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The Compulsive
GiverTo all appearances, the
compulsive giver is an altruistic, empathic, and caring
person. Actually, he or she is a people-pleaser and a
codependent. The compulsive giver is trapped in a narrative
of his own confabulation: how his nearest and dearest need
him because they are poor, young, inexperienced, lacking in
intelligence or good looks, and are otherwise inferior to
him. Compulsive giving, therefore, involves pathological
narcissism.
In reality, it is the compulsive giver who coerces, cajoles,
and tempts people around him to avail themselves of his
services or money. He forces himself on the recipients of his
ostentatious largesse and the beneficiaries of his generosity
or magnanimity. He is unable to deny anyone their wishes or a
requests, even when these are not explicit or expressed and are
mere figments of his own neediness and grandiose
imagination.
Inevitably, he develops unrealistic expectations. He feels that
people should be immensely grateful to him and that their
gratitude should translate into a kind of obsequiousness.
Internally, he seethes and rages against the lack of
reciprocity he perceives in his relationships with family,
friends, and colleagues. He mutely castigates everyone around
him for being so ungenerous. To the compulsive giver, giving is
perceived as sacrifice and taking is exploitation. Thus, he
gives without grace, always with visible strings attached. No
wonder he is always frustrated and often aggressive.
In psychological jargon, we would say that the compulsive giver
has alloplastic defenses with an external locus of control.
This simply means that he relies on input from people around
him to regulate his fluctuating sense of self-worth, his
precarious self-esteem, and his ever shifting moods. It also
means that he blames the world for his failures. He feels
imprisoned in a hostile and mystifying universe, entirely
unable to influence events, circumstances, and outcomes. He
thus avoids assuming responsibility for the consequences of his
actions.
Yet, it is important to realize that the compulsive giver
cherishes and relishes his self-conferred victimhood and
nurtures his grudges by maintaining a meticulous accounting of
everything he gives and receives. This mental operation of
masochistic bookkeeping is a background process of which the
compulsive giver is sometimes unaware. He is likely to
vehemently deny such meanness and narrow-mindedness.
The compulsive giver is an artist of projective identification.
He manipulates his closest into behaving exactly the way he
expects them to. He keeps lying to them and telling them that
the act of giving is the only reward he seeks. All the while he
secretly yearns for reciprocity. He rejects any attempt to rob
him of his sacrificial status - he won't accept gifts or money
and he avoids being the recipient or beneficiary of help or
compliments. These false asceticism and fake modesty are mere
baits. He uses them to prove to himself that his nearest and
dearest are nasty ingrates. "If they wanted to (give me a
present or help me), they would have insisted" - he bellows
triumphantly, his worst fears and suspicions yet again
confirmed.
Gradually, people fall into line. They begin to feel that they
are the ones who are doing the compulsive giver a favor by
succumbing to his endless and overweening charity. "What can we
do?" - they sigh - "It means so much to him and he has put so
much effort into it! I just couldn't say no." The roles are
reversed and everyone is happy: the beneficiaries benefit and
the compulsive giver goes on feeling that the world is unjust
and people are self-centered exploiters. As he always
suspected.
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