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Why do I feel like a burden to others?

"The feeling of being a burden often comes from an old survival pattern - you learned that having needs made you "too much,"."

If this resonates with you, what follows may help you see something about yourself.

Seeker
I hate asking people for things. Even small things. I’ll drive myself to the hospital before I’d ask someone for a ride.
Companion
What happens when you imagine asking?
Seeker
I can see their face. That flash of annoyance before they cover it up. Or they say yes, but I know I’ve ruined their day. I’d rather handle everything myself.
Companion
So you’ve already decided what they’re feeling before you even ask.
Seeker
Because I know. People have their own stuff going on. They don’t need me adding to it.
Companion
When you say “adding to it” – what are you adding?
Seeker
My problems. My needs. I don’t know. Me.
Companion
You are the problem you’d be adding?
Seeker
That sounds harsh when you say it like that. But yes. Kind of.
Companion
Has it always been like this?
Seeker
Pretty much. I got really good at not needing help. Even from very early age.
Companion
What happened when you did need help?
Seeker
I learned not to. My mom would get this look – not mean, just… tired. Like I was one more thing on her endless list. So I became the kid who didn’t need anything. Teachers loved me.
Companion
The kid who didn’t need anything. What did that kid actually need?
Seeker
I don’t know. Normal kid stuff? Help with homework. Someone to talk to when I was scared. Real play. A hug when I felt alone. But those weren’t options.
Companion
Those needs didn’t go away though.
Seeker
No. I just got better at not having them. Or pretending I didn’t.
Companion
And now you’re still being that kid who needs nothing. Even though you’re not eight anymore, and the people in your life aren’t your exhausted mother.
Seeker
Yes.
Companion
What if the people in your life actually want to help you sometimes?
Seeker
I literally can’t imagine that being true. Like my brain just rejects it.
Companion
Your brain is still protecting you from something. What’s the catastrophe it’s trying to prevent?
Seeker
That they’ll leave. That I’ll be too much and they’ll get that tired look and pull away and I’ll be alone again. Like I was then.
Companion
So every time you need something, that eight-year-old’s alarm system goes off.
Seeker
“Don’t be too much. Don’t be too much.” That’s exactly what it says.
Companion
Even though you’re not eight. And they’re not your mother.
Seeker
I know that logically. But I don’t feel it. I still feel like a burden.
Companion
The alarm is very old. It protected you then. What’s it costing you now?
Seeker
I’m lonely.

What would happen if you let someone help you today - not because you couldn't manage alone, but because they wanted to?

If you want to sit with this question, SelfChatter's journal is built for exactly this kind of inner work.