emotional patterns
Codependent people commonly experience:
- Low self esteem and persistent shame
- Fear of abandonment or rejection that drives decisions
- Difficulty identifying their own feelings or own needs
- Feeling responsible for others’ moods and choices
- Overwhelming responsibility for a partner’s problems
- Suppressed anger or resentment from unmet needs
- Intimacy problems despite relationship preoccupation
Relational patterns
A 2018 research review identified four recurring themes in codependency: self sacrifice, focus on others, control needs that spark conflict, and difficulty recognizing or expressing emotions.
In practice, this means:
- Choosing partners who are unreliable, addicted, or emotionally unavailable
- Staying in relationships involving emotional, verbal, or physical abuse
- Feeling unable to leave because “they couldn’t cope without me.”
- Idealizing flawed partners to sustain unfulfilling bonds
The internal conflict is painful. Codependent people often feel deep resentment toward the person they’re helping—yet experience intense anxiety or emptiness if they’re not in a helping or rescuing role. Their self-identity has become so tied to caretaking that they don’t know who they are without it.
How to Recognize the Signs of Codependency in Yourself
This section is an invitation to self-reflect, not self-diagnose. The following are common signs that many people with codependent patterns recognize in themselves.
Self-check: Signs of codependency
Consider whether these statements resonate with your experience:
- I have extreme difficulty saying “no,” even when I’m exhausted or overwhelmed
- I feel guilty when I prioritize my own needs over someone else’s
- I constantly worry about what others think of me
- I’ve lied to friends or family to protect a partner’s reputation
- I’m drawn to “broken” people who I feel I can fix or save
- I have difficulty making decisions without checking how the other person feels first
- I feel responsible whenever anyone around me is upset
- I experience panic when a relationship feels threatened
- I avoid conflict at almost any cost, even when I’m clearly being mistreated
- I’ve neglected my own health, friendships, or goals while managing someone else’s life
- My mood depends almost entirely on how my partner or loved one is doing
- I feel empty or without purpose when I’m not needed by someone
- I’ve covered up someone’s substance abuse or harmful behavior
- I’ve made excuses for a romantic partner’s bad behavior repeatedly
- I struggle to express anger directly, even when it’s justified
If you recognize many of these patterns—especially if they cause distress, burnout, or put you at risk—consider consulting a mental health professional. A therapist, psychologist, or psychiatrist can provide proper assessment and support.
Online quizzes and self-evaluation tools can raise awareness, but they’re not substitutes for professional guidance. Codependency isn’t about a single behavior; it’s about patterns that consistently harm your well-being and maintain relationships at your own expense.
Codependency, Personality Traits, and Other Mental Health Issues
Codependency overlaps with, but is distinct from, certain personality disorders and mental health conditions. Understanding these differences helps clarify what codependency actually is—and isn’t.
Codependency vs. dependent personality disorder
These two concepts are often confused, but a 2017 study found only 14.5% overlap between them. The key difference:
- Dependent personality disorder: The person seeks someone to take care of them, yielding to stronger egos
- Codependency: The person seeks to take care of—and often control—the other person’s life
Codependent people actively prioritize and manage others rather than passively depending on them. They find satisfaction in running someone else’s life, not in having their life run for them.
Related concepts
Codependency connects to several other psychological ideas:
- Pathological altruism: Helping others in ways that ultimately hurt yourself or them
- Learned helplessness: Feeling stuck and powerless to change the relationship dynamic
- Enmeshment: Boundaries between individuals become so blurred that separate identity is lost
Co-occurring conditions
Anxiety disorders, depression, and trauma histories (including complex PTSD from childhood neglect or abuse) commonly appear alongside codependent patterns. Many people with codependency experienced dysfunctional families where their emotional development was disrupted.
The debate around codependency
Some researchers and clinicians criticize the term “codependency” as too broad or as pathologizing normal caregiving. Others see it as useful shorthand for a painful pattern that many people immediately recognize.
What matters most isn’t the label itself. The focus should stay on your actual distress, your relationship difficulties, and whether your patterns are causing harm. If caring for others consistently comes at the cost of your own mental health, physical health, and sense of self—that’s worth addressing, regardless of what you call it.
Codependent vs. Interdependent Relationships
Understanding the difference between codependency and healthy dependence is essential for building healthier relationships.
The key distinction
- Codependent relationships blur or erase boundaries, with one person losing their identity to maintain the connection
- Interdependent relationship dynamics combine closeness with mutual respect and autonomy
Think of it visually: codependency looks like one merged circle where individual identities disappear. An interdependent relationship looks like two overlapping but distinct circles—connected, but each person maintains their own shape.
Specific differences
| Area | Codependent | Interdependent |
|---|---|---|
| Boundaries | Weak or nonexistent | Clear and respected |
| Self-identity | Lost in the relationship | Maintained alongside connection |
| Reciprocity | One-sided giving | Mutual support and give-and-take |
| Power | Imbalanced (control or submission) | Shared decision-making |
| Conflict | Avoided at all costs | Addressed directly and respectfully |
| Individual growth | Sacrificed for the relationship | Encouraged and celebrated |
What healthy dependence looks like
An interdependent couple might look like this: Both partners pursue their own goals and friendships while still relying on each other for emotional support. They spend time together and apart. When one faces a challenge, the other offers support—but doesn’t take over. Each person can say “I need space” or “I disagree” without the relationship feeling threatened.
Needing others is not inherently unhealthy. Humans are social beings who thrive on connection. The problem arises when one person’s needs and identity consistently disappear to keep the relationship intact.
As you reflect on your own relationships, consider: Where do they fall along the spectrum from independence to interdependence to codependence? Are you able to maintain your own wants, pursue your own goals, and express your own feelings—while also being genuinely connected?
Steps to Change Codependent Patterns in a Relationship
Change is possible at any age. Shifting long-standing patterns can feel confusing or scary at first, but many people successfully move from codependent patterns toward healthier dynamics.
Early practical steps
Start by noticing when you step in to fix problems that aren’t yours. Before taking action, pause and ask yourself:
- Is this my responsibility or theirs?
- Am I rescuing them from a natural consequence they need to experience?
- What am I afraid will happen if I don’t intervene?
Allow the other person to experience natural consequences. This might mean letting them face late fees, hangovers, missed deadlines, or disappointed employers. It feels uncomfortable—but shielding someone from reality prevents both of you from growing.
Separating your feelings from theirs
One hallmark of codependency is difficulty identifying where you end and the other person begins. Try these strategies:
- Journaling: Write about what you feel, want, and need without referencing the other person
- Making a personal preferences list: What do you like? What brings you joy? What do you value? Many codependent people realize they haven’t thought about this in years
- Scheduling solo activities: Spend time doing something just for yourself, even if it feels selfish at first
Building outside support
A codependent relationship often becomes the only source of emotional connection. Break this pattern by:
- Reconnecting with trusted friends you may have neglected
- Joining support groups or community activities
- Pursuing hobbies that don’t involve your codependent partner
Small, consistent changes
Dramatic overnight transformation isn’t realistic. Focus on small shifts:
- Say “I need to think about that” instead of an automatic yes
- Take one evening a week for yourself
- Let one phone call go unanswered without guilt
- Make one decision without consulting the other person first
A real example: Sarah noticed she always handled her partner’s doctor appointments and pharmacy runs. She started by simply asking, “Would you like to handle calling the pharmacy this time?” Over months, she gradually transferred responsibilities back to him—and discovered he was more capable than either of them had believed.
Healthy Support vs. Control: Learning New Boundaries
Many codependent people confuse helping with controlling. Learning the difference is essential for changing unhealthy behavior patterns.
Support vs. control
Healthy support looks like:
- Listening without trying to fix
- Encouraging professional help (therapist, doctor, treatment program)
- Offering options and letting them choose
- Being present without taking over
Control looks like:
- Monitoring phones, emails, or whereabouts
- Making appointments without their consent
- Covering up harmful behavior from others
- Insisting you know what’s best for them
Questions to ask yourself
Before taking action on someone else’s behalf, consider:
- Am I doing something they could reasonably do for themselves?
- Am I trying to manage their feelings instead of my own?
- Am I protecting them from a consequence they need to face?
- Would I feel resentful if they didn’t appreciate this?
- Am I doing this to gain approval or avoid conflict?
Setting and communicating healthy boundaries
A boundary is not a threat or punishment—it’s a statement about what you will and won’t do. Here are simple scripts:
- “I care about you, but I won’t lie to your boss for you anymore.”
- “I love you, and I’m not able to lend you money again.”
- “I want to support your recovery, but I won’t stay if you’re drinking.”
When you set boundaries, expect some pushback. The other person may react with anger, guilt trips, or withdrawal. These emotional responses don’t mean your boundary is wrong—they mean the dynamic is changing.
Seek support while practicing new boundaries. Friends, a therapist, or a support group can help you hold firm when the pressure to return to old patterns gets intense. Holding boundaries is especially hard for those with codependent histories, and you don’t have to do it alone.
Challenging Negative Thoughts and Building Self-Esteem
Codependent behavior connects to underlying beliefs like “I’m only lovable when I’m useful” or “If I don’t fix it, everything will fall apart.” Changing these beliefs is essential for lasting change.
Common cognitive distortions in codependency
| Distortion | Example thought |
|---|---|
| All-or-nothing thinking | “If they’re upset, I’ve completely failed” |
| Catastrophizing | “If I say no, they’ll leave me forever” |
| Self-blame | “Their relapse is my fault—I should have tried harder” |
| Mind reading | “They must think I’m a bad person for setting this boundary” |
| Emotional reasoning | “I feel guilty, so I must be doing something wrong” |
| Exaggerated sense of responsibility | “If I don’t manage this, no one will” |
A three-step process for challenging thoughts
- Notice the thought: Catch yourself in a negative thinking pattern. “I’m selfish if I rest.”
- Question its accuracy: What’s the evidence for and against this thought? Have you rested before without everything falling apart? Do you believe other people are selfish for resting?
- Replace with a more balanced statement: “Resting helps me show up as my best self. Taking care of myself isn’t selfish—it’s necessary.”
Rebuilding self esteem
Strengthening your strong sense of self involves both internal work and external actions:
Internal work:
- Practice self-compassion when you make mistakes
- Challenge the voice that says your worth depends on what you do for others
- Acknowledge your needs and feelings as valid
External actions:
- Set small, achievable goals for yourself
- Take care of your physical health (sleep, movement, nutrition)
- Celebrate personal strengths that have nothing to do with caregiving
- Reconnect with hobbies and interests you’ve neglected
Self-care isn’t a reward for being productive. It’s a foundation for having the energy and clarity to show up in any relationship.
Professional Help and Support for Codependency
While self-help steps are valuable, many people benefit from structured support when addressing long-standing codependent patterns.
Individual therapy
Codependency treatment often involves working with a mental health professional who can help you:
- Identify the origins of your patterns in family dynamics
- Practice new relational skills in a safe environment
- Process grief and anger from childhood experiences
- Develop strategies for maintaining healthy boundaries
Effective approaches include cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), psychodynamic therapy, and trauma-informed care. Look for therapists with experience in family-of-origin issues, addiction, and boundary work.
Couples or family therapy
When safe and appropriate, couples or family therapy can help shift roles and responsibilities in the relationship. Both people can learn new communication patterns and address enabling behavior together.
Important note: Couples therapy should not be used in situations of active violence without proper safeguards. If abuse is present, individual therapy and safety planning should come first.
Peer support options
Several peer support groups address codependency and related issues:
| Group | Focus | Founded |
|---|---|---|
| Co Dependents Anonymous (CoDA) | Recovery from codependent patterns | 1986 |
| Al-Anon | Family and friends of people with alcohol problems | 1951 |
| Nar-Anon | Family and friends of people with drug problems | 1967 |
| Adult Children of Alcoholics (ACA) | Adults who grew up in dysfunctional families | 1978 |
These groups typically offer weekly meetings (in-person and online), shared experience, and a structured program for recovery. Many people find that hearing similar patterns in others’ stories reduces shame and isolation.
Finding the right professional
Look for licensed professionals with relevant experience:
- Psychologists
- Clinical social workers
- Licensed professional counselors
- Marriage and family therapists
Questions to ask a potential therapist:
- Do you have experience working with codependency or relationship issues?
- Are you familiar with family-of-origin work?
- What’s your approach to helping clients set boundaries?
Seeking help is a sign of strength, not weakness. It’s a step toward more balanced, interdependent relationships—not a rejection of caring or love.
When Codependency Hits Home: Moving Toward Healthier Relationships
Codependency is a learned pattern rooted in past experiences. Recognizing the signs is the first step toward change—and you’ve already taken that step by reading this far.
Observing your relationships honestly
Take some time to observe your current relationships gently but honestly:
- Where do you feel over-responsible?
- Where do you feel resentful?
- Where do you feel invisible or unappreciated?
- Where have you abandoned your own needs to maintain relationships?
These observations aren’t about blaming yourself or anyone else. They’re about seeing clearly so you can make different choices.
Caring for others while caring for yourself
It is possible to care deeply about others while also caring for yourself. Healthy love includes boundaries, mutual support, and room for both people’s growth. You don’t have to choose between connection and self-care.
Concrete next steps
If you’re ready to move forward, consider:
- Read a reputable book on codependency (Melody Beattie’s “Codependent No More” remains a classic starting point)
- Attend a local or online support group at least once (Co Dependents Anonymous meetings are free and widely available)
- Schedule an initial consultation with a therapist who has experience in relationship issues and family dynamics
- Start a journal to track your thoughts, feelings, and patterns
- Identify one small boundary you can practice this week
Acknowledging grief
As you step out of old roles, grief may arise. Whether the relationship changes or ends, letting go of familiar patterns means losing something—even if what you’re losing was hurting you. Grief is a natural part of healing from codependent dynamics.
You may grieve the fantasy of the relationship you hoped for. You may grieve the years spent focused on someone else. You may grieve the childhood where you first learned these patterns. All of this is valid.
A Hopeful Path Forward
Imagine relationships where you’re valued not just for what you do for others, but for who you are. Where you can have your own feelings, pursue your own goals, and maintain your sense of self—while still being genuinely connected to people you love.
This isn’t fantasy. It’s what healthy, interdependent relationships actually look like. And it’s available to you, one small step at a time.
The patterns you learned to survive can be unlearned. The boundaries you never knew how to set can become natural. The person you lost track of while caring for everyone else is still there, waiting for you to come home to yourself.
Frequently Asked
Questions about Codependency
What are the symptoms of being codependent?
Codependency is a behavioral and emotional pattern often identified in relationship psychology and family-systems therapy. While it is not a formal DSM-5 diagnosis, it is widely recognized by mental health professionals.
Common symptoms include:
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People-pleasing at the expense of your own needs
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Difficulty setting or maintaining healthy boundaries
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Fear of abandonment or rejection
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Over-reliance on others for self-worth or identity
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Excessive caretaking, rescuing, or enabling behaviors
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Guilt or anxiety when prioritizing yourself
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Staying in unhealthy or one-sided relationships
Codependency is frequently discussed in clinical work involving substance use disorders, trauma, and family systems, and is commonly addressed in therapy models such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT).
How do I fix my codependency?
Codependency is treatable, and many people make meaningful changes with the right support.
Effective steps include:
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Individual therapy, especially CBT or trauma-informed therapy
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Learning boundary-setting skills and assertive communication
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Identifying core beliefs tied to self-worth and approval
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Practicing self-care and autonomy
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Attending support groups such as Codependents Anonymous (CoDA)
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Addressing underlying issues like childhood trauma, attachment wounds, or addiction in the family
Mental health professionals emphasize that healing codependency is a process, not a quick fix, and progress often involves unlearning long-standing relational patterns.
What does it mean when people are codependent?
When people are codependent, their sense of identity, emotional stability, or self-esteem is excessively tied to another person—often a partner, family member, or someone struggling with addiction or mental illness.
This dynamic typically involves:
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One person over-functioning (caretaker, fixer)
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The other under-functioning (dependent, emotionally unavailable)
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A cycle that reinforces imbalance and emotional burnout
The concept of codependency emerged from addiction recovery frameworks, particularly in families affected by alcohol use disorder (AUD), and remains widely used in modern psychotherapy.
What does being codependent feel like?
Being codependent often feels emotionally exhausting and confusing, even when the relationship appears close or loving.
People commonly describe feeling:
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Responsible for others’ emotions or outcomes
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Anxious when others are upset or distant
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Afraid to say “no”
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Invisible or unimportant in relationships
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Trapped between resentment and guilt
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Unsure of who they are outside of helping others
According to mental health clinicians, these feelings are often rooted in early attachment experiences, where love or safety felt conditional.





