More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Therese Borchard

GET UPDATES FROM Therese Borchard

10 Steps to End a Toxic Relationship

Posted: 06/28/11 02:13 PM ET

"You complete me." You know that line, right ... from Jerry McGuire? It comes right before "You had me at hello" (another puker). The completing-the-other bit nauseates me a tad because we relationship-analyzers (some with the right initials after their names and some self-declared experts who can type) like to classify that type of dialogue with a term known as "codependency."

Ideally, you shouldn't need anyone to complete you. You should be whole going into a relationship, right? My guess is that those who feel like they are getting fixed are actually getting ripped off. That's why they keep coming back, hoping that this time their partner will make the ouches go away, making them feel all sunshiny and warm inside. Instead, the ouch is bigger, the hole is wider, and they are feeling the way I do when I see a Tom Cruise movie: bad.

A relationship doesn't have to be romantic to fall into the "toxic" category, of course. Many friendships, mother-daughter, boss-employee, and waiter-eater relationships qualify. If someone is bringing you down consistently, chances are that your relationship with him is toxic. But if you follow these 10 steps, you can start to complete yourself, maybe even look into the mirror and say, "You had me at hello."

1. Step out of denial.

Be prepared to dry off as you step out of the river of Denial. A few questions will get you there. Ask yourself these, for starters: Do I feel energized or drained after I spent an hour with X? Do I WANT to spend time with X or do I feel like I have to? Do I feel sorry for X? Do I go to X looking for a response that I never get? Do I come away consistently disappointed by X's comments and behavior? Am I giving way more to the relationship than X? Do I even like X? I mean, if X were on a cruise and I didn't know her, would I walk up to her and want to be her friend/boyfriend based on her actions and interactions with others? Go check out this questionnaire if you are still confused.

2. Keep a log of emotions.

One of my depression busters is to keep a record of things that make me feel bad. Consistently bad. I am not a fast learner. School was hard for me. So I have to perform the same mistake, oh, about 35 times before my brain gets the message that perhaps I am doing something wrong. The journalist in me then takes the case and begins gathering the facts. So if, after 35 tries, I suspect that having coffee with X makes me feel worse, not better, I will log my feelings immediately following our meeting. If I get two or more of "I feel like crap, like I am a weak and pathetic person," then I know that I'm enmeshed in a toxic relationship that I should consider tossing out.

3. Identify the perks.

As I wrote in "10 Steps to End an Affair," all relationships, even toxic ones, have hidden benefits. Or why would you stay in them? So identify the perks. Determine what, specifically, you are getting from this relationship. Does X make you feel attractive and sexy again? Does helping X with her kids even though it exhausts you relieve your guilt in some twisted way because you feel like your life is easier than hers? Even though X doesn't treat you well, does she remind you of your verbally abusive mom, and therefore bring you a comfort level?

4. Fill the hole.

Now that you've identified what you were hoping to stuff with this relationship, it's time to find alternative sources of peace and wholeness. The other day, when I was attempting this very task, my friend Priscilla Warner listed not 5 or 10, but 18 ways she nourishes her soul, or center, attempts to complete herself so that she doesn't have to rely on others for that job. Among her 18: writing and making jewelry, retail therapy (like picking out the juiciest orange she can find), meditation CDs, hugging her dog Mickey, listening to sad songs -- to release the tears, calling up friends, and reminding herself that her sadness won't stay forever.

5. Surround yourself with positive friends.

Lots of support and friends isn't going to cut it. You need the right kind of friends -- i.e. those working on their boundaries as hard as you are, who aren't enmeshed in their fair share of toxic relationships and therefore become somewhat toxic themselves. The stuff is contagious. I suspect the risk for getting sucked into or stuck in a toxic relationships for people who have friends in toxic relationships is higher than 100 percent. So be smart with whom you choose to hang out.

6. Drop a note to yourself.

I got this idea from Howard Halpern's How to Break Your Addiction to a Person. One of his patients wrote memos to herself to cover those fragile moments when she knew she'd need reinforcement. She would compose a note, drop it in the mail, and then be pleasantly surprised to find a letter from her self saying something like: "Hey, self! I know you don't feel like it right now, but you really should make some plans for the weekend before it's here because I know you get down when you are sitting around the house alone. Call Carolyn. She'd love to hear from you."

7. Bribe yourself.

I know there are parenting experts that don't approve of this technique, but I say nothing is more effective than bribing to get to a goal. Therefore, on your way to freeing yourself from the harness of a toxic relationship, reward yourself at various stages along the way. First, try not initiating any communication for a week. If you pull it off, then treat yourself to coffee with a fun, supportive friend, or a half-hour by the bay alone (no computer, phone, or iPod). If you have been able to utter that delicious word "no" a few times in a row, go celebrate by downloading a CD of your favorite musical artist from iTunes or splurging on the dark chocolate hiding in the freezer.

8. Heal the shame.

For me, breaking free of toxic relationships has led to a lot of inner-child work. You know, when I sit the wounded little girl on my lap and let her tell her story. Because I'm a visual person, I facilitate this process with a pretty doll that Eric almost gave to Goodwill (like she needed any more trauma!). I ask her why she is scared and lonely and wanting the wrong kind of attention. "Because that's all I know," is usually her response, at which point I play with her hair and reassure her that relationships are supposed to make her feel better, not worse, and that the right kind of love is out there -- in fact, she has already found it in so many of her relationships.

9. Repeat affirmations.

The other day I used the bathroom at a friend's home and on the bathroom door were posted all kinds of affirmations like: "My Life is full of loveliness, passion, tenderness, surrender and flowing with DIVINE LOVE"; "My Life is full of play and humor and overflowing with RADIANT HEALTH"; "My Life is COURAGEOUS and FREE"; and "My Life is FULL OF MIRACLES." I came out of the bathroom and said, "Wow, I feel much better."

In her book, Women, Sex, and Addiction, Charlotte Davis Kasl writes, "Once the negative core beliefs have been exposed and challenged as false, you need to adopt positive, life-affirming beliefs. 'I am unlovable' becomes 'I can love and be loved, I am a sacred child of the Universe.' Feelings of hopelessness are counteracted by the new belief 'I have the power to change my life.' 'I am defective' slowly changes to 'I get to make mistakes and be loved.'

My affirmations these days are "I have a good heart" and "I mean well," especially when I get guilt trips about not giving more to a relationship.

10. Allow some rest.

In Ready to Heal: Women Facing Love, Sex, and Relationship Addiction, Kelly McDaniel advises persons who have just broken off a toxic relationship to lay low, and avoid packing their day with too many activities. She writes:

The energy it takes to endure withdrawal [to an addictive or toxic relationship] is equivalent to working a full-time job. Truthfully, this may be the hardest work you've ever done. In addition to support from people who understand your undertaking, you must keep the rest of your life simple. You need rest and solitude.

***

Originally published on Beyond Blue at Beliefnet.com.

 

Follow Therese Borchard on Twitter: www.twitter.com/thereseborchard

"You complete me." You know that line, right ... from Jerry McGuire? It comes right before "You had me at hello" (another puker). The completing-the-other bit nauseates me a tad because we relationshi...
"You complete me." You know that line, right ... from Jerry McGuire? It comes right before "You had me at hello" (another puker). The completing-the-other bit nauseates me a tad because we relationshi...
 
 
  • Comments
  • 46
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
11:46 PM on 06/29/2011
"So I have to perform the same mistake, oh, about 35 times before my brain gets the message that perhaps I am doing something wrong." T. borchard

Now here's a person I can relate to. Sounds like my dating career. Memo to self (after bungling about 35 times): if she says ANYTHING other than an unqualified, unconditional "yes" you have just heard womanese for "No." Pretty simple, Mike. Pity it only took about 35 years to learn that.

Better late than never.
11:39 PM on 06/29/2011
"feeling the way I do when I see a Tom Cruise movie: bad." T. Borchard

Props for good taste.
12:12 PM on 06/29/2011
Great article! Too many people spend too much time in relationships that just aren't going to work. They would be better off seeing this, cutting the chord and starting anew. It can be terribly hard, but is the only way to get what you want and deserve. To expand on the point about looking at the data objectively, it's so very true that when you look at your relationship in objective terms you cannot escape the reality of what you're in. My book "The Four Factors: Should You Stay Go or Improve Your Relationship?" http://thefourfactorsbook.com gives a straightforward process/worksheet for seeing your relationship in objective terms and deciding what to do about it. Again, great article and here's to everyone getting what they want and deserve in their relationships!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RButler
"Who wouldn't love a person who had a pony?"
07:54 AM on 06/29/2011
I've felt that the word 'toxic' is too simplistic a term. You can call just about anything 'toxic' that you don't like. There are breakdowns in every relationship and being able to use language that is specific and effective in addressing the issues would help enormously rather than saying 'it's toxic'. Is it 'lack of communication', no integrity or lying, not being supported or supportable, etc. If you went to a doctor and his diagnosis was 'you're sick'. That wouldn't do much, would it. Is it cancer or indigestion? I fault the mental health community and popular pundits on these issues for their lazy, un-rigorous use of language when language is pretty much what relationships are about. BTW I wonder how many books have been written on this or a similar subjects that didn't make that much difference with their 'tips' and, so, now we need this list. Next year, another list of 'tips'.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RButler
"Who wouldn't love a person who had a pony?"
07:03 AM on 06/29/2011
One of the hardest things to get out of is a bad relationship. And there are many 'bad' relationships that aren't necessarily abusive, just unsatisfying and burdensome. I suspect the thought of going it alone for many people is too confronting, so they simply endure and don't even bother to do anything about it but complain or drink.
10:09 AM on 06/29/2011
This is probably one of the most insightful comments I have seen on HuffPo. Thank you.
photo
darquelourd
You Get What You Play For
11:51 AM on 06/29/2011
I've found drinking more satisfying than complaining (hiccup)
11:36 PM on 06/29/2011
LOL!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wernerholm
bio doesnt ever meet guidelines
05:20 AM on 06/29/2011
I took the Quiz twice.... the first time I took It I thought about my husband as the other person in the relationship... we have some toxic elements and scored a 6.

HOWEVER, when I took the Quiz a second time and answered my questions like the United States Government were the other person in the relationship... wow... toxic hell!

(And before you all comment and tell me to move someplace, you give me a million dollars liquid to buy my way into anther country... cause that's the only way most desirable places to live will take me without a masters degree and a job offer)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheSarge
Firearms Inst Environmental Activist
11:29 PM on 06/28/2011
Maybe just leaving should be step 1-10 There a ton of romantic nice guys out there that are plenty manly.
traceymarie
Independent to Dem in 2007
10:30 PM on 06/28/2011
only one step needed....walk away emotionally and physically
photo
longtalldrink
Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you wan
06:25 AM on 06/29/2011
I imagine the point of the article is that many people do not even realize that their relationship is toxic.
photo
GoodNews
Re-elect Obama 2012!
09:38 PM on 06/28/2011
Avoid the reeking herd,
Shun the polluted flock,
Live like the stoic bird,
The eagle of the rock
--Wylie
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
09:09 PM on 06/28/2011
Very good advice in this article. Wished I'd read this, and others like it, a decade ago. Cleaned house of toxic relationships just a few years ago and although it was painful, it was so worth it. Some were family members and others were, I later figured out, friendships that had the same toxic dynamic as family. So I guess I replicated what I knew growing up. But now I know how to pick and choose people that are in my life with a higher conscious awareness. It's really true that consistently being drained is a huge red flag. Also, people who give you little jealous digs when you achieve goals. I had a friend who I supported through her divorce and her battle with cancer. I was there for her 100 percent. But when I got very busy building my business and only had time to talk to her on the phone a couple of times a week instead of every day, she pulled the biggest hissy fit and was so not supportive. Total selfishness. I look out for selfish people and don't give them the time of day anymore.
bluejaykira
Vote Democrat to SAVE the American Dream
10:37 PM on 06/28/2011
Thank you, that was very informative and I totally agree, it's so worth getting rid of toxic relationships!
07:32 PM on 06/28/2011
Yes, this is the reason I stay the heck away from men romantically - emotional and verbal abuse, put up with it once years in a relationship years ago, never again.
09:07 PM on 06/28/2011
One guy soured your opinions on the entire gender?
02:46 AM on 06/29/2011
Nope all men are basically alike, self absorbed and treat you like a future prostitute, even asking you if you will have sex on a 2nd date and this is not the same guy, next guy I dated basically lied about something that is very important to me ethics wise. If men want respect from women, they'll have to give it back. No one way street here. But yet again I don't kiss male rear anymore, gave that up in my 20s in my 1st relationship. Too nice and the wolves come knocking.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lou Allin
Lou is the author of two series of mystery novels
11:15 PM on 06/28/2011
Give the guys another chance. And I say this as a 66 yr old lesbian. But the men in my life were princes. I'd recommend every one of them. In fact, I went to their weddings and still keep in touch.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
01:48 AM on 06/29/2011
Sweetly expressed, Lou Allin. I love your comments!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zuzette
06:30 PM on 06/28/2011
Liked this article a lot. Thing is, we humans have evolved tremendously physically & technologically, but emotionally? ...Hardly, at all. When it comes to our feelings we're still functioning on our wee, little "me, me" reptile brains. Sadlly (tragically, really) emotional evolution is an individual, life-long endeavor that too few of us ever even attempt, never mind succeed at. And isn't that the great life test?
Given that everyone, of every generation, has to flail around reinventing the emotional wheel, it's a wonder the world chugs along as well as it does.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
rysagr
whip me beat me just don't bore me to death
04:35 PM on 06/28/2011
blah blah blah. try just leaving
Pennsylvanianne
There is no sin but ignorance.
05:20 PM on 06/28/2011
Hard to do if you can't afford a new place. This happens often in divorce cases, when the spouse with the higher income must provide support to the other if he or she moves out before the house is sold. Can you imagine the toxicity of two people who hate each other, living in the same house? Unbearable!
10:34 PM on 06/28/2011
Been there, done that! So toxic, miserable and stressful!
photo
CarlyQ
Without followers, evil cannot spread.
11:00 PM on 06/28/2011
Even worse, when one of those people has a girlfriend and wants them to move in.
12:00 AM on 06/30/2011
"blah blah blah. try just leaving" rysagr

Well said. I think the KISS principle is applicable.
03:56 PM on 06/28/2011
When men and women realize the the REAL toxic relationship isn't between men and women, it's between social structure and the status quo, that's the day women and men will understand that relationships are more simple than they make them out to be.
04:57 PM on 06/28/2011
Well, rape and sexual abuse and domestic violence and sex trafficking and prostitution and war and murder and militaristic brutal economis and the general violence that men rain down on women and children are all fairly toxic. Maybe when men stop the violent war on women, relationships will become naturally less toxic.
07:13 PM on 06/28/2011
Well, thats a simplification. Not all men are those things...