 I'm Sam Baknin and I'm the author of Malignant Self-Love, Narcissism Revisited. There is a great confusion regarding the terms codependent, counterdependent, and straightforward dependent. Let us try to clarify them. Start with codependence. Codependence depend on other people for their emotional gratification, and the performance of both inconsequential and crucial daily and psychological functions. Codependence are needy, demanding, and submissive. They suffer from abandonment anxiety, and to avoid being overwhelmed by it, codependence cling to others and act immaturally. These behaviors are intended to elicit protective responses, and to safeguard the relationship with their companion or mate upon whom they depend. Codependence appear to be impervious to abuse. No matter how badly they are mistreated, they remain committed to the so-called relationship. This is where the co in codependence comes into play. By accepting the role of victims, codependence seek to control their abuses, to manipulate them. It is a dense macabre in which both members of the diet collaborate. There are four types of codependence. Codependence is a complex, multifaceted and multi-dimensional defense against the codependence fears and needs. The first type of codependent is a codependent that aims to fend anxieties related to abandonment. These codependents are clingy, smothering, prone to panic, outplagued with ideas of reference, and display self-negating submissiveness. The main concern of type 1 codependence is to prevent their victims, friends, spouses, family members from deserting them, or from attaining true autonomy and independence. There's a second type of codependence, and it is geared to cope with the codependence fear of losing control. By feigning helplessness and neediness, such codependence coerce their environment into ceaselessly catering to their needs, wishes, and requirements. These codependents are drama queens, and their life is a kaleidoscope of instability and chaos. They refuse to grow up and force their nearest and dearest to treat them as emotional and or physical invalids as children. These codependents deploy their self-imputed deficiencies and disabilities as weapons. If the first type and the second type of codependent use emotional blackmail and when necessary threats to secure the presence and blight compliance of their suppliers. There is a third type of codependent that is a vicarious codependent. The vicarious codependent lives through others. He sacrifices or she sacrifices herself in order to glory in the accomplishments of their chosen targets. Such codependence subsists on reflected light, on second-hand applause, on derivative achievements. They have no personal history and no personal accomplishments. They have suspended their wishes, preferences and dreams in favor of another person, and that person is the person they are codependent on. And finally, there is a form of codependence that is so subtle that it usually eludes detection until late. And it is a counterdependent. Counterdependence rejects and despises authority and often clashes with authority figures, parents, the boss, the law. Their sense of self-worth and their very self-identity are premised on and derived from these acts of bravura and defiance. In other words, their sense of self-worth and self-identity and self-confidence and self-esteem are dependent on these anti-authority actions. Counterdependence are fiercely independent, controlling, self-centered and aggressive. Many of them are anti-social and they use projective identification. In other words, they force people to behave in ways that buttress and affirm the counterdependence view of the world and his expectations. These behavior patterns are often the result of deep-seated fear of intimacy. In an intimate relationship, the counterdependent feels enslaved and snare, trapped, captive, shackled, suffocated. Counterdependence are locked into approach avoidance repetition complex cycles. Hesitant approach is followed by avoidance of commitment. Counterdependence are lone wolves and dead team players. The dependent personality disorder is a much disputed mental health diagnosis. We are all dependent to some degree, we all like to be taken care of. When is this need judged to be pathological, compulsive, pervasive and excessive? No one knows. The yardstick is arbitrary. Clinicians who contributed to the study of this disorder use words such as craving, clinging, stifling, humiliating, submissive, and they use these words both in relation to the codependent or the dependent and the victim. But these are all subjective terms, they are open to disagreement and to differences of opinion. Moreover, virtually all cultures encourage dependency to varying degrees. In developed countries, many women, the very old, the very young, the sick, the criminal and the mentally handicapped are denied personal autonomy and they are all legally and economically dependent on others or on the authorities. Thus, the dependent personality disorder is diagnosed only when such behavior does not conform with social or cultural norms. Dependents as they are sometimes known are possessed with fantastic worries and concerns and they are paralyzed by their abandonment anxiety and fear of separation. Their inner turmoil renders them indecisive. Even the simplest everyday decision becomes an excruciating ordeal. This is why codependents rarely initiate projects or do things on their own. Dependents typically go around eliciting constant and repeated assurances and advice from myriad sources. This recurrent solicitation of SACOR is proof that the codependent seeks to transfer responsibility for his or her life to others, whether they have agreed or assumed it or not. This recoil and studious avoidance of challenges may give the wrong impression that the dependent is indolent or insipid, yet most dependents are neither. They are often fired by repressed ambition, energy and imagination. It is the lack of self-confidence that holds them back. They don't trust their own abilities and judgment. Absent and inner compass and a realistic assessment of their positive qualities on the one hand and their limitations on the other hand, dependents are forced to rely on crucial input from the outside and in this sense they are not unlike narcissists. Realizing this, their behavior becomes self-negating. They never disagree with meaningful others or criticize them. They are afraid to lose their support and emotional nurturance. I wrote in the Open Sites Encyclopedia, the codependent molds himself or herself and bends over backwards to cater to the needs of his nearest and dearest and to satisfy their every whim, wish, expectation and demand. Nothing is too unpleasant or unacceptable if it serves to secure the uninterrupted presence of the codependent's family and friends and the emotional sustenance that she can extract or extort from them. The codependent does not feel fully alive when alone. She feels helpless, threatened, ill at ease and childlike. This acute discomfort of loneliness drives the codependent to hop from one relationship to another. The sources of nurturance are interchangeable. To the codependent, being with someone, with anyone, no matter whom, is always preferable to solitude.