Codependency

The term “codependency” is often used to describe relationships in which one person needs or depends on another person.

In its simplest terms, a codependent relationship is when one needs the other, who in turn needs to be needed. This circular relationship is the basis of what experts mean when they describe the “cycle” of codependency.

A codependency can exist in any kind of relationship: partners, parent-adult child , friends, in a profesional relationship… Here I put the focus on the codependency relationship with the partner.

In the codependent relationship common reasons for staying together include children, finances, time invested, and fear of embarrassment that separation can bring. But the most important problem is that the person believes they deserve to be abused.

The codependent person usually:

• Doesn’t find satisfaction or happiness in life  out of the activities with their partner.

• Stay in the relationship even if they are aware that their partner is doing hurtful things.

• Do anything to please and satisfy their partner regardless of the cost to them.

• They feel constant anxiety about their relationship due to their desire to always make the other person happy.

• Use all their time and energy to give their partner everything he asks for.

• They feel guilty for thinking of themselves in the relationship and therefore do not express personal needs or desires.

• Ignores his own morals or needs in order to do what the other person wants.

This type of personality is formed in childhood:

1. In families when one or two of the parents have a problem with alcohol or drug addiction or lack of maturity and emotional development, which turns out to be focused on their own egocentric needs. This is the way they teach the child to focus on the needs of the parents and never think about himself.

Needy parents can teach their children that children are selfish or greedy if they want something for themselves.

As a result, the child learns to ignore his own needs and thinks only of what he can do for others all the times.

These situations damage the child’s emotional development and lead him to seek codependent relationships later on.

2. Live with a family member who suffers from mental or physical illness.

Codependency can also result from caring for a person with a chronic illness. Taking the role of caregiver, especially at a young age, can result in the young person neglecting their own needs and developing the habit of only helping to the others.

A person’s self-esteem can be built around someone else needs and not getting anything in return.

3. Abusive families

Physical, emotional, and sexual abuse can cause psychological problems that last for years or even a lifetime. One of the many problems that can arise from past abuse is codependency.

A child or adolescent who is abused will learn to suppress his feelings as a defense mechanism against the pain of the abuse. As an adult, this learned behavior results in caring only for the feelings of others and not acknowledging their own needs.

Sometimes a person who is abused will seek abusive relationships later because they are only familiar with this type of relationship. This often manifests itself in codependent relationships.

How to help:

1. Individual or group therapy is very helpful for people who have codependent relationships. An expert can help them find ways to recognize and express their feelings that have normally been buried since childhood.

Treatment for codependency often involves exploring early childhood problems and their connection to current dysfunctional behavior patterns. Getting in touch with deep-seated feelings of grief, loss, and anger will allow you to rebuild the proper relationship dynamics. Most of all to rebuild your sense of yourself and to realize why you depend so much on the other person. Codependency is the result of not setting personal boundaries, and learning how to do through therapy, is essential for healing.

2. Reconnect with friends and family. Being in a codependent relationship can lead to isolation, which fuels the loss of self.

3. Time for you. Go back to doing the things you used to enjoy before getting so tangled up with the other person.

4. Seek substance abuse treatment. If you abuse drugs or alcohol, talk to your doctor about treatment options.

Finally, both parties in a codependent relationship must learn to recognize specific patterns of behavior, such as “needing to be needed” and expect the other person to center their life around them.

These steps are not easy to do, but it is worth the effort to help both parties figure out how to maintain a balanced, two – way relationship.

Anita Chukaleska, Psychologist, Gestalt Psychotherapist

Did you hug today the people that you love?

Hugging is an essential form of non-verbal communication. If we observe young children, they express all the emotions through hugs: When they feel happy to see you, when they feel sad or when they feel fear. Through hugging, children learn to regulate their emotions. That is why when a child feels upset, after hugging you, it calms down. In this way it learns how to calm itself when it grows older. This way of connecting with others without words and letting ourselves feel our feelings (from the prelinguistic stage) is the most basic and we can use it all our lives.

Hugs decrease anxiety, stress and pain (as well as emotional and physical).

Through the hugs we express protection and provide security, which is very important especially for young children. Through hugs we show value to the person that we hug, we give recognition that this person is someone important to us.

By hugging someone for at least 20 seconds, the hormone Oxytocin begins to release in the body, which relaxes us and reduces anxiety. It also lowers blood pressure and lowers stress hormones.

That is why it is highly recommended to give your loved ones a long hug. Children are wise and use them so much to connect with their feelings. Why as adults we stop using this very beneficial way of communication?

During the therapeutic work I use the pillows so the client can express his feelings and can “hug” the important person. In group therapy, the hugs are a great benefit for the participants.

So, start consciously to use hugs until your body begins to remember this basic and wonderful need and starts to be more spontaneous in the way of expression and connection.

Almost a year since the pandemic began and we cannot hug all the people important for us. But there is always someone to hug: Hug the people who live with you, your dog, your cat, your teddy bear, your pillow and hug yourself.

Anita Chukaleska

Psychologist, Gestalt Psychotherapist

About the forgivness…

“Not forgiving, it’s like drinking a glass of poison and waiting for your enemies to die,” Nelson Mandela said.

The process of forgiving someone for what they have done is necessary to do it for yourself, it is an act of self-love. If you wonder what that has to do with me, if I didn’t do anything? And if I forgive him, does that mean I approve of what he did?

Forgiveness is necessary in order to free yourself from the chains of negative emotions (anger, rage, sadness, fear …) that keep you trapped in the past like a prisoner. Forgiveness is not approving what the person did, but accepting what happened and leaving it where it belongs – in the past.

In Gestalt Therapy different techniques are used with which you can work to close cycles without the presence of the person with whom you have unfinished cycles. Because all these emotions and thoughts are inside you, they destroy you day by day.

The first step is to recognize these emotions and thoughts, realize how present they are in your actions, decisions, your mood … and accept them, feel them consciously and make a decision to face them and work on them.

Forgive because of you, because you deserve to be happy!

Anita Chukaleska,

Psychologist, Gestalt Therapist. 25 of January 2021

Reactions to the pandemic

The reactions to a situation like the one we find ourselves in lately, seem to me to be analogous to the stages in the grieving process. Each person goes through this process at their own pace.

That is why there are people who are still in the first stage of denial / shock. Reality is not accepted and the new situation is denied. (“There is no virus” …).

In the second stage, the emotion anger is generated by the frustration of not being able to satisfy various needs. This emotion gives energy to maintain the sense of control of the situation that helps to maintain self-esteem.

The third stage “Negotiation” is when we begin to have thoughts to keep control of the situation: “If this had not happened, I would be had / done / gone ….

The fourth stage is the Depressive one where the emotions of sadness and losing interest to get up in the morning are dominant.

In the fifth stage comes the acceptance of the situation. Not everybody reach this stage. Whoever made it this far, feels calm. It is not a period of happiness or depression. When calm and acceptance come, something interesting happens: you are fully in the present moment and many possibilities open up in front of you. You decide which is the best option for you at this time of your life.

It is important to recognize in which stage you are, so you can better understand your reactions. Are you waiting for a better time to start something, to pass the contingency, when everything returns as before? Things will never go back as they were before, because each experience changes us and we will never be the same again. If you find a way to be in the present moment (one of these is meditation, psychotherapy …), to feel the whole palette of emotions, to see what is around you, you could detect what you need to take action, learn new tools suitable for a situation outside of “the new normal”.

Anita Chukaleska, Psychologist, Gestalt Psychotherapist. 15. 05. 2020

Trauma and Pandemia

First, with the closure, with the social isolation, the people who have experienced some trauma, all the work that they have been doing in terms of trying to connect, to trust, to be open, re-experience the others, the quarantine has had a real impact, so that sometimes they have ended up, locked in their houses, both in physical isolation from others, also stopping any contact with others. What follows is disconnecting from oneself and I think that is the part that becomes retraumatizing, that if you are disconnected from the present, it is much easier to return to the past and the other part of returning to the past is that there is a, what we call , “A phenomenon of state-dependent memories”. So if you have had a traumatic experience that has involved certain modalities or sensory experiences, and then you find yourself in a similar situation again, they will reactivate and trigger those previous traumatic experiences.

That is one reason why the pandemic has more impact on mental health than people who have experienced previous trauma.

“I really don’t know what it means to overcome, if to overcome is to forget, if to overcome is to be who I was again… I will never return to who I was, and that is ok. Is not about to overcome, it is about learning to live with what happened!”                                                                                                                   María Belón

Anita Chukaleska, Psychologist, Gestalt Psychotherapist 27.11.2020

WHAT HAPPENS DURING THE GRIEF

In order to make sense of the grieving process, to make the whole messy, bewildering experience more understandable and manageable the therapists assigned a task for the bereaved, which was to disengage from the relationship with the person who had died. Then they described phases that the griever passed through, or tasks that were accomplished as they moved towards the eventual acceptance of their loss and the internalisation of the loved one who had died.

And while is said that there are different stages to grief, different people deal with grief in different ways. No one has to experience all of a particular set of emotions in any set order. You may often think of the stages as lasting weeks or months. Don’t forget that the stages are responses to feelings that can last for minutes or hours as we flip in and out of one and then another. We do not enter and leave each individual stage in a linear fashion. We may feel one, then another and back again to the first one.

Grief should only become a concern if it doesn’t start to diminish after some months and the grief-stricken person starts to believe that they cannot possibly have any meaningful existence without their deceased loved one.

DENIAL is the first stage of grief. In this stage, the world becomes meaningless and overwhelming. Life makes no sense. We are in a state of shock and denial. Denial and shock help us to cope and make survival possible. There is a grace in denial. It is nature’s way of letting in only as much as we can handle. As you accept the reality of the loss and start to ask yourself questions, you are unknowingly beginning the healing process.

ANGER  Be willing to feel your anger, even though it may seem endless. There are many other emotions under the anger and you will get to them in time, but anger is the emotion we are most used to managing. It can extend not only to your friends, the doctors, your family, yourself and your loved one who died, but also to God.  Underneath anger is pain, your pain.  The anger is giving you a structure, a bridge that connect you with the others, is just another indication of the intensity of your love.

BARGAINING  We become lost in a maze of “If only…” or “What if…” statements. We want life returned to what is was; we want our loved one restored. We want to go back in time: find the tumor sooner, recognize the illness more quickly, stop the accident from happening…if only, if only, if only. Guilt is often bargaining’s companion. The “if onlys” cause us to find fault in ourselves and what we “think” we could have done differently. We may even bargain with the pain. We will do anything not to feel the pain of this loss. We remain in the past, trying to negotiate our way out of the hurt.

DEPRESSION When your attention  come back to the presence the feelings of emptiness are starting to be overwhelming and the grief is going deep in your life, deeper that you could of ever imagine. The depression is very normal respond in the process of grieving, actually to not experience it would be something strange. To lost someone that you love, to realize that will not come back is depressing.

ACEPTANCE This stage is often confused with reaching some final goal of “Being all right” of what happened. For the most of the people this will not happened. This stage is about accepting the reality like it is, without the loved one and many people are resisting to accept this. They maintain the life like before their loved died. The life has been forever changed and we must readjust. We must learn to reorganize roles, re-assign them to others or take them on ourselves. As we begin to live again and enjoy our life, we often feel that in doing so, we are betraying our loved one. We can never replace what has been lost, but we can make new connections, new meaningful relationships, new inter-dependencies and new experiences.

Critically what  more recent writers did was to suggest that mourning was not about relinquishing the bonds with the person who had died but about finding a new and different ways of sustaining them.

Loss and grief are painful subjects but they are part of what it means to be mortal, what it means to be attached to other people and to care for them. There is so true in the words of Colin Murray Parkes:

“The pain of grief is just as much part of life as the joy of love: it is perhaps the price we pay for love, the cost of commitment. To ignore this fact, or to pretend that it is not so, is to put on emotional blinkers which leave us unprepared for the losses that will inevitably occur in our own lives and unprepared to help others cope with losses in theirs”.

Anita Chukaleska, Psychologist, Gestalt Psychotherapist 07. 12. 2020

Did you set your goals for the next year?

Has it happened to you that what you promised to change or start in the New Year had already been forgotten in the middle of January? Probably you’ve set goals that are too general, too ambitious, or something that you don’t really care about.

The S.M.A.R.T. Protocol offers a guide to setting your goals that are in accordance with your abilities, are time-limited and measurable.

S (Specific) It is very important when you set your goals to be specific as possible, so not to feel frustration setting a general goal. It is important to specify: What do you want; Why do you want it; How are you going to get it; When do you think you can achieve this goal.

M (Measurable) Setting a goal that is measurable helps to evaluate your progress.

A (Achievable) Achievable – The goal has to be set according to your abilities.

R (Relevant) Here the direction is deeper towards your internal motivation: Why do you want to achieve this goal? Reaching it will give you personal satisfaction or is it for some reason / external pressure? Only if you want or do something for your self-realization you can achieve it or when you achieve it, it gives you satisfaction that nourishes your soul.

T (Time-specific) Set specific time when you will reach the goal. It is important to set up enough time to avoid unnecessary frustration.

Specific steps:

1. Write your goals!

2. If the goal is challenging, break it into small parts with specific steps and weekly, monthly goals that ultimately culminate in reaching the challenging goal.

3. Review your goals often, if necessary make adjustments.

 4. Recognize each success for reaching each step that brings you closer to your final goal.

Remember happiness is not a final destination but a process, a lifestyle if you allow yourself to enjoy each step on your way to fulfill your dreams.

Anita Chukaleska, Psychologist, Gestalt Psychotherapist. 29. 12. 2019