 Okay baby seal! This is my Christmas baby seal and I'm with you today to discuss how does the codependent sees you, her intimate partner. This is the third in a series of three videos. The first one is how does the narcissist see you. The second one is how does the borderline see you and now how does the codependent see you. It's reminiscent of the world series, only much more thrilling and much less predictable. My name is Sam Bhatni. I'm the author of Malina and Saiflau. Narcissism Revisited and I'm also a professor of psychology in CIAPS Center for International Advanced Professional Studies, the outreach program of the CIAPS Consortium of Universities. Yep! This over we can go straight into the codependent's mind. The codependent says to her intimate partner, I need you. I depend on you. I won't survive without you. I'm afraid that you will dump me and her insistence in repeating these sentences borders on brainwashing or indoctrination. She leverages learned helplessness into an art form. It is the equivalent of emotional blackmail. The codependent says I can't make sense of the world without you. I need you to make decisions for me. I want you to rescue and protect me especially from myself. I'm so I'm so unsure of who I am and what is the best course of action that you have become my lodestone. Her clinginess and neediness are couched in words of wisdom. She says I have so much ambition, so much energy and imagination and a lot of insight but I lack self-confidence and it's holding me back. I don't trust my own abilities and judgment and that is where you my intimate partner comes in as my alter ego as my facilitator. Tell me she says just keep telling me that you love me. Tell me this all the time unsolicited. I need you to tell me this. I need you to reassure me because it feels so wonderful to love you. It feels so magnificent to be needed and wanted finally by someone. You're the only person in the world who cares about me and loves me and it makes me feel alive again without you. I'm numb without you. I'm dead so I want to become one with you. I want to merge with you. I want to fuse with you. I want us to be inseparable because I love myself through you. I demand that you give me what I need because I always give you what you need and I do it unquestioningly. I do it unhesitatingly. I submit to you every whim and wish. I never disagree with you. I never criticize you. Doesn't this call for reciprocity? Don't I deserve something for putting up with you essentially? I love you. Don't ever leave me. Take me everywhere with you. I wish I could fit into your pocket. We will do everything together always and I will be your child and you will keep me safe. I call this in-house talking by the way and the co-dependent continues her soliloquy. She says never mind what you do to me. I will always be here by your side. I will always have your back. I will save you. I will have pity on you when no one else will and I'll redeem you. I feel guilty and responsible for your abuse because sometimes I'm considering to abandon you but I never will rest assured. It's only me saying stupid things. Don't pay attention. I cannot live apart from you. I cannot have a life without you anymore. I wish I could overcome you. I wish I could erase you but this will never happen. This is the co-dependence voice. This is how she sees her intimate part. I wrote in the open site encyclopedia the entry about co-dependent personality disorder and I said there the co-dependent-dependent molds herself or himself, molds herself and bends over backward to cater to the needs of her nearest and dearest and to satisfy their every whim, wish, expectation and demand. Nothing is too unpleasant or too unacceptable if it serves to secure the uninterrupted presence of the co-dependence family and friends and the emotional sustenance that she can extract or extort from them. Co-dependent does not feel fully alive when she is alone. She feels helpless, threatened, ill at ease and childlike. This acute discomfort drives the co-dependent to hope for one relationship to another. The sources of nurturance are interchangeable. To the co-dependent, being with someone, with anyone, no matter who, is always preferable to agonizing solitude. There are several types of co-dependence. Co-dependency is a complex, multifaceted and multidimensional defense against the co-dependence fears and needs. There are five categories of co-dependency stemming from the respective etiologies. Number one, co-dependency that aims to fend off anxieties related to abandonment. These co-dependents are clingy, smothering and prone to panic. They are plagued with ideas of reference, referential ideation. They display self-negating submissiveness. The main concern of these type of co-dependence is to prevent their victims, friends, spouses, family members, from deserting them or from attaining true autonomy and independence. These co-dependents merged with their loved ones and experience any sign of abandonment, actual, threatened, anticipated or even imagined as a form of self-annihilation or amputation. In this, the co-dependent is very similar to the borderline, resembles it. The second type of co-dependency is geared to cope with the co-dependence fear of losing control. By feigning helplessness and neediness, such co-dependence coerce their environment into ceaselessly catering to their needs, wishes and requirements. This is controlled from the bottom. These co-dependents are labile drama queens and their life is a kaleidoscope of instability and chaos. These co-dependents refuse to grow up. They force the nearest and dearest to treat them as emotional or as physical invalides. They deploy their self-imputed deficiencies and disabilities as weapons, they will them as weapons. But these types of co-dependents use emotional blackmail and when necessary, they threaten to secure the presence and blind compliance of their suppliers one way or another. Both types, by the way. The first type and the second type do this. Then there's the third type, the vicarious co-dependent. Vicarious co-dependents live through others, like the moon with the sun reflected light. Vicarious co-dependents sacrifice themselves in order to glory in the accomplishments of their chosen targets. They subsist on reflected light, on secondhand applause and on derivative achievements. They have no personal history, having suspended their own lives, wishes, preferences and dreams in favor of someone else's. One type of such vicarious co-dependent is the inverted narcissists. I'm quoting from my book Malignan Serf Love Narcissism Revisited 10th Edition. The inverted narcissists, a subtype of covert narcissist. This is a co-dependent who depends exclusively on narcissists. The narcissist co-dependent. If you're living with the narcissist, if you have a relationship with one, if you're married to one, if you're working with the narcissist, it does not mean that you're an inverted narcissist. To qualify as an inverted narcissist, you must crave to be in a relationship with the narcissist regardless of any abuse inflicted on you by him or her. You must actively seek relationships with narcissists and only with narcissists, no matter what your bitter and traumatic past experience has been. You must feel empty and unhappy in relationships with any other kind of person except the narcissist. Only then, and if you satisfy the other diagnostic criteria of dependent personality disorder, can you be safely labeled an inverted narcissist. The fourth type of co-dependent is the borderline co-dependent or borderline narcissist. These co-dependents oscillate between periods of clinging and other co-dependent behavior patterns, which they interpret as intimacy and periods of aloofness, detachment and emotional neglect and abandonment, which they regard as legitimate and the only possible manifestations of their personal autonomy and space. Co-dependent or borderline narcissists also tend to form with their intimate partner a shared fantasy, a shared psychosis for their due. These are all the outcomes of their overwhelming and all-pervasive abandonment anxiety. They either smother their partner in an attempt to forestall abandonment, or they preemptively abandon ship, thus avoiding hurt and maintaining an illusion of control over the situation. I walked out on her and I dumped her, not the other way around. The co-dependent deploys strategies such as merger, becoming one with her intimate partner, while renouncing all personal autonomy and independence of both of them up to the point of a shared fantasy. So this is one strategy deployed by co-dependence. There is another strategy known as co-extensivity, the I call it the ventriloquist defense, insisting that the partner mind reads her and acts in ways that reflect her inner psychological states and moods, which are not communicated. Then there is shifting boundaries, using behavioral unpredictability and ambient uncertainty to induce paralyzing dependence in the partner. And finally, the fifth type of co-dependent is another form of dependence that is so subtle that it eludes the eluded detection until very recently. So the fifth type of co-dependent is known as counter-dependent. Counter-dependents reject and despise authority. They are conchumacious and they often clash with authority figures such as parents, bosses, the law. Their sense of self-worth and their very self-identity are premised on and they are derived from this autonomy. In other words, they are dependent on these acts of bravura and defiance. They are personal autonomy militants. Counter-dependents are fiercely uncompromisingly independent on the surface. They are controlling, they are self-centered, they are aggressive, but actually they are highly dependent on these displays of reactance. Many of them are anti-social and use projective identification. They force people to behave in ways that buttress and affirm the counter-dependence view of the world and his expectations. And these behaviour patterns are often the result of deep-seated fear of intimacy. In an intimate relationship, counter-dependence feel enslaved, ensnared, captive, shackled. Counter-dependents are locked into approach avoidance repetition, compulsion cycles. Hesitant approach is followed by avoidance commitment, avoidance of commitment. They are counter-dependents are lone wolves and bad team players, but highly dependent on reacting to other people. Counter dependence is a reaction formation. The counter-dependent dreads his own weaknesses. He seeks to overcome them by projecting an image of omnipotence, omniscience, success, self-sufficiency and superiority. It's very similar to narcissism. Most classical overt narcissists are actually counter-dependence. Their emotions and needs are buried under scar tissue, which had formed, coalesced and hardened during years of one form of abuse or another. Grandiosity, a sense of entitlement, a lack of empathy and over-winning haughtiness usually hide knowing insecurity and a fluctuating sense of self-worth. There may be a sixth form of codependency, and I call it situational or late onset codependency. Some people develop codependent behaviours and traits in the wake of a life crisis or trauma, especially a traumatic relationship, especially if it involves an abandonment and the resulting solitude, a divorce, an emptiness. Such late onset codependency forces a complex emotional and behavioral chain reaction whose role is to resolve the inner conflict by reading oneself of the emergent, undesirable, codependent conduct. Consciously, such a part, such a patient may at first feel liberated, but unconsciously being abruptly dumped and lonesome as a disoriented and disconcerting effect. I have dedicated a whole video to situational codependency and late onset codependency. I recommend that you watch it. Thank you for listening and happy new year. Tomorrow, a video about the best new year resolution you can ever make. Get rid of a fake friend.