Sometimes
the motivation to help others may be an extension of a deep desire to heal a
wounded part of ourselves. |
Some people seem called to help others,
often from early on in their childhoods. They respond to the needs of family
members, strangers, or animals with an impressive selflessness. While these
caregivers can appear to have very few needs of their own as they focus on
rescuing, helping, and healing others, there are few people who are truly
able to sustain this completely giving lifestyle. The vast majority have
needs that lie beneath the surface, unmet. In these cases, their motivation
to help others may be in service to a deep desire to heal a wounded part of
themselves. They need the kind of love and attention they give on a daily
basis to those around them. For any number of reasons, they are unable to
give themselves that love, so they give it to others. This does not mean that
they are not meant to be helping others, but it does mean that they would do
well to turn some of that helping energy within. One problem with the constant caregiver is
that the individual can get stuck in the role, always living in crisis mode
at the expense of inner peace and personal growth. Until the person resolves
their own inner dramas, they play them out in their relationships with
others, drawn to those who need them and often unable to acknowledge their
own needs. In the worst-case scenario, they enable the other person’s dilemma
by not knowing when to stop playing the rescuer and allow the person to
figure it out on their own. However, if the rescuer finds the strength to
turn within and face their own needs, they can become a model of empowerment
and a true source of healing in the world. Some signs that you or someone you love may
need to rescue the rescuer within are inner burnout from overgiving,
underlying resentment, an inability to admit to having needs of one’s own,
and an unwillingness to be vulnerable. Help comes when we allow ourselves to
admit we need it, acknowledging our humanity and our wholeness by
acknowledging our pain. The understanding we gain in the process will
naturally inform and inspire our ability to help those in need to do the
same. |
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