If there is a person in your life and every other single person you meet says that there’s a problem with that person and your gut reaction is to explain away those problems or to excuse that person from responsibility for the problems that are alleged against them, you are currently running interference for a person who has unaddressed problems.
That is codependent enabling behavior, and is a sign that you yourself may have some issues that need to be addressed.
Just because I think the guy is absolutely horrible doesn’t mean that I’m going to pretend he wasn’t joking when he clearly was. Yes, he also doesn’t actually care about them, but that doesn’t change the fact that he was joking.
That viewpoint is called codependency.
If there is a person in your life and every other single person you meet says that there’s a problem with that person and your gut reaction is to explain away those problems or to excuse that person from responsibility for the problems that are alleged against them, you are currently running interference for a person who has unaddressed problems.
That is codependent enabling behavior, and is a sign that you yourself may have some issues that need to be addressed.
Acknowledging reality is not codependence.
Just because I think the guy is absolutely horrible doesn’t mean that I’m going to pretend he wasn’t joking when he clearly was. Yes, he also doesn’t actually care about them, but that doesn’t change the fact that he was joking.