This is inspired by Tupp's recent comment about how triggering it is to be around someone who's emitting a vibe of "total helplessness." I can lunge into rescue behavior. For me, it's to soothe a bolt of anxiety that comes up in me in response.
I don't know what exactly happens, but the response I have (if I'm not being aware and breathing through it) is a frantic desire to open their eyes, get them thinking, etc. I don't even care whether someone turns out to be capable or successful at something, I just feel desperate for them to at least try. (*Preaching to self....). I think I get especially anxious when people say things like, there's nothing I can do about it.
My closest example with a close friend has little to do with practical stuff, although I notice her obliviousness there too. She is in an emotionally/verbally abusive relationship. When his mood is wrong he'll say really cutting, belittling things to her--like, when she's trying to urgently explain something she cares about that he disagrees with, he's say she's "crazy" or she's "yapping." He's so contemptuous.
She can be unpleasantly defensive herself at times, but she's usually still trying to explain her thoughts or actions in a logical way. I don't have an inside view, but don't believe she ever belittles him. But he goes right there, using stereotypical, misogynistic remarks (like "yapping", which Trump did about a woman speaking just the other day).
She comes over about once a week, a huge comfort during quarantine, and I serve her wine and snacks outside and set everything up. Now and then I wish it would occur to her to bring something, but she never does. I finally got around to telling her on occasion, this time please bring XXX, and she'll do it. I think she's gotten into a deep pattern of expecting passively to be taken of by others, and so be it.
I am frequently hiring men/teen boys for outside jobs I can't do myself. I don't blame her for needing physical help (her home has significant yard to deal with, etc). It's just the demeanor...oh I am helpless, someone has to do this -- for small things. The big thing is that she has convinced herself she absolutely cannot be alone, or live alone. Even temporarily to transition out of a miserable relationship. She told me she HAS to live with someone she loves (and who loves her) so a simple housemate arrangement wouldn't work. It's a man, or her daughter. (I wouldn't want to be her housemate for various reasons though at one point, I thought it could be a nice way to get old.) She constantly talks herself into remaining in a truly toxic relationship that is very painful half the time. She talks to me about her rationales for loving him, etc. And I internally freak out. (I MUST be projecting. I am ferocious about women not accepting abusive behavior or talk.)
I've gotten more aware of it and have decided to listen to her distress when she needs to vent, and try some stock responses once she lets it out: That must be so stressful for you. I'm sorry this still happens. Addressing her feelings instead of mentioning solutions. As the cycle repeats, maybe spend a little less emotional energy on being present to the very same thing as it recurs. Not sure how to balance all that, so maybe a thread on helping vs rescuing will open some doors.
There's only one solution to the pain she's often in, really: Leave him. But she won't and completely panics at the idea. If he died or she gave up on the relationship, she would immediately move halfway across the country to live with her daughter, and perhaps that's best. I'll miss her a lot when that happens, but I'm just going to try to enjoy her now.
I do know that it's best not to give specific advice unless someone asks for it. So for me the wisest (and really, simplest) answer is to be empathic when she talks, and just that. ("You are so disappointed, you seem so sad, that's a lot of heaviness, etc.") Only that. Nothing more. Not saying, "You could or you can or have you tried or XXXXXXXX...."). If I keep my assignment just that simple I'll do better with her.
(If anybody asks me to stop giving advice on this board, I'm screwed! But I do hope I'll learn when I'm actually helping, vs being frantic to fix....)
Anyway, thought it might be good to have a thread on helping vs rescuing, and how we deal with moments/relationships like that from time to time.
hugs
Hops