Job descriptions are a much-needed necessity in this world,
beyond areas of employment. Indeed, for those of us who especially
struggle with healthy boundaries and codependency, knowing what the job
description is within relationships, what we are and are not responsible for,
can be sanity and sometimes, literal lifesavers.
Each of us needs to learn how to navigate the unrealistic
expectations that constantly fly at us. And unfortunately, most us are
improperly taught unhealthy and dangerous job descriptions. We are groomed to
believe we must rescue, be there, available, constantly forgiving and allowing,
no matter what toxic person or circumstance arrives in our lives. Many of us
are taught to “just take it.”
Our health, our relationships, our families are, therefore,
at risk. The stakes are high.
So, let’s look at some of the harmful, mistaken thoughts that
we wrongly absorb and try to apply in our lives.
Be liked.
Right out the gate, we believe an impossible doozy. Oh, just
be liked. By everyone. All the time. Without fail. What could possibly
go wrong with this job description?
This is deadly peer pressure, even though, most of the time,
it’s self-generated. We agree to the all-encompassing terms.
“Yes, I’ll be liked, even if it’s not good for me, even if
it’s unsafe. Because, in the end, being liked by this person, by being pleasing
in this situation, will be worth all of the trouble.”
Only, it doesn’t quite work out that way. For, in this
gigantic, unhealthy and unsafe job description, we find more subtle, and just
as dangerous, other descriptions. “Be Liked,” is the governing mandate
to all other dysfunction.
Case in point?
Fix or Save People.
Ay-Yi-Yi.
This unhealthy part of the wrong job description we
internalize has us repeatedly coming back and staying in harmful situations
with harmful people. Addiction and abuse are rife with these dynamics. We
supply, protect and enable someone, sacrificing ourselves, all because we love
them and genuinely believe our “help” is helping them.
It is not.
Yet, we believe it is helping because, somehow, we need to
believe it is helping. If we fail to adopt a Savior role, we believe our very
identity can be at risk. And, for some of us, that is unacceptable, even
life-threatening.
Do it all.
Likewise, we can also adopt another oppressive mandate in a
harmful job description: we must do absolutely everything. We must be Superman
or Superwoman. No excuses.
It doesn’t matter if we work full-time, are raising a family,
are caregiving, we must do way more than is asked of us. After all, we,
again, want to be liked.
So, somehow, we rationalize, we will find a way to get
everything done.
Please everyone.
We believe fulfilling the toxic job descriptions, including doing
everything, will successfully accomplish being perfectly pleasing. Again, we’re
back to “be liked.” We’re back to our Savior role and function.
What do we fear if we’re not liked, if we’re not
being pleasing?
Rejection? Loss? Failure?
For some of us, that is too high of a price to pay. We envision
the worst-case scenario, so much so, we dare not even ask ourselves the hard
questions, let alone, answer them.
We just cannot go there.
Hold it together.
And that, therefore, ushers in yet another harmful principle
in our unhealthy job description. We think can hold it all together somehow.
Spinning plates? Sure. Why not add a couple more?
We can easily believe we are the only ones to solve all
problems, tasks and issues. No need to delegate; I got it. No need to ask for
help; I got it. No need to say no; I got it.
Only, we don’t have it. We have a mess. We have a breakdown
coming our way.
Much like the self-imposed pressure to “do it all,” we,
likewise, expect that we will prevent, sustain, protect and help a circumstance
perfectly, without any fallout or untimely event throwing a wrench into
everything. Perfectionism is a hard taskmaster; it’s unreasonable and
irrational. And impossible.
And
unhealthy.
For perfectionism, in its supposedly “noble” pursuit,
inevitably, has us obsessing on image over truth, no matter what the situation
may be. We may not be aware that we are doing this; we may have no intention of
doing that. But impact has the final say.
For, in our striving to “hold it all together,” we,
consciously or unconsciously, give sole importance to how something appears. If
things “look” healthy, pretty, organized, happy or “right,” we can tend to
believe we are, in fact, doing our job effectively.
But take a closer look beyond that beautiful smiling face, that
supposedly fit physique, that Norman Rockwell-looking family, that well-ordered
life, and what really is going on there? Addictions? Abuse? Depression? Toxic
relationships? Criminal activity?
What if we worked on healing the mess, not just making it aesthetically
pleasing?
So, What IS My Job?
Each of us does have a job. It’s not about avoiding all
responsibility. Rather, it’s about taking appropriate, realistic responsibility
for ourselves.
Such a small thing? Far from it.
The antidote to being liked? Love people.
This seems like a no-brainer. And how many of us, doing the
dysfunctional job description behaviors, thoroughly believe we are doing it
“out of love?” But love looks different than codependence, than enabling an
unhealthy choice. Loving people is far different than being liked. Sometimes,
they are diametrically opposing to one another.
Loving people sometimes means not helping.
We can, without knowing or intending, cause someone’s death,
because of our supposed love for them. Think drug addict who overdoses because
we supply them with the money and the substances to do so.
Loving people sometimes means saying no.
This is the ultimate test to us people pleasers, isn’t it? We
fear rejection, scorn, not being viewed as kind or valuable. We risk someone’s
unflattering opinion of us.
Loving people sometimes means no longer being in relationship
with them.
There are times when we need to let others go. Dissolve and
sever the relationship. It’s too detrimental to stay connected. It means imminent
destruction. We need to accept that this death must occur.
And then, we need to grieve that loss.
The antidote to fixing or saving people? Be authentic.
We cannot save or fix anyone. Yes, we can “help.” But we need
to scrutinize what is help… and what is not. The root of ascertaining that
involves authenticity. We must be real and honest with what is happening and
how we are contributing to that situation. Perhaps, our “help” isn’t help at
all. Perhaps it is harm. Perhaps, because we fear facing the truth ourselves,
we opt to be someone else’s solution. Doing that is selfish, counterproductive
and unloving to ourselves.
We need to recognize that being authentic sometimes means
that we will have limits. And we need to enforce that reality. Sometimes, we
shouldn’t give people endless chances. Sometimes, constantly giving money to an
addict of any kind, keeps everyone in disease, instead of recovery.
Sometimes, we need to recognize we choose to be inauthentic
because we see it as easier. And, as unflattering as it sounds, we like the
path of least resistance.
Being authentic isn’t that. But it is integrity. And when you
and stay choose integrity over ease, we have the realistic peace we have been
craving our entire lives.
Being authentic does not equal being pleasing. But it does
equal being our honorable selves. It is scary, but it’s worth it.
The antidote to doing it all? Take the next step.
Once again, we get caught up in perfectionism. We fail, then,
before we even start.
Somehow, we believe that, unless and until we can do
something perfectly, it’s not worth starting. We magically think that all the
stars must be aligned, this or that prerequisite must be in place, laying the
perfect foundation for our plan.
And that perfect foundation, that perfect star alignment just
never happens.
In the meantime, we up the stress ands pressure levels. With
procrastination, comes heightened anxiety.
“Faith is taking
the first step even when you can't see the whole staircase.”
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Dr. King was on
the money here. Life does not require all certainty and all answers be made
available for us to take action.
Life is about
doing the next thing. What IS that next thing?
Solving a world
problem, completely and thoroughly? Or is it taking out the garbage? Brushing
our teeth?
You may laugh at
that. But really, life is about many small, ordinary, tedious tasks being
accomplished on a daily, consistent basis.
How about we take
things down a notch? How about letting
ourselves off the hook concerning perfection… concerning anything or anyone?
There is no such thing. We do what we can; we have limitations.
We have the
inherent right to live life without doing it perfectly.
Period.
The antidote to pleasing everyone? Speak my truth.
Authenticity and truth go hand in hand. It’s impossible,
unhealthy and perfectionistic to please everyone. We will fail. Therefore,
choosing to be truthful about ourselves can free us from pressure, whether it
be self-imposed or implemented from others. We don’t need to be nasty or rude
about voicing our authentic truth, only brave. It’s hard to go against the
grain. Popularity contests are still around, long after high school has ended.
Peer pressure. Conformity.
Yet, when we succumb to trying to reach those states of
being, we seem to only feel constrained, trapped, like frauds.
We need a newer measuring stick, being our truthful selves.
That remains when the temporary trend, situation, relationship dynamic,
inevitably, changes or ends. The truth of who we are, should we choose to
embrace it, remains.
The Antidote To Holding it together? Breathe.
Sometimes, we need to make things as simple as possible.
When you and I hit the wall, the realm of our finite beings,
it is, therefore, helpful to remember to breathe. If we can do nothing else,
while stuck in any moment, we can do that.
We hear so much, these days, about mindfulness, about being
present and in the moment. What each of these things have in common for us,
whether or not we recognize it as such, is breathing. It’s automatic. Most of
the time, we don’t think about it.
But take breath away, literally, and suddenly, we are full
conscious of it.
This is probably at the very center of our human job
description: just breathe. Do nothing else right now.
Yes, I know, there’s so much going on.
Just breathe.
Yes, I know (insert any other reason or excuse)…
Just breathe.
We’ve all bought the lie of what our job description should
be. We’ve all turned ourselves inside out; we have jumped through flames and
hoops, trying to be “enough.”
We are that already. Our job description should reflect that.
Truth. Enough. Realistic truth. Not the lie any
longer.
Copyright © 2021 by Sheryle Cruse
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