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Mark Manson - The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F__k (2016, HarperOne) - libgen.li

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In each scenario, the person is either taking responsibility for

problems/emotions that are not theirs, or demanding that someone else take

responsibility for their problems/emotions.

In general, entitled people fall into one of two traps in their relationships.

Either they expect other people to take responsibility for their problems: “I

wanted a nice relaxing weekend at home. You should have known that and

canceled your plans.” Or they take on too much responsibility for other

people’s problems: “She just lost her job again, but it’s probably my fault

because I wasn’t as supportive of her as I could have been. I’m going to

help her rewrite her résumé tomorrow.”

Entitled people adopt these strategies in their relationships, as with

everything, to help avoid accepting responsibility for their own problems. As

a result, their relationships are fragile and fake, products of avoiding inner

pain rather than embracing a genuine appreciation and adoration of their

partner.

This goes not just for romantic relationships, by the way, but also for

family relationships and friendships. An overbearing mother may take

responsibility for every problem in her children’s lives. Her own entitlement

then encourages an entitlement in her children, as they grow up to believe

other people should always be responsible for their problems.

(This is why the problems in your romantic relationships always eerily

resemble the problems in your parents’ relationship.)

When you have murky areas of responsibility for your emotions and

actions—areas where it’s unclear who is responsible for what, whose fault

is what, why you’re doing what you’re doing—you never develop strong

values for yourself. Your only value becomes making your partner happy. Or

your only value becomes your partner making you happy.

This is self-defeating, of course. And relationships characterized by such

murkiness usually go down like the Hindenburg, with all the drama and

fireworks.

People can’t solve your problems for you. And they shouldn’t try,

because that won’t make you happy. You can’t solve other people’s problems

for them either, because that likewise won’t make them happy. The mark of

an unhealthy relationship is two people who try to solve each other’s

problems in order to feel good about themselves. Rather, a healthy

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