When Anxiety Prompts Fixing in Relationships

We’ve all heard of the hustle. Obsessions with career-building, expanding professional networks, and adding new streams of income. And of course, there is merit and value to participating in all these activities. However, today’s world seems to actively endorse this approach and prompt people to keep pushing even when they have everything they once wanted. Just look at how many people have the money, the houses, the cars, the looks, the image, and they still feel anxious, stressed, and depressed. Constantly pushing for more. It begs the question: why?

When you step back and observe what’s happening, it looks like for many the purpose of the hustle is not really the fruits of the hustle, but rather the hustle itself. If it were about the results of the hustle, many should be happy and content. But they’re not. So we get back to the question: Why not?

It’s important to understand people are intelligent. Everything we do serves some purpose for us. This doesn’t mean we are always efficient with our decisions, but everything we do has some function. In order to appreciate why someone would “love the hustle,” all one needs to do is look at how psychological fawning or “fixing” works. A biologically wired reaction to high anxiety, fawning refers to our tendency to try to anxiously “fix” the source of what is causing us anxiety. Usually starting in childhood, when a child is very anxious and does not feel safe in their environment, one of the ways it tries to cope is to compulsively “hustle” to try to “fix” what’s wrong. Maybe this means comforting an aggressive parent. Consoling an anxious caregiver. Trying to broker peace. Or possibly all three.

Over time, the hustling-to-fix child gets used to this process and learns that this is who they are. The hustle becomes so ingrained in them that it actually becomes a part of their identity. Except, it’s actually just a defense mechanism to feel okay. When anxious, they fix. When there is a problem, they fix. When something is wrong, they fix. Gradually, the hustle to fix no longer serves as a defense mechanism in anxious times per se. Instead, now it becomes a way of life. The default standard operating procedure. It’s what gives the now-adult meaning and purpose in life. To hustle. To fix. To resolve.

Naturally, this leads many chronic fixers to unconsciously be drawn to problems and projects even in relationships. Since fixing is what gives the anxious-fixer meaning, then it follows that unconsciously the most expedient way to feel more important and useful is to be in relationships, amidst crowds, and among groups of people in situations that are dramatic, intense, and require work. In other words, chronic fixers are subconsciously drawn to difficult, challenging people. They find them “attractive.” It’s important to understand the fixer does not actually find the “project” person or situation attractive, but rather they subconsciously see the opportunity to fix as the ultimate prize. After all, more problems means more opportunities to fix. And more fixing means more personal worth.

Without realizing it, chronic fixers become addicted to problems. Problems are their lifeblood. Whether it’s in work, or personal relationships. Without problems, they have nothing. Without problems, they feel like they are nothing. So they might even start manufacturing problems just so they have something to fix. This is famously known as “self-sabotage.”

Anxious-fixers might do various things in relationships to create more work for themselves, and chances to fix. Here are 3 hallmark ways an anxious-fixer often goes about relationships with “projects.” One, they might overthink and overanalyze things about the other person to try to achieve a sense of control over something they are actually powerless over. For example, a fixer might overlook abusive or neglectful behavior and come up with elaborate explanations to justify the person’s behavior. They might say something like, “Oh, they had a tough childhood! It’s okay, I’m going to be there for them because they need me. I know they don’t mean to hurt me. That’s what you do for someone you love.” Two, a fixer is likely to argue excessively and over-explain themselves to get the other person to “shape up.” They conveniently assume the reason the other person is “misbehaving” (or not doing what they want) is they didn’t explain themselves well enough. The fixer often thinks, “If they truly hear me out and understand where I’m coming from, they’re going to see that I actually do make sense, and change their ways to do what I want them to do.” And three, fixers are very likely to scramble to accommodate the other person, thinking that if they just agree and do everything the other person says, everything will be fine. After all, a fixer might secretly tell themselves, “I know they love me. I can inspire them to change. When they see how well I listen and treat them, they will finally feel heard and come around. They’re smart. They’re going to realize how good I am to them, and reciprocate in kind. They have to. It’s karma!”

Without realizing it, chronic fixers are often stuck in a dance that knows no end. Unfortunately, they usually end up anxiously running themselves through the ground. They are often unwitting to the fact that they are unconsciously drawn to the “hustle” to fix in relationships because that is what they do. That is where they have learned their value comes from. What started as an innocent defense mechanism to ward off anxiety in the milieu as a child has now morphed into an identity, a purpose, a way of life, reinforced by the endless pursuit of problems, projects, and toxic interactions. Anxious fixers are not bad people. They are incredibly hurt, and innocently oblivious to their own worth and value as people. When someone sacrifices themselves, their dignity, and their self-respect to “fix” another, something is wrong.

The good news is there’s hope. When an anxious-fixer really gets to the bottom of their fixing tendencies, and addresses the root causes of their patterns, they will start to see things very differently. They will begin to understand that they were walking in the dark before, and that they deserve so much better in life. When an individual appreciates the true extent of their worth and value as a person, they will no longer volunteer to be around draining, taxing, and exhausting people or relationship dynamics. Let alone try to fix them. Where once they felt a pull towards “projects,” they will now begin to feel repulsion. What once looked “sexy,” now looks messy. What once felt “rapturous,” now feels strenuous. Because the whole idea of working for love, respect, kindness, and understanding starts to sound rightfully silly.

You have always deserved to be treated with dignity and respect. Sans the hustle.

The only difference: Now you know.


How Anxiety Drives the Need to Fix and Overachieve

Modern society is outspoken on the idea of the push, the hustle, and the grind. In fact, it seems like most people engage in it, and don’t even know why they do it. They may tell themselves “it’s to make a good living” or “live comfortably,” but the fact that so many participate in it, get all the things they wanted, and still feel a need to keep pushing hard raises some important questions. What’s really going on here? Where is the finish line? When does it end?

To fully understand what’s going on here, it’s important to look at how psychological fawning works. Fawning is a psychological reaction in times of high anxiety that focuses on pleasing or “fixing” elements of the environment in order to feel okay. It usually starts in childhood and is designed to help a child cope with an anxious and emotionally out-of-control environment. What the child is seeking to do amidst the chaos and disarray is comport and twist themselves in such a way to get the anxiety to go away. Essentially, they try to “fix” whatever is causing them anxiety. Maybe they try to calm a volatile parent. Get the attention of an emotionally neglectful caregiver. Or simply do things to feel important when no one seems to be caring for them. Either way, the child learns here that the goal is to “work” to create the calm, warmth, and security they’re missing. They have to exert themselves to “fix” the situation: to alleviate the parent’s volatility, be noticed by the emotionally unavailable figure, and feel worthy despite the lack of emotional security in the air, respectively. It’s too difficult to admit the shit they’re going through is real. And that perhaps the people around them and the situations they’re in are simply too hard to handle.

What usually happens here is the fixing-child grows up and uses this “fixing” attitude as a default way to handle anxiety. Feeling bad at home? Work harder at school, raise those grades, and get better marks. Maybe then people will love you. Relationships a drag to deal with? Just hustle to achieve and make more money, look better to prove how valuable you are so they will treat you better. Difficulties with the family? Spend more time at work. Maybe if you work hard enough, do more, and make more that feeling will go away. Notice in all these cases, the person’s trying to “fix” their emotions with things like accomplishments, achievement, and external validation, none of which actually provide any meaningful solutions to their underlying angst. The sadness. The loneliness. The pain.

The caveat to this fixing dynamic is that people engaging in it usually don’t know they’re doing it. It’s a very unconscious process. And frequently leads to tremendous suffering for those in it and the people around them. While the fixer may look like they have it all on paper — the titles, the awards, the properties, the cars, the cash, and perhaps even the looks — they are fundamentally living a life run by anxiety. In other words, their fuel is fear. The fear of being still. The fear of not having enough. The fear of not being enough. As a result, they are frequently unsettled. Obsessing. Scheming. For the next fix. Pun intended.

One of the most tragic elements of the chronic fixer is that over time fixing becomes part of their identity. Often without knowing it, the fixer actually thrives off problems. They need problems. And in the absence of them, sometimes they’ll subconsciously manufacture problems just so they can turn around and solve them. To feel accomplished. To feel valuable. To feel like they are doing something good and virtuous. Otherwise, what will they do with themselves? How will they feel worthy? Where do they get their value from? Moreover, a grim, yet glaring reality is that despite what they say, fixers don’t actually want peace and quiet. They can’t stand it. The absence of chaos, drama, and problems secretly makes them feel like they are not important anymore.

While the need to fix has likely led to many advancements in society and helped many acquire the wonderful blessings they have, it is arguably also the very thing that makes it difficult for them to truly enjoy what they’ve acquired as well. Imagine having everything you ever wanted materially. You got the money. The homes. The cars. The people around you. The body. The partner. The kids. But you still feel anxious. Stressed. Depressed. Unfortunately, this is a sad, but common story amongst many overachievers in large metropolitan cities like Los Angeles, Miami, and New York. Needless to say, it’s an exhausting and confusing way to live.

There is good news in all this, though. When a person truly gets to the bottom of their anxious fixing tendencies, and addresses them at the root and core, a beautiful transformation happens. Work becomes work. Relationships become meaningful. And life becomes worth living. Because you are no longer being driven by a fear of what happens if you don’t do this, but rather from a love and joy that will only increase your efficiency. You will do more. With less effort. And actually enjoy the process. Perhaps for the first time. Think about it. If you can do all you’ve done driven by fear and anxiety, imagine what you can do once you remove that and replace it with love, passion, and joy.

You won’t feel a need to fix anymore. Because you’ll see there’s no problem to begin with.