Accepting Help Makes Me Cringe - How About You?
Asking for help - and accepting help that is offered - makes me
cringe. As my family prepares for a major celebration for one of
our members, I've noticed that my husband and I have radically
different ways of dealing with people offering to help. My
husband, who has no addiction problems, says "That would be
great! Thank you!" each time people offer to help with our
party. My response is "Thanks, but I'd really rather that you
enjoy yourself and not feel you have to work." I do want them to
enjoy themselves, but I'm also painfully aware of my discomfort
in saying "Yes! I would appreciate your help!"
I've been thinking about alcoholic families and why this would
be my tendency to respond this way. Here are some of the things
I learned as a child: * It's good to be self-reliant. * You
can't rely on others; you can only rely on yourself. * Asking
for help means that you aren't capable of doing it on your own.
Well, it probably is good to be self-reliant, some of the time.
When carried to extremes it can lead to isolation, aloneness,
tension, and anxiety, and we all know how effective alcohol is
in relieving those feelings, at least temporarily!
Many of us end up in recovery when we finally "give up" and ask
for help. We learn to ask and get help from our recovery group,
sponsor, treatment center, Higher Power. But it still isn't easy
to pick up the phone and call someone when we need help. Service
- chairing a meeting, being the literature person in a 12-step
group - is always much easier.
Now, what about the opposite? How do we feel when we help
someone? We feel good about ourselves, generous, a sense of
warmth toward that other person, happy that we were asked, happy
that someone else felt we could help them, right?
So by not accepting the help that someone is offering we are
depriving them of something. We are rebuffing their impulse to
be generous, to be giving, and we are making sure that we are
not allowing too much of a relationship to grow between us. We
are protecting ourselves from the uncomfortable feelings of
trust, neediness, being beholden, those feelings that intrinsic
to being human but which may have created problems for us when
we were younger. If we do accept help and are critical of how
that help is given, it further shields us from developing a
mutual relationship with the other person.
We are also depriving ourselves of the opportunity to soar when
we insist on acting alone. There is a synergy that happens when
people work together and come up with a solution that would have
been impossible if each had acted alone. My son's school
encourages "project-based learning" as a way to teach this
principle. (On a larger scale, notice how difficult it is for
the U.S. acting unilaterally in the world and how we have
deprived ourselves of valuable input from other nations.)
Mentors, guides, mastermind groups, coaches, sponsors all
forward the idea of working together.
I'm sure there are people in your life that you allow in, that
you let help and nurture you. But I bet this only goes so far. I
challenge you to just say "Yes, thank you!" the next time
someone offers help. Live with the bit of discomfort and see if
you can allow a different outcome. And think of me as I practice
doing the same next Saturday.