People Pleasing Complex

I mentioned this to my therapist last week about my complex. The complex is that when I feel as if I have disappointed someone, I retain it in my mind to try and find a way to synthesise that disappointment so that I feel as if I have made up for it. This can be for literally anything, and the fact not everything solves neatly in life is a distress for me. Even if it is merely a missed opportunity (i.e. someone likes me and I miss the signals ), I feel the need to mentally keep it on my mind so I can try to rectify it. This can be as small as rearranging the time to meet, to feeling the need to throw myself into something uncomfortable or make something extravagant in order to meet the need. I feel bad that I have 'failed' that need, and I feel the necessity keep that stuck in my mind to 'drive' me in order to satisfy that need at once. May lead to saying yes moe willingly too. It feeds a lot into my negative thinking. This mindset, once I had finally spoken it, felt like I had finally said it properly for the first time with a therapist. I'm pretty sure that this complex drives a lot of the reason why I make decisions.

It's a progress, and I am not sure where to go from there, but I really hope someone can relate to me on this! I don't know if it has anything to do with autism too...

Parents
  • I'm the same... A small way that it's happened for me recently is that one of my classmates (who is usually man bit had been nice to me lately) stood up for me when someone was sitting in the spot I like to sit in and I felt that just saying "thank you" wasn't enough since internally I was panicking when I saw someone in my spot and she unintentionally even l saved me from a panic attack. I ended up panicking for, like, a week over it because I didn't have any lollies (she LOVES the Asian lollies I always carry with me but ran out the day before this happened) and wanted to give her a few as thanks... I ended up restocking my 'stash' of lollies a week and a half later and have her some as planned and only then did I stop feeling bad... 

    Sorry about the whole rant there. With things like this, I struggle to get my point across in under 20 words Sweat smileSweat smile

Reply
  • I'm the same... A small way that it's happened for me recently is that one of my classmates (who is usually man bit had been nice to me lately) stood up for me when someone was sitting in the spot I like to sit in and I felt that just saying "thank you" wasn't enough since internally I was panicking when I saw someone in my spot and she unintentionally even l saved me from a panic attack. I ended up panicking for, like, a week over it because I didn't have any lollies (she LOVES the Asian lollies I always carry with me but ran out the day before this happened) and wanted to give her a few as thanks... I ended up restocking my 'stash' of lollies a week and a half later and have her some as planned and only then did I stop feeling bad... 

    Sorry about the whole rant there. With things like this, I struggle to get my point across in under 20 words Sweat smileSweat smile

Children
No Data