| Healthy: Empathetic, compassionate,
feeling for others. Caring and concerned
about their needs. Thoughtful, warm-hearted,
forgiving and sincere. / Encouraging and
appreciative, able to see the good in others.
Service is important, but takes care of
self too: they are nurturing, generous,
and giving a truly loving person.
At Their Best: Become deeply unselfish,
humble, and altruistic: giving unconditional
love to self and others. Feel it is a privilege
to be in their lives of others.
Average: Want to be closer to others,
so start "people pleasing", becoming
overly friendly, emotionally demonstrative,
and full of "good intentions"
about everything. Give seductive attention:
approval, "strokes," flattery.
Love their supreme value, and they talk
about it constantly. / Become overly intimate
and intrusive: they need to be needed, so
they hover, meddle, and control in the name
of love. Want others to depend on them:
give, but expect a return: send double messages.
Enveloping and possessive: the codependent,
self-sacrificial person who cannot do enough
for others wearing themselves out
for everyone, creating needs for themselves
to fulfill. / Increasingly self-important
and self-satisfied, feel they are indispensable,
although they overrate their efforts in
others' behalf. Hypochondria, becoming a
"martyr" for others. Overbearing,
patronizing, presumptuous.
Unhealthy: Can be manipulative and
self-serving, instilling guilt by telling
others how much they owe them and make them
suffer. Abuse food and medication to "stuff
feelings" and get sympathy. Undermine
people, making belittling, disparaging remarks.
Extremely self-deceptive about their motives
and how aggressive and/or selfish their
behavior is. / Domineering and coercive:
feel entitled to get anything they want
from others: the repayment of old debts,
money, sexual favors. / Able to excuse and
rationalize what they do since they feel
abused and victimized by others and are
bitterly resentful and angry. Somatization
of their aggressions result in chronic health
problems as they vindicate themselves by
"falling apart" and burdening
others.
Key Motivations: Want to be loved,
to express their feelings for others, to
be needed and appreciated, to get others
to respond to them, to vindicate their claims
about themselves.
Examples: Mother Teresa, Barbara
Bush, Eleanor Roosevelt, Leo Buscaglia,
Monica Lewinsky, Bill Cosby, Barry Manilow,
Lionel Richie, Kenny G., Luciano Pavarotti,
Lillian Carter, Sammy Davis, Jr., Martin
Sheen, Robert Fulghum, Alan Alda, Richard
Thomas, Jack Paar, Sally Jessy Raphael,
Bishop Desmond Tutu, Ann Landers, "Melanie
Hamilton" (Gone With the Wind). and
"Dr. McCoy" (Star Trek). |