Anonymous ID: 59e268 April 18, 2023, 7:16 p.m. No.18717818   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7828 >>7834 >>7849 >>7873

Have you ever wondered if you might be doing too much for other people?

“Super-helper syndrome” is a term coined by psychologists Jess Baker and Rod Vincent to describe people who have a compulsion to help others while failing to meet their own needs. And it’s more harmful than you might realise.

It makes sense. If all your attention has been on caring for others, it’s easy to fall behind with everything from medical and dental check-ups to eating and looking after yourself. It’s not easy to admit, but this compulsion can cause serious damage over time, and it can be hard to recognise the super-helper tendency until it’s too far gone.

But once you’ve made the frank and honest assessment that yes, you probably do do too much for others and sure, you maybe are a bit burned out from constantly shouldering other people’s burdens, what do you do?

How to unlearn super-helper syndrome

  1. Ask why?

According to Baker and Vincent, the first and most important thing to do is explore your motivations for helping. They identify four core beliefs that typically underlie the super-helper syndrome:

The Good Person Belief: Are you helping in order to prove that you are a good person?

The Help Everyone Belief: Do you have a compulsion to help everyone you meet?

The They-Couldn’t-Survive-Without-Me Belief: Do you believe that the people you are caring for couldn’t cope without you?

The No Needs Belief: Do you act as though you believe ‘I shouldn’t have any needs’?

Many of these conceptions are formed in childhood, where we may have had adults depend on us or been praised for exhibiting helpful behaviour. But deconstructing these beliefs – why you hold them, where they came from and how they’re damaging you – will allow you to make conscious choices to balance caring for others with caring for yourself.

  1. Set healthy helping boundaries

Compulsive helpers tend to help in all aspects of life: at work, volunteering, caring for relatives, acting as the fixer in the family. You are often the one that everyone turns to – the first port of call when they are in distress or in need. But your relationships lack balance: you help people but they seldom help you. You are the one making all the effort: remembering birthdays, keeping in touch, sending well-wishes for that job interview.

But it’s OK to consciously decide who, how and when you are going to help. You don’t have to be there all the time, for every person. Setting some well-needed boundaries is key to helping you reclaim your time, space and energy.

  1. Ask for help

Remember that you are not alone. Those who habitually provide help seldom ask for it for themselves. Go to someone you trust and think about what you need from them. You might just ask them to listen while you offload what’s on your mind.

  1. Don’t put up with helper’s guilt

Remind yourself that it’s OK to say no sometimes. You don’t have to feel guilty when you don’t help. You don’t have to feel guilty when you care for yourself. If you don’t do this, who is going to?

Baker and Vincent insist that they’re not “against helping”, but instead wish to promote ‘healthy helping’ – which comes out of compassion rather than out of compulsion. And super-helper syndrome is something that must be overcome because it cannot be managed sustainably or healthily.

“Healthy helping is where you look after your own needs as well as looking after others,” they add.

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-4-most-important-things-you-need-to-do-to-recover-from-super-helper-syndrome

Anonymous ID: 59e268 April 18, 2023, 7:36 p.m. No.18717911   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7931 >>7953 >>8059 >>8225 >>8273

Callsign POSDN18. Norwegian military BOEING P-8 Poseidon 9582. Strange orbiting flight pattern at 5,500 feet NW of DC. The really strange part is the circle is just about centered on Hagerstown Speedway. Base camp for the past DC trucker protests.

Anonymous ID: 59e268 April 18, 2023, 8:48 p.m. No.18718250   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8273

Tarrant County commissioner spars with county judge after elections administrator resigns

Elections Administrator Heider Garcia resigned Monday and referenced a meeting with County Judge Tim O'Hare as a reason. O'Hare wouldn't share details on their talk.

Author: William Joy (WFAA)

Published: 4:31 PM CDT April 18, 2023

Updated: 4:31 PM CDT April 18, 2023

FORT WORTH, Texas — Tarrant County commissioners shared concerns over the resignation of the county’s elections administrator in their first meeting since he resigned Monday.

Heider Garcia had served as elections administrator since 2018 and was sell-respected across the state. Garcia’s resignation letter thanks county administrator GK Maenius for his support and leadership.

At the end of the letter, Garcia addresses Republican County Judge Tim O’Hare saying, “my formula to ‘administer a quality transparent election’ stands on respect and zero politics; compromising on these values is not an option for me. You made it clear in our last meeting that your formula is different.”

Several commissioners pushed O’Hare over what happened in that meeting. Democrat County Commissioner Roy Brooks blamed O’Hare for Garcia stepping down.

“It was made to be broken. It was broken by the hand of you, judge,” Brooks said.

“Go ahead and explain how I broke it,” O’Hare quickly replied. “Explain to the public how I broke the system.”

O’Hare said he wasn’t sure legally what details he could share about the meeting with Garcia and that he wanted to keep their conversation private.

“I did not ask Heider to resign,” he said. “I did not put pressure on Heider to resign. I did not threaten to fire Heider. I did not threaten to bring him before the election commission for a review to determine if he would keep his employment.”

O’Hare indicated their conversation had to do with concerns both O’Hare and another member of the election commission had with Garcia.

“As the chair of the election commission, I was asked by a member of the election commission to approach Mr. Garcia and deliver a message which I did,” O’Hare said. “I have several issues that I brought up which as the county judge and as the chair of the election commission, I have every right in the world to do.”

Commissioners touted Garcia’s transparency. He allowed people with doubts about election systems to test voting machines in the county offices.

In 2020, former President Trump, who won Texas by a six-point margin, called for an audit of the state’s results. Within hours, Gov. Greg Abbott announced the state would conduct an audit. A final report released in December of 2022 said, “Tarrant County administers a quality, transparent election”,

Commissioner Alisa Simmons said Garcia’s departure could fuel more doubts.

“We were not in the room, and I will be asking what the heck happened, but this is very concerning,” Simons said. “These are critical times. Many people are concerned about our election process and to lose a tenured, well-thought-of expert like Heider Garcia, it’s terrifying.”

Commissioner Manny Ramirez said he hopes a replacement is found quickly.

With early voting in the May 6 general election just a week away, Garcia said he plans to stay in his current role until June 23.

https://www.wfaa.com/article/news/local/tarrant-county-commissioner-spars-county-judge-elections-administrator-resigns/287-a9dec7eb-68a9-4803-a47f-15a1fefe9809