angel2write
Diamond Member
I've been thinking about the difference between helping people in a healthy way and being used and abused by destructive people.
Thinking about it from the perspective of my "Inner Mouse" is helping me see the difference.
You see, as a mouse, I need to share my cheese.
Cheese is anything good a mouse can have. Cheese might be time, or talent. Cheese might be money I could spare, cookies I could bake, help I could offer, or time spent listening. It is good for mice to share their cheese.
If my parents had too much cheese, they would have kept it all for themselves. They would have sat on top of the giant block of cheese and thought "Woo hoo! Cheese for life! Don't you touch MY cheese!!!"
Some mice don't share well.
I didn't want to be like my parents. I wanted to share my cheese. If I saw someone with no cheese or no ability to get cheese, I thought, poor mouse! I must give him cheese! I thought this would make me a good mouse.
Unfortunately, life with my parents did not teach me to tell the difference between needy but gentle mice and greedy, devouring rats.
I saw this:
and didn't realize that what I was really feeding was this:
People with inner rats aren't satisfied when you share a little of your cheese. They want more and more cheese. They become demanding and persistent. They play on your sympathies, manipulate, or even threaten you to try and control the amount of cheese they are getting. Often they are insecure or unstable and cannot be satisfied no matter how much cheese you give them.
Cheese has become an obsession. No amount is enough.
Thinking about it from the perspective of my "Inner Mouse" is helping me see the difference.
You see, as a mouse, I need to share my cheese.
Cheese is anything good a mouse can have. Cheese might be time, or talent. Cheese might be money I could spare, cookies I could bake, help I could offer, or time spent listening. It is good for mice to share their cheese.
If my parents had too much cheese, they would have kept it all for themselves. They would have sat on top of the giant block of cheese and thought "Woo hoo! Cheese for life! Don't you touch MY cheese!!!"
Some mice don't share well.
I didn't want to be like my parents. I wanted to share my cheese. If I saw someone with no cheese or no ability to get cheese, I thought, poor mouse! I must give him cheese! I thought this would make me a good mouse.
Unfortunately, life with my parents did not teach me to tell the difference between needy but gentle mice and greedy, devouring rats.
I saw this:
and didn't realize that what I was really feeding was this:
People with inner rats aren't satisfied when you share a little of your cheese. They want more and more cheese. They become demanding and persistent. They play on your sympathies, manipulate, or even threaten you to try and control the amount of cheese they are getting. Often they are insecure or unstable and cannot be satisfied no matter how much cheese you give them.
Cheese has become an obsession. No amount is enough.