As I have bumped along in life, I have lived by the saying,
“See a need; meet a need.”
It sounds kind, sweet, generous, selfless. And maybe it is
all of those things… and maybe it something else also.
The equivalent of a “Kick Me sign” bullseye target on the
backs of all codependents.
Now, somehow, it elicits an uncomfortable squirm or two,
doesn’t it?
Pema Chödrön is an American Buddhist nun who has famously taught
on the principle, “idiot compassion.” I happened upon her a few years ago, as I
was embarking on the full leg of my intense Narcissistic abuse recovery tour
(without the snazzy t-shirts). Had it not been for the onslaught of my abuse, I
wouldn’t have discovered her. After all, what did this recovering Lutheran from
rural Minnesota have in common with not only a Buddhist nun, but a New Yorker,
to boot?
(I can hear my Scandinavian ancestors, crying,
“Uff-da).
Anyway, idiot compassion can be regarded as
enabling, as giving into an unhealthy person or dynamic, simply because it’s
easier to do that than it is to say no, and we cannot bear to see the
struggling and the suffering of the situation or the person “going without.”
It is all about short-term pay off
instead of delayed gratification or outright refusal of dysfunction.
And, in that light, I started thinking
about my phrase, “See a need; meet a need.” Was that just idiotic compassion
all along? Was that all there was to it? Not decency? Not love for my
fellow man? Not helping? Just me being an idiotic who thinks she’s being
helpful, when really, all that is happening is just a chaotic Kumbaya effort on
steroids?
Oh, Pema, help a Lutheran codependent OUT here!
Alas, I’m left to wander and sift through my
own pasture of perceived needs and discern as to whether or not I should meet
them with help… with my help, most specifically.
So, wander I did. I started picking apart what
have been some common themes, sparking some necessary questions about their
existence in my life.
What is it?
Or, as Shakespeare once said, “Hark, who goes there?”
First thing is first. What is the thing begging for
our help? What is the so-called “need?”
Many of us abuse survivors, especially, can get caught up in
hypervigilance, seeing danger, threat, and pressing need at every turn.
Therefore, we may “hop to” meeting something out there that, according to you,
appears to be a need, but maybe is just a want, a request, a
question, or a circumstance, needing none of your interaction
whatsoever.
My personal case in point?
Recently, I was over at a friend’s home. We were sitting on
his couch and his elderly cat was parked on his lap. Out of some Pavlovian
habit, I asked if I could get my friend anything, because, you know, he was
trapped under his eight- pound cat. Sounds like urgent danger to me.
My friend was not in distress. He was not in danger. There was
nothing he needed or wanted. Yet I saw his cat on the lap reality as something
that needed tending to, Johnny on the spot.
Never mind the absurdity that I was a guest in his home.
He, in the name of hospitality and good manners, would normally be the
one inclined to ask me if I needed or wanted anything.
So, for you, what is it? What is the thing set before
you?
Did you put it there? Is the need a need?
What does it look like?
The old saying goes, “there is no reality; only perception.”
So, what are we perceiving about a person or a situation?
Are they a doomed, helpless victim? Can they be “shown the
light” by us?
We can project and catastrophize a worst-- case scenario onto
someone else. Life or death. Dire need.
“See a need; meet a need.”
We see someone in distress, maybe even in peril. Maybe they
send us a call for help.
Or maybe we simply volunteer ourselves for their personal
rescue. We see a need and try to meet that need. Forget about if someone
else is more qualified or better trained. Forget about asking ourselves
if we should be doing this in the first place. We swoop in there and
determine our intentions and efforts will, indeed, save the day.
Or maybe we do this.
We completely underestimate a situation, failing to
heed the red flags. The addiction, the womanizing, the abuse, the theft, aren’t
that bad.
We sense something is toxic and unhealthy. Maybe we have
taken someone to detox, bailed them out of jail, or been hit by them. But
seeing the need, the actual need, for what it is, without
flinching, is not something we want to do. It’s too difficult, too painful, too
inconvenient to do so.
So, we turn our version of a blind eye and we rationalize
that we are helping their need. Maybe we even arrogantly assert that we
are the only ones who can help them. We are the superheroes, the
undying, unconditional love support person. We can love them into health and
healing because, well, we are there on the scene.
Do we see danger?
Or do we simply downplay something that is harmful to us?
The definition of insanity is repeatedly doing the same thing
but expecting a different result.
How many times have you encountered this need before?
“A man of great
anger must pay the penalty; if you rescue him, you will have to do so again.”
Proverbs 19:19
Scripture’s take on anger issues can also be interchangeable
with anything else deemed dangerous and unhealthy. And those are usually the
attention-getting things clawing for our intervention.
I have been in friendships in which rent was always, somehow,
past due, there was no food in the house, and their marriages were always on
the brink of collapse and/or a felony being committed. High stakes, high drama.
And even though tears were the dominant staple in the sob
stories I was confronted by, make no mistake, anger was rife throughout each
circumstance. As I came to each dysfunctional rescue, Proverbs 19:19’s
“man of great anger” soon showed up. It showed up in the underlying
fueled causes for various dysfunctions, like unresolved trauma and unmet need.
It showed up in white-hot rage that absolutely refused to learn the lesson, get
help, make amends.
Indeed, a one-time rescue with such a person, inevitably,
resulted in another trek around the mountain (but with no Sherpa to help bear
the baggage).
Centuries’ old scripture and Pema’s well-taught idiot
compassion seemed to utter (with a heavy sigh) the same
perspective:
“Here we go again. Proceed at your own risk.”
Through these dysfunctional relationships, I learned that my
best intentions and heart’s desires were no match for a human being’s
free will. People choose. People can choose destruction. People can
choose destruction and will not be deterred from that choice, even if it
means we get harmed in the process.
Yep, swallow that. It’s a pretty spiky pill.
“See a need; meet a need.”
Oh, really, now? How’s that working out? Are you and I broke,
with ruined credit, wrecked health, damaged reputations, and tattered marriages?
Are we the ones now in need, all because we tried to
meet an idiot compassion situation, presenting itself to us as a need?
As we, perhaps, dare to answer those questions, desperately
dreaming that Pema Chödrön
will kiss our foreheads and feed us Rocky Road ice cream, we should
probably take a pit stop at a few other questions as well:
What has changed?
What has not?
Why is this situation (this same old situation) before us
(again)?
Will tending to this need hurt us?
And, if so, why is that acceptable?
Answering these questions can shed light on the deeper truths
to who and why we are in the world. What drives us?
Is being a compassionate idiot soothing to us somehow? What
is the payoff we’re getting from being this rescuing idiot?
What need do we think we are meeting and/or healing, by trying
to rescue someone who does not want to be rescued?
Are we avoiding our own issues and pain? What are
those issues? What IS that pain?
Does acting with idiot compassion give us an inflated sense
of purpose, meaning, and identity?
Indeed, “See a
need; meet a need” is not quite an innocent as it appears. The powerful
prospect or even the lure of a “need” may mean way more than it should
to us. The “need” can assure us with distraction, obliteration, and a sense of
self. It can be a respite to dealing with our own problems. It can feed our
Savior complex. It can turn the “bad boy or girl” into a “good boy or girl.” It
can be the appropriate punishment we think we deserve.
Yeah. Maybe it’s more like, “See their need; meet our
need.”
Eww. Not a flattering portrait, is it?
But it is probably the exact portrait we need to gaze
upon.
It comes down to motivation. What is it for us? Why
do we insist on helping? Who is that for, exactly?
Why do we insist on being the idiot? Aren’t we all smarter
than that?
Copyright
© 2021 by Sheryle Cruse
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