[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":120},["ShallowReactive",2],{"glossary-codependency":3},{"_path":4,"_dir":5,"_draft":6,"_partial":6,"_locale":7,"title":8,"description":9,"datePublished":10,"canonical":11,"readTime":12,"glossaryCategory":13,"faq":14,"relatedPosts":27,"relatedTerms":34,"body":44,"_type":113,"_id":114,"_source":115,"_file":116,"_stem":117,"_extension":118,"sitemap":119},"\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fcodependency","glossary",false,"","Codependency: Meaning & Definition","Codependency is an excessive emotional reliance on another person — often at the cost of your own needs and identity. Here's what it looks like and how it develops.","2026-04-01","https:\u002F\u002Fhilainie.com\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fcodependency\u002F",5,"general",[15,18,21,24],{"q":16,"a":17},"What is codependency?","Codependency is an excessive emotional reliance on another person — where your sense of self-worth, identity, and emotional stability are tied to managing or being needed by someone else. It often involves neglecting your own needs in favor of theirs.",{"q":19,"a":20},"Is codependency the same as just being close to someone?","No. Healthy closeness involves mutual care while both people maintain their own identities and can function independently. Codependency involves losing yourself in the other person — where their moods, needs, and approval become the organizing principle of your life.",{"q":22,"a":23},"Can both people in a relationship be codependent?","Yes — in different ways. One person may take the caretaker role while the other takes the enabled role, or both may be mutually dependent on each other's validation. The dynamic is self-reinforcing regardless of the specific configuration.",{"q":25,"a":26},"How do you break a codependent pattern?","By gradually rebuilding your relationship with your own needs, values, and identity independently of the other person. This usually involves learning to tolerate discomfort when you're not fixing or managing someone, setting limits, and reconnecting with your own life outside the relationship.",[28,31],{"title":29,"href":30},"How to Set Boundaries in Relationships","\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fhow-to-set-boundaries-in-relationships\u002F",{"title":32,"href":33},"Red Flags in a Relationship","\u002Fblog\u002Frelationships\u002Fred-flags-in-a-relationship\u002F",[35,38,41],{"label":36,"href":37},"People-Pleasing","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fpeople-pleasing\u002F",{"label":39,"href":40},"Trauma Bonding","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Ftrauma-bonding\u002F",{"label":42,"href":43},"Emotional Unavailability","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Femotional-unavailability\u002F",{"type":45,"children":46,"toc":108},"root",[47,56,91,97,103],{"type":48,"tag":49,"props":50,"children":52},"element","h2",{"id":51},"signs-of-codependency",[53],{"type":54,"value":55},"text","Signs of Codependency",{"type":48,"tag":57,"props":58,"children":59},"ul",{},[60,66,71,76,81,86],{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":62,"children":63},"li",{},[64],{"type":54,"value":65},"You feel responsible for the other person's emotions and moods",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":67,"children":68},{},[69],{"type":54,"value":70},"You have difficulty making decisions without their input or approval",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":72,"children":73},{},[74],{"type":54,"value":75},"Their happiness feels more important than your own",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":77,"children":78},{},[79],{"type":54,"value":80},"You feel anxious or empty when not taking care of them",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":82,"children":83},{},[84],{"type":54,"value":85},"You stay in relationships longer than you should because you're needed",{"type":48,"tag":61,"props":87,"children":88},{},[89],{"type":54,"value":90},"Your own goals, interests, and friendships have gradually disappeared",{"type":48,"tag":49,"props":92,"children":94},{"id":93},"how-it-develops-and-what-to-do",[95],{"type":54,"value":96},"How It Develops and What to Do",{"type":48,"tag":98,"props":99,"children":100},"p",{},[101],{"type":54,"value":102},"Codependency typically develops in environments where needs were inconsistent — a parent who needed caregiving, a childhood with unpredictable emotional dynamics, or early relationships where love was conditional on being needed. These patterns become a template.",{"type":48,"tag":98,"props":104,"children":105},{},[106],{"type":54,"value":107},"Addressing codependency starts with reconnecting with your own needs, feelings, and identity independently of the other person. This is genuinely difficult when the pattern is deep — therapy is often valuable here. The goal isn't to stop caring for others; it's to care from a place of choice rather than compulsion.",{"title":7,"searchDepth":109,"depth":109,"links":110},2,[111,112],{"id":51,"depth":109,"text":55},{"id":93,"depth":109,"text":96},"markdown","content:blog:glossary:codependency.md","content","blog\u002Fglossary\u002Fcodependency.md","blog\u002Fglossary\u002Fcodependency","md",{"loc":4},1775272859577]