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Codependency in Relationship: Spotting The SignsCodependency in Relationship: Spotting The Signs">

Codependency in Relationship: Spotting The Signs

Irina Zhuravleva
par 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
 Soulmatcher
13 minutes de lecture
Blog
novembre 05, 2025

Let’s be honest: if most of your emotional energy is fixed on how another person’s dysfunctional behavior wounds you, and you truly believe you cannot be happy until they change — yet they haven’t changed — then you have a serious issue. Imagine you argue about the same things constantly, it exhausts you, and it robs you of sleep. A word of counsel: I’m not a therapist, but I have worked through codependent patterns in my own life, and I’ll say plainly — if your sense of well‑being depends entirely on someone else changing, the problem lies with you. They may have their own problems, but yours is that you have handed over your power to someone who does not meet your needs. That is the essence of codependency. If you don’t recognize the signs, here are twenty of them to help you identify what’s happening. People often use the term “codependent” loosely — to describe being in a relationship with someone who has an addiction, or simply being overly reliant on another person — but true codependency is more precise and far more corrosive than many realize. It damages both the person behaving codependently and the one they cling to. If you’re caught in that pattern, especially with a background of trauma, I urge you to name it and dedicate yourself to healing it. Below are behaviors that commonly mark codependency; read them and see which match your life. I’ll list them first and then suggest practical steps you can take. Here’s how it typically looks. One: codependents second‑guess themselves when others mistreat them. Instead of setting a boundary — for example, walking away and refusing toxic treatment — they repeatedly attempt to force the other person to change. Two: when their efforts fail to produce change, they usually escalate the pressure, issuing threats or ultimatums and demanding the other person do what they want, often to ugly effect — and still nothing changes. Three: codependents are not direct about their intentions; sometimes they don’t even understand their own motives. Their thinking gets tangled, with cognitive dissonance between the image they present to others and the actual state of their relationship and inner life. They tend to use tactics they think will make someone care or behave differently rather than speaking honestly and letting the chips fall where they may, which blurs their grasp of what’s true and what they really want. Four: although they want to feel happier like anyone else, trauma wounds create blind spots that keep them from pursuing the kinds of changes that actually bring joy — such as personal growth and forming natural, healthy bonds with people who genuinely care. Five: a codependent often waits for another person to supply love, connection, financial security and a life plan — things they haven’t cultivated for themselves. Instead of taking charge and imagining the life they want, they loop into another person and expect that person to provide fulfillment, which rarely succeeds. Six: they attach to dysfunctional people, which activates a powerful “fixer” instinct — a compulsion to repair the other person that distracts them from addressing what’s missing in their own life. This fixing energy diverts their willpower outward rather than toward building their own well‑being. Seven: codependents relish roles such as the responsible one, the wise counselor, or the long‑suffering martyr who keeps everyone together — often without anyone asking them to fill that role. That role becomes their source of belonging and meaning, but it is a part they play rather than an authentic state. Eight: the emphasis a codependent places on appearing to have it all together usually prevents them from reaching out for help. They are invested in looking good, and that image becomes a barrier to genuine connection. Nine: it’s difficult for them to admit personal failures, worries, or ordinary feelings of self‑doubt — thoughts like “hardly anyone genuinely likes me” or “I thought I’d be further along by now” are rarely revealed to others. Ten: codependents commonly narrate their pain as something caused by other people. When asked what they want to heal, many describe a long story about parents or partners rather than articulating a personal desire for change; they struggle to answer “What would you like for your life?” because their complaints are framed chiefly as other people’s faults. Granted, everyone has difficult people in their lives and it can be draining to worry about them, but a codependent has trouble acknowledging that they chose or signed up for many of those relationships — relationships are rarely purely accidental. Eleven: they confuse themselves with someone else’s problems, pouring energy into solving another person’s issues instead of attending to their own life and goals. Twelve: they hold a deep conviction that if the other person changed, they would finally be happy — sometimes even after a brief dating period, which is an extreme form of codependence that can completely upend a life and leave the codependent convinced they have no options. Thirteen: codependents often buy books, hunt for therapists, and watch videos — anything to get the other person to accept help — but you can’t make someone consume resources or enter treatment unless there’s a legal or safety imperative. In those cases the correct move is to seek help for yourself rather than trying to coerce another person’s recovery. A typical example is someone who, after leaving an abusive partner, wants to send that person a book about narcissism thinking it will fix them — but the healthier choice is to cut contact and allow that person to face the consequences and find their own solution. Attempting to “save” them often keeps you from facing the painful truth about why you chose that partner or stayed so long. Fourteen: codependents rarely seek resources for themselves or admit they have a problem; instead they keep focusing on other people’s issues. Fifteen: their recurring negative patterns feel almost fated, like a curse; they wonder “Why does this keep happening?” If you sense that, ask whether clinging to that idea is a diversion that obscures the existence of a repeatable pattern. If the same dynamic occurs again and again, it’s not because everyone else is the same — you are participating in a pattern, and that means it can be changed. Sixteen: resentment is common — feeling taken for granted after doing so much while receiving little reciprocity. That uneven dynamic tends to produce an avoidant or underfunctioning partner; overfunctioning (doing more than one’s share) overlaps with codependency and often leads to enabling others instead of letting them take responsibility. Seventeen: when asked about their own hopes and future plans, a codependent frequently can’t answer. Life feels like an ongoing crisis; quiet moments are unsettling, and the crisis‑creating behaviors quickly reappear, preventing fertile ground for dreaming or planning. Eighteen: the pattern repeats beyond intimate partnerships — at work with supervisors and colleagues, too — because it often began in childhood as a groove of relating. Codependent people are actually drawn toward relationships that mirror the old dynamic; the toxic stress of those interactions can act like an addictive emotional high, resembling a fast, destructive stimulant that delivers quick intensity and long‑term harm. Nineteen: living this way produces chronic, toxic stress that makes people vulnerable to stress‑related illnesses, chronic pain, autoimmune issues, frequent sickness, money troubles, and social isolation. When the codependent does not get what they want — which is typically the case — they can erupt in anger, alienating potential sources of support and deepening the negative cycle. Twenty: finally, don’t wait to change. Don’t let things deteriorate to the point of burning bridges, sacrificing finances, stability and happiness. Healing can begin today; one small step forward often makes a huge difference and invites the next step. So what can you do? I’ll walk through the list again with practical steps you can take; you don’t have to tackle everything at once. At the end of the video there’s a free download listing these twenty signs so you can use it to plan a path to healing. One: if you second‑guess yourself after being mistreated, stop trying to force the other person to change and turn your attention to the changes you need to make — typically by setting clear boundaries. There’s no substitute for the help of a trusted person — a therapist, a 12‑step sponsor, or a coach — to help you map and enforce those boundaries so people can’t walk all over you. Two: when you set a boundary and the other person doesn’t meet your request, resist the impulse to intensify pressure; see that urge as a signal to do your own work. Focus on what you can change so you can be happy independently; that may mean changing within the relationship or stepping away if the relationship is beyond repair. You don’t have to decide immediately — answers come as you recommit to yourself. Three: practice communicating plainly — no hints, no mind‑reading, no passive‑aggressive “helpful” comments. Say what is bothering you and what you want. People aren’t obliged to become who you imagine, but you have the right to state your truth and observe how they respond. Honest, calm statements like “I feel worried that you’re not working and resent carrying most of the household expenses” reveal the reality of the relationship and force a clearer look at what’s real and what’s fantasy. Four: actively consider what you need to be happy without making someone else’s change a prerequisite. That fantasy — waiting for another person to improve your life — must be set aside. It’s possible to build joy and supportive connections regardless of whether someone else reforms, and your happiness requires taking responsibility for cultivating it. Five: notice beliefs that make you feel helpless and dependent on another person to bring love, money or direction into your life. Reclaim those building blocks for yourself. If you didn’t learn this from your parents, you can learn it now — for many people, 12‑step programs (including Codependents Anonymous) are valuable places to meet others practicing autonomy, joy and healthy boundaries. Six: if you’re attached to dysfunctional people and feel compelled to fix them, gradually shut down that fixer engine. It often triggers intense anxiety at first, so try releasing control in small ways to experience life running smoothly without you forcing it. You’ll likely be surprised — but be alert for relapse, because fixing others may have become a core part of your identity and belonging. That quiet, empty feeling at first is the space where genuine joy and purpose can begin to grow. Seven: allowing some things to fall apart and admitting you’re not keeping up appearances will let others see your real humanity. The perfect façade alienates people; letting it go helps dissolve the loneliness and opens the door to connections with people who truly care. Eight: find at least one setting and a few people where you can candidly share personal failures and struggles. Twelve‑step groups are especially good at nurturing honest connection; people there respond to openness and that authenticity is a relief. Nine: take responsibility for how your own choices contributed to the dynamics you’re in. You may have been shaped by childhood trauma, but as an adult you are an active participant and can change the pattern. Ten: make clear which problems belong to others and which belong to you. Friends who are themselves healing from codependency can help you see this distinction. As you free up energy previously spent solving unsolvable problems, you’ll have more to invest in your own life. Eleven: catch yourself whenever you ruminate about other people’s failures and stop granting them the power to determine your happiness. Your well‑being is created from within, though positive relationships can complement it. You cannot outsource happiness. Twelve: be vigilant in new relationships — don’t use emotional “spackle” to cover relational holes or the other person’s deficits. That tendency to fit yourself to unsuitable people (what some call “crap fit”) keeps you trapped. Instead, lean on honest friends for perspective and use your senses to decide whether someone truly fits you. Thirteen: if you find yourself purchasing books, scouting therapists, or offering to pay for someone else’s help, recognize this as a classic codependent loop: when you need help, you try to fix another person. Let that be a cue to seek support for yourself. Fourteen: take seriously the need for your own resources — books, therapy, courses — and stay focused within your own “hula hoop.” Healing yourself is the best way to influence others for the better. Even a small first step toward your own recovery often clarifies the issues and points the way forward. Fifteen: remember this draining dynamic is not a fate — you’re not cursed or doomed; you’re acting from codependent tendencies that can be healed. Sixteen: face your resentment. If you’ve poured life energy into someone who never repaid it, of course you feel cheated. You gave it away; stop stealing from yourself. When one person becomes the fixer, the other often becomes the slacker, and it’s exhausting. The only cure is to stop playing your part in that cycle. Seventeen: develop a vision for your life. After you step back from constant crises you’ll have spare energy and perhaps a hollow feeling — that emptiness is fertile ground for a new life plan. Solitude, reflection, and experimentation will be bumpy at first, but they will reveal choices and restore hope. Eighteen: consider whether codependency is draining the pleasure from your work; if so, you can change the dynamic at work or, if necessary, look for a different job. Nineteen: recognize the stakes of living with ongoing toxic stress and unfulfillment. This is not who you were meant to be; you deserve love, connection and support. Twenty: start now — don’t wait until you’ve lashed out, burned bridges, or sacrificed money and stability. Healing begins today, and a single small step can make a profound difference and invite the next one. If you’d like a copy of the free download “Signs You’re in a Codependent Relationship,” it lists all twenty items covered here; you can click on that list right here. See you soon. [Music]

Let’s be honest: if most of your emotional energy is fixed on how another person’s dysfunctional behavior wounds you, and you truly believe you cannot be happy until they change — yet they haven’t changed — then you have a serious issue. Imagine you argue about the same things constantly, it exhausts you, and it robs you of sleep. A word of counsel: I’m not a therapist, but I have worked through codependent patterns in my own life, and I’ll say plainly — if your sense of well‑being depends entirely on someone else changing, the problem lies with you. They may have their own problems, but yours is that you have handed over your power to someone who does not meet your needs. That is the essence of codependency. If you don’t recognize the signs, here are twenty of them to help you identify what’s happening. People often use the term “codependent” loosely — to describe being in a relationship with someone who has an addiction, or simply being overly reliant on another person — but true codependency is more precise and far more corrosive than many realize. It damages both the person behaving codependently and the one they cling to. If you’re caught in that pattern, especially with a background of trauma, I urge you to name it and dedicate yourself to healing it. Below are behaviors that commonly mark codependency; read them and see which match your life. I’ll list them first and then suggest practical steps you can take. Here’s how it typically looks. One: codependents second‑guess themselves when others mistreat them. Instead of setting a boundary — for example, walking away and refusing toxic treatment — they repeatedly attempt to force the other person to change. Two: when their efforts fail to produce change, they usually escalate the pressure, issuing threats or ultimatums and demanding the other person do what they want, often to ugly effect — and still nothing changes. Three: codependents are not direct about their intentions; sometimes they don’t even understand their own motives. Their thinking gets tangled, with cognitive dissonance between the image they present to others and the actual state of their relationship and inner life. They tend to use tactics they think will make someone care or behave differently rather than speaking honestly and letting the chips fall where they may, which blurs their grasp of what’s true and what they really want. Four: although they want to feel happier like anyone else, trauma wounds create blind spots that keep them from pursuing the kinds of changes that actually bring joy — such as personal growth and forming natural, healthy bonds with people who genuinely care. Five: a codependent often waits for another person to supply love, connection, financial security and a life plan — things they haven’t cultivated for themselves. Instead of taking charge and imagining the life they want, they loop into another person and expect that person to provide fulfillment, which rarely succeeds. Six: they attach to dysfunctional people, which activates a powerful “fixer” instinct — a compulsion to repair the other person that distracts them from addressing what’s missing in their own life. This fixing energy diverts their willpower outward rather than toward building their own well‑being. Seven: codependents relish roles such as the responsible one, the wise counselor, or the long‑suffering martyr who keeps everyone together — often without anyone asking them to fill that role. That role becomes their source of belonging and meaning, but it is a part they play rather than an authentic state. Eight: the emphasis a codependent places on appearing to have it all together usually prevents them from reaching out for help. They are invested in looking good, and that image becomes a barrier to genuine connection. Nine: it’s difficult for them to admit personal failures, worries, or ordinary feelings of self‑doubt — thoughts like “hardly anyone genuinely likes me” or “I thought I’d be further along by now” are rarely revealed to others. Ten: codependents commonly narrate their pain as something caused by other people. When asked what they want to heal, many describe a long story about parents or partners rather than articulating a personal desire for change; they struggle to answer “What would you like for your life?” because their complaints are framed chiefly as other people’s faults. Granted, everyone has difficult people in their lives and it can be draining to worry about them, but a codependent has trouble acknowledging that they chose or signed up for many of those relationships — relationships are rarely purely accidental. Eleven: they confuse themselves with someone else’s problems, pouring energy into solving another person’s issues instead of attending to their own life and goals. Twelve: they hold a deep conviction that if the other person changed, they would finally be happy — sometimes even after a brief dating period, which is an extreme form of codependence that can completely upend a life and leave the codependent convinced they have no options. Thirteen: codependents often buy books, hunt for therapists, and watch videos — anything to get the other person to accept help — but you can’t make someone consume resources or enter treatment unless there’s a legal or safety imperative. In those cases the correct move is to seek help for yourself rather than trying to coerce another person’s recovery. A typical example is someone who, after leaving an abusive partner, wants to send that person a book about narcissism thinking it will fix them — but the healthier choice is to cut contact and allow that person to face the consequences and find their own solution. Attempting to “save” them often keeps you from facing the painful truth about why you chose that partner or stayed so long. Fourteen: codependents rarely seek resources for themselves or admit they have a problem; instead they keep focusing on other people’s issues. Fifteen: their recurring negative patterns feel almost fated, like a curse; they wonder “Why does this keep happening?” If you sense that, ask whether clinging to that idea is a diversion that obscures the existence of a repeatable pattern. If the same dynamic occurs again and again, it’s not because everyone else is the same — you are participating in a pattern, and that means it can be changed. Sixteen: resentment is common — feeling taken for granted after doing so much while receiving little reciprocity. That uneven dynamic tends to produce an avoidant or underfunctioning partner; overfunctioning (doing more than one’s share) overlaps with codependency and often leads to enabling others instead of letting them take responsibility. Seventeen: when asked about their own hopes and future plans, a codependent frequently can’t answer. Life feels like an ongoing crisis; quiet moments are unsettling, and the crisis‑creating behaviors quickly reappear, preventing fertile ground for dreaming or planning. Eighteen: the pattern repeats beyond intimate partnerships — at work with supervisors and colleagues, too — because it often began in childhood as a groove of relating. Codependent people are actually drawn toward relationships that mirror the old dynamic; the toxic stress of those interactions can act like an addictive emotional high, resembling a fast, destructive stimulant that delivers quick intensity and long‑term harm. Nineteen: living this way produces chronic, toxic stress that makes people vulnerable to stress‑related illnesses, chronic pain, autoimmune issues, frequent sickness, money troubles, and social isolation. When the codependent does not get what they want — which is typically the case — they can erupt in anger, alienating potential sources of support and deepening the negative cycle. Twenty: finally, don’t wait to change. Don’t let things deteriorate to the point of burning bridges, sacrificing finances, stability and happiness. Healing can begin today; one small step forward often makes a huge difference and invites the next step. So what can you do? I’ll walk through the list again with practical steps you can take; you don’t have to tackle everything at once. At the end of the video there’s a free download listing these twenty signs so you can use it to plan a path to healing. One: if you second‑guess yourself after being mistreated, stop trying to force the other person to change and turn your attention to the changes you need to make — typically by setting clear boundaries. There’s no substitute for the help of a trusted person — a therapist, a 12‑step sponsor, or a coach — to help you map and enforce those boundaries so people can’t walk all over you. Two: when you set a boundary and the other person doesn’t meet your request, resist the impulse to intensify pressure; see that urge as a signal to do your own work. Focus on what you can change so you can be happy independently; that may mean changing within the relationship or stepping away if the relationship is beyond repair. You don’t have to decide immediately — answers come as you recommit to yourself. Three: practice communicating plainly — no hints, no mind‑reading, no passive‑aggressive “helpful” comments. Say what is bothering you and what you want. People aren’t obliged to become who you imagine, but you have the right to state your truth and observe how they respond. Honest, calm statements like “I feel worried that you’re not working and resent carrying most of the household expenses” reveal the reality of the relationship and force a clearer look at what’s real and what’s fantasy. Four: actively consider what you need to be happy without making someone else’s change a prerequisite. That fantasy — waiting for another person to improve your life — must be set aside. It’s possible to build joy and supportive connections regardless of whether someone else reforms, and your happiness requires taking responsibility for cultivating it. Five: notice beliefs that make you feel helpless and dependent on another person to bring love, money or direction into your life. Reclaim those building blocks for yourself. If you didn’t learn this from your parents, you can learn it now — for many people, 12‑step programs (including Codependents Anonymous) are valuable places to meet others practicing autonomy, joy and healthy boundaries. Six: if you’re attached to dysfunctional people and feel compelled to fix them, gradually shut down that fixer engine. It often triggers intense anxiety at first, so try releasing control in small ways to experience life running smoothly without you forcing it. You’ll likely be surprised — but be alert for relapse, because fixing others may have become a core part of your identity and belonging. That quiet, empty feeling at first is the space where genuine joy and purpose can begin to grow. Seven: allowing some things to fall apart and admitting you’re not keeping up appearances will let others see your real humanity. The perfect façade alienates people; letting it go helps dissolve the loneliness and opens the door to connections with people who truly care. Eight: find at least one setting and a few people where you can candidly share personal failures and struggles. Twelve‑step groups are especially good at nurturing honest connection; people there respond to openness and that authenticity is a relief. Nine: take responsibility for how your own choices contributed to the dynamics you’re in. You may have been shaped by childhood trauma, but as an adult you are an active participant and can change the pattern. Ten: make clear which problems belong to others and which belong to you. Friends who are themselves healing from codependency can help you see this distinction. As you free up energy previously spent solving unsolvable problems, you’ll have more to invest in your own life. Eleven: catch yourself whenever you ruminate about other people’s failures and stop granting them the power to determine your happiness. Your well‑being is created from within, though positive relationships can complement it. You cannot outsource happiness. Twelve: be vigilant in new relationships — don’t use emotional “spackle” to cover relational holes or the other person’s deficits. That tendency to fit yourself to unsuitable people (what some call “crap fit”) keeps you trapped. Instead, lean on honest friends for perspective and use your senses to decide whether someone truly fits you. Thirteen: if you find yourself purchasing books, scouting therapists, or offering to pay for someone else’s help, recognize this as a classic codependent loop: when you need help, you try to fix another person. Let that be a cue to seek support for yourself. Fourteen: take seriously the need for your own resources — books, therapy, courses — and stay focused within your own “hula hoop.” Healing yourself is the best way to influence others for the better. Even a small first step toward your own recovery often clarifies the issues and points the way forward. Fifteen: remember this draining dynamic is not a fate — you’re not cursed or doomed; you’re acting from codependent tendencies that can be healed. Sixteen: face your resentment. If you’ve poured life energy into someone who never repaid it, of course you feel cheated. You gave it away; stop stealing from yourself. When one person becomes the fixer, the other often becomes the slacker, and it’s exhausting. The only cure is to stop playing your part in that cycle. Seventeen: develop a vision for your life. After you step back from constant crises you’ll have spare energy and perhaps a hollow feeling — that emptiness is fertile ground for a new life plan. Solitude, reflection, and experimentation will be bumpy at first, but they will reveal choices and restore hope. Eighteen: consider whether codependency is draining the pleasure from your work; if so, you can change the dynamic at work or, if necessary, look for a different job. Nineteen: recognize the stakes of living with ongoing toxic stress and unfulfillment. This is not who you were meant to be; you deserve love, connection and support. Twenty: start now — don’t wait until you’ve lashed out, burned bridges, or sacrificed money and stability. Healing begins today, and a single small step can make a profound difference and invite the next one. If you’d like a copy of the free download “Signs You’re in a Codependent Relationship,” it lists all twenty items covered here; you can click on that list right here. See you soon. [Music]

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