The Difference between Love
and Rescue
Teresa
and Anoop got married after all the usual hassles, from
both
sides, questions were raised about religion , age , and most
importantly about financial disparity.
Anoop
was a school dropout .and she worked for a Bank
Years
later she headed her department, and he was hardly able
to
hold on to a job.
Two
kids and she now support him while he has become insecure
and suspicious.
Nothing
new about this story except that when I look at it
through
a coaching lens, I wish youngsters would be able make
out the difference between love and rescue
People who grow up in a dysfunctional family may fail to learn the difference
between love and sympathy. Children growing up in these conditions may learn to
have sympathy for the emotional crippling in their parents’ lives and feel that
the only time they get attention is when they show compassion for the parent.
They feel that when they forgive, they are showing love. Actually, they are
rescuing the parent and enabling abusive behaviour to continue. They learn to
give up their own protective boundaries in order to take care of the
dysfunctioning parent, becoming a surrogate co-dependent spouse. In adulthood,
they carry these learned behaviours into their own relationships. If they can
rescue their partner from the consequences of their behaviour, they feel that
they are showing love. They get a warm, caring, sharing feeling from helping
their partner, a feeling they call love. But this may actually encourage their
partner to become needy and helpless enabling the negative behaviour to
continue. An imbalance can then occur in the relationship in which one partner
becomes the rescuer or enabler and the other plays the role of the helpless
victim. In this case, healthy boundaries which allow both partners to live
complete lives are absent. Mature love requires the presence of healthy,
flexible boundaries.
Sympathy and compassion are worthy qualities, but they can be confused
with love, especially when boundaries have become distorted or are virtually
non existent. Healthy boundaries lead to respect for the other and equality in
a relationship, an appreciation for the aliveness and strength of the other
person, and a mutual flow of feelings between the two partners, all features of
mature love. When one partner is in control and the other is needy and
helpless, there is no room for the give-and-take of a healthy relationship.
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