18 Feb 2008 04:33:57 | Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
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Title: Addiction to Complaining Author: Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
E-mail: mailto:margaret@innerbonding.com Copyright: © 2005 by
Margaret Paul URL: http://www.innerbonding.com Word Count: 723
Category: Self Improvement
Addiction to Complaining By Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
Complaining is a way of life for some people. It was certainly a
way of life for my mother. I don’t remember a day going by
without her complaining, endlessly. I don’t think I ever heard a
word of gratitude out of my mother’s mouth. No matter how good
things were, she would manage to find something wrong. No matter
how perfect I was – and God knows I tried to be perfect! – she
always found something wrong with me, as well as with my father.
Over the years of counseling others, I’ve noticed that some
people start every session with a complaint. They can’t seem to
help it. Like my mother, they are addicted to complaining.
Why do people complain? What is it they want or hope for when
they complain?
People who complain are generally people who have not done the
emotional and spiritual work of developing a loving,
compassionate inner adult self. They are operating as a wounded
child in need of love, attention and compassion. Because they
have not learned to give themselves the attention and compassion
they need, they seek to get these needs met by others.
Complaining is a way they have learned to attempt to get this.
They use complaining as a form of control, hoping to guilt
others into giving them the attention, caring and compassion
they seek.
Complaining is a “pull” on other people. Energetically,
complainers are pulling on others for caring and understanding
because they have emotionally abandoned themselves. They are
like demanding little children. The problem is that most people
dislike being pulled on and demanded of. Most people don’t want
emotional responsibility for another person and will withdraw in
the face of another’s complaints.
This is what my father did. He withdrew, shut down, was
emotionally unavailable to my mother as a way to protect himself
from being controlled by her complaints. Of course, he didn’t
just do this in response to my mother. He had learned to
withdraw as a child in response to his own mother’s complaints
and criticism. He entered the marriage ready to withdraw in the
face of my mother’s pull, while she entered the marriage ready
to make my father emotionally responsible for her. A perfect
match!
My father’s withdrawal, of course, only served to exacerbate my
mother’s complaining, and she constantly complained about my
father’s lack of caring about her. Likewise, my mother’s
complaining served to exacerbate my father’s already withdrawn
way of being. This vicious circle started early and continued
unabated for the 60 years of their marriage, until my mother
died.
While my parents loved each other, their ability to express
their love got buried beneath the dysfunctional system they
created. Unfortunately, this is all too common in relationships.
One person pulling – with complaints, anger, judgment, and other
forms of control - and the other withdrawing, is the most common
relationship system I work with.
A person addicted to complaining will not be able to stop
complaining until he or she does the inner work of developing an
adult part of themselves capable of giving themselves the love,
caring, understanding and compassion they need. As long as they
believe that it is another’s responsibility to be the adult for
them and fill them with love, they will not take on this
responsibility for themselves.
Our inner child – the feeling part of us – needs attention,
approval, caring. If we don’t learn to give this to ourselves,
then this wounded child part of ourselves will either seek to
get it from others, or learn to numb out with substance and
process addictions – food, alcohol, drugs, TV, work, gambling,
and so on. If, as a child, a person saw others get attention
through complaining – as my mother did with my grandmother – and
if complaining worked for the child to get what he or she
wanted, then it can become an addiction. Like all addictions, it
may work for the moment, but it will never fill the deep inner
need for love. Only we can fill this need for ourselves, by
opening our hearts to the Source of love. Only we can do the
inner work of developing a loving adult capable of opening to
the love of Spirit and bringing that love to the child within.
People stop complaining when they learn to fill themselves with
love.
About Author :
Margaret Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and co-author of
eight books, including "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By
You?" She is the co-creator of the powerful Inner Bonding
healing process. Visit her web site for a FREE Inner Bonding
course: http://www.innerbonding.com or email her at margaret@innerbonding.com.