7 Steps to Stop Being Codependent in a Relationship

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We all want to be with that special person in our lives, but what about when that desire for your partner becomes twisted into a relationship based on “need?” When you need someone to make you feel good about yourself, you depend on that person. 

There is also the opposite: when you need someone to need you, you feel helpful and become their “savior,” which makes you feel good about yourself. Is either of these types of relationships healthy? Should you stop being “needy” or codependent? 

Stopping codependency is not easy, but you can learn how to stop being codependent in a relationship in these steps (without leaving your partner). 

What Is Codependency?

Codependency is when you are more than just in a mutually inclusive relationship where both partners contribute equally and share equally. It’s when you become over-invested in your partner’s life when their life becomes your life that it is known as codependency. 

In codependency, there is a “giver” and a “taker.” The giver does for the taker, while the taker depends on the giver to make them feel good. In a codependent relationship, there’s no single “guilty” party. Instead, both parties are involved in an unhealthy relationship

When a couple is codependent, they struggle to function independently. For them, only an “us” and not two people contribute to the relationship. Instead, a designated “driver” steers the relationship, while the “passenger” partner is just along for the ride and has no life of their own. The twist is that the “driver” needs the “passenger” to make them feel good about driving them along the road of life. 

Are You in a Codependent Relationship?

It may be hard to distinguish between a codependent relationship and a normal relationship, especially when you are on the inside. People around you may be more able to see that your relationship is not balanced, but you probably don’t want to turn to others for their opinions. 

Being needed is expected in a relationship. Being involved in your partner’s life is normal for any couple. It’s when you can’t live without being involved, when you can’t survive if your partner has to go away for their work, and you become utterly depressed that you are looking at a codependent relationship.

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Start becoming aware of your partner in the relationship. Begin to encourage them toward self-exploration and becoming more of who they are meant to be.

Being in a codependent relationship means you are not able to function healthily on your own. Instead of living your life and sharing that life with your partner, you have no life of your own. When you are the taker, you live as a shadow in their life – you try to share their life as your own, but it is entirely a mere shadow.

A person who has a shadow living with them is also not living a wholesome life, as they are responsible for two people instead of just themselves. 

The giver then becomes reliant on feeling good only because they have a passenger they can satisfy. This feeling of “being in charge” gives the giver a sense of power. The resulting relationship is not a joining of two equals but rather a parent-child relationship. 

Some warning signs that you may be in a codependent relationship include:

  • Being unable to go without your partner for more than a short period
  • Demanding to go with them when they travel
  • Calling them relentlessly during the day
  • Obsessing over them when you are alone
  • Being unable to see any flaws in them
  • Not willing to listen to any negative criticism about them or your relationship
  • Not having any hobbies or pastimes away from home and away from your partner
  • Being fearful of upsetting your partner
  • Feeling utterly responsible for your passive partner

Attraction, Challenges, and Concerns with Codependency

You may ask why anyone would want to be in a relationship where your life takes a seat on the back burner. Suppose you are a strong and independent person. In that case, the idea of so completely enmeshing with your partner may sound like a nightmare—but there are also some perks to being in a codependent relationship. As a result, when you are in one, you may not want to leave it. 

The attractions of a codependent relationship are that:

  • Your partner is your biggest fan
  • Your partner is ALWAYS there for you.
  • You are never alone. 
  • You feel connected to someone who seems to get you.
  • There is safety in being in such an enmeshed relationship. 
  • You don’t have to make big decisions as the passenger partner.
  • Your decisions are always supported and praised when you are the driver-partner.

The challenge with a codependent relationship is that nobody is supposed to live their life wholly absorbed by their partner or limited by them. A healthy relationship is between two independent personalities and minds, where the sharing brings a unique identity to the relationship. In a codependent relationship, you may find that there is only one identity—that of the driving partner. 

Of course, there is then the concern that this could lead to severe personality disorders beginning to factor into the relationship. Narcissism, for instance, is often found in a codependent relationship since the driver position appeals to a narcissistic personality

The passenger partner may develop a victim complex and soon begin to resent their partner. Love can turn to hate. 

Should You Leave Your Codependent Relationship, or Is There Hope? 

Reading this, you may wonder if the only course of action is to divorce your marital partner or leave your romantic partner. It isn’t. There is hope for a codependent relationship, and it doesn’t require you to end the relationship

There are healthy ways to be in a codependent relationship that is mutually beneficial and less damaging than just being driver and passenger. The goal is to carve out some space for both partners while maintaining the beneficial side of a codependent relationship. 

You also want to avoid the relationship eventually disintegrating into a parent-child relationship where the “child” will soon resent their “parent” for dominating them and not allowing them to live their own life. 

7 Steps to Stop Being Codependent in Your Relationship

By working in a step-by-step manner, you can begin to redefine your codependent relationship and stop it from becoming harmful to either you or your partner. It can work if you’re willing to put in the work.

1. Acknowledge Your Needs

Whether you are the driver or passenger partner, you must own up to your needs. These needs apply to you as a person, not to you as an integrated part of the relationship.

You may have a hobby you want to practice, but you’ve been holding back because your partner doesn’t like it or cannot participate in it. 

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We all have a personal style involving self-care, fashion, likes and dislikes, and more. It is a style that shouldn’t be locked down like a prisoner.

Start doing some solo activities. Small steps here will help ease you into a personal activity that doesn’t involve your partner (not even as a spectator). 

2. Become Self-Aware

In a codependent relationship, you focus on your relationship and not on yourself. Start seeing yourself. Acknowledge your thoughts, feelings, and needs. Your partner isn’t responsible for fulfilling these—you are. 

A few ways to get in touch with who you are (outside of the relationship) include:

3. Redefine Your Style

We all have a personal style that involves self-care, fashion, likes and dislikes, and more. This style shouldn’t be locked down like a prisoner; instead, it is meant to evolve with our passage through life. 

In a codependent relationship, you may have become stuck in who you are. Instead of growing and changing, you have remained who you were. You now don’t know your full potential. It’s time to find out what you like and what your purpose is

Start with small items, such as changing up your wardrobe. Don’t go on a shopping spree, as even trying on clothes you’d never have considered wearing before can help create the mind shift. 

This activity is ideally done alone, but you can involve your partner if they don’t dominate your adventurous spirit. If you are the passenger and they are a narcissistic driver, they may choose to suppress your changing style

4. Build Boundaries, Not Walls

We all know that a relationship needs boundaries. Some aspects of our lives are not open to our partner’s presence or things we won’t accept. Not accepting physical abuse from your partner is one example of a boundary. 

Boundaries aren’t negative things in your relationship. These don’t keep your partner out. Instead, they help show you both where to go, what is acceptable, and what is required from each other. 

What are the boundaries in your relationship at the moment? Which boundaries can help you take more ownership of your life while supporting your partner

5. Embrace the Power of NO

In a codependent relationship, the word NO is rarely used (if ever). Therefore, start using it in small ways. 

“No, I don’t want a second serving of pie.”

“No, I am not going out tonight.”

“No, I don’t like that color.”

“No, you can go to the store alone today.”

When you and your partner learn that NO isn’t a bad thing, you can begin to respect each other more, see independence as a good thing, and practice personal power without causing or taking offense. 

6. Practice Awareness in the Relationship

Communication is powerful. Not all codependent relationships are created intentionally. Sometimes, these relationships happen when the partners can’t fully communicate and express their needs.

This can quickly happen in a relationship where one partner has a strong personality, and the other is more submissive.

3 steps to heal from codependency | can a codependent relationship be saved | am i codependent on my boyfriend
Start doing some solo activities. Small steps here will help ease you into a personal activity that doesn’t involve your partner (not even as a spectator). 

Start becoming aware of your partner in the relationship. This isn’t an opportunity to criticize them. Instead, you can begin to encourage them toward self-exploration and becoming more of who they are meant to be. It’s also about communicating to them your need to be more of who you are. 

7. Open Your Emotions

When you are insecure in your feelings, you may slip into the shadows of your partner because it’s easier and safer. Yet, this isn’t healthy. Even the driver partner may become tired and decide to leave a relationship where they carry all the emotional responsibility

Open your feelings, acknowledge them, and share them with your partner. You may find that your partner can be a true pillar of strength, not a door to hide behind. 

Sharing your feelings honestly means you can start creating an interdependent relationship instead of a codependent one. You and your partner can find real connection, new intimacy, and trust each other. 

Final Thoughts on How to Stop Being Codependent in a Relationship

Codependency gets a bad rep because it often leads to a relationship that’s so unbalanced that it’s hard to see where one partner starts and the other stops. A relationship should be between two equal individuals, but this is often rare to achieve. 

Usually, one partner is stronger than the other. Strength doesn’t mean the strong person should drive the relationship, and their partner is reduced to being a passenger. Codependency can become a valuable form of relationship when it’s a more balanced relationship where both partners receive their share of responsibility and ownership

Depend on your partner, but trust yourself also to get things done.  And if your partner is acting out, you may want to read our article on men with mother abandonment issues.

Learn more about codependency in these posts:

how to stop being codependent in a relationship | how do i stop being codependent in my marriage | how to stop being codependent with a narcissist
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