Bringing up alternative examples isn't helpful.
It may not be for you, but that doesn't mean that it won't be helpful for everyone.
For myself, when I'm too close to a thing, I often have to step back & look at what's similar/what's different to be able to see it at all.
how is it helpful to examine your role in their obviously inappropriate behavior?
In this specific case?
1 - I end up looking for crumbs of affection from the wrong people
2 - until recently I didn't even know boundaries existed, then it took me a while to teach myself that I deserve to use them // "you're worthless" from the people closest
3 - Normally I freeze, so I guess none (aka no boundaries)
4 - It's easier with strangers
((this right here? Easier with strangers? Is HUGE. It has a whole lot of possible things in it; most basically
- Not being able to say no to anyone is one thing,
- Not being able to say no to friends is another, and
- Not being able to say no to strangers but only people you know well is a 3rd.
And then there are several dozen other possiblilities in between, and that spin off of those 3 options, and on the other end of the huge list of places to take this is... Practical application;
- How to practice and get comfortable saying no & applying boundaries? Work with your strengths. Since it's easier with strangers? Practice on strangers! :)
- However, since the end goal is to be comfortable saying no & having boundaries with both friends and strangers? Keeping that in mind as one practices, so it doesn't become even more polarized as being "okay" with strangers, but "not okay" with friends. Nope. It's okay with both.
Just practicing, here.
- As well as knowing that it becomes more difficult the closer the relationship? That strangers being practiced on will start to become closer, so working on that transition & awareness of who she is choosing to get closer to. Is it her conscious choice, who her friends become? Or is it because those who ignore her boundaries as strangers "somehow end up" as friends, the people she's close to & cannot say no to, but freezes...aka a self perpetuating cycle. ))
And all of that's just the tip of the iceberg. From one line of looking at her role in who is it easier/most difficult to say no, to?
***
The more one is aware of their own role? (Their
actual role, neither learned helplessness nor overreaching / taking responsibility for things that are not theirs.) The more power one has.