Astrology, Anger And Balance In Relationships

December 3rd, 2007 @ 6:10 am by Elsa

Ask the collective

libra garfieldSpeaking of Moon Venus in Libra, I was talking to my friend and astrologer, cf Perez yesterday and she got my attention when she made a statement about inequity in relationships.

She said that when one person in a relationship gave far more than the other, the person who was indebted filled in with anger. I was stunned with this simple observation which I think is entirely correct.

For example, take the alcoholic / codependent relationship. The codependent gives and gives and does the alcoholic appreciate it? Hell no! They grow to loathe the person doing the care taking. The more they receive (that they will never be able to reciprocate) the angrier they get. The more you give, the more they hate you and I’d say this makes a compelling argument against giving too much.

Have you ever been part of a relationship out of whack like this? How did it wind up?


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28 Responses to “Astrology, Anger And Balance In Relationships”

1.
the other Kat
the other Kat

Yes…if he was angry about it, he drank those feelings away too, but I can definitely see the point being made. I think in some cases they may see it as a way of being controlled, being “forced” to accept when they can’t/won’t give back.

 
2.
shell
shell

This reminds me of my parents. My mom enduring all the BS with a smile on her face for so many years and my dad just taking advantage of her and loathing her “I’m gonna be the bigger person” ways. I think (and I always told her this!) that my dad just wanted her to show some cojones and put her foot down and refuse to take his crap. When she finally did this (after about 25 years!) he eventually came around and started treating her right.

 
3.
elsie
elsie

i agree with ‘the other kat’ that ‘overgiving’ is a way of controlling, learned that from sad experience. alcoholic ex-husband. :( so, elsa, what do you do if your chart points to overgiving? venus leo in the 6th. i THINK i’m being this wonderful, generous, giving person but in reality, am either alienating loved ones or wind up feeling taken advantage of.

 
4.
Kathy
Kathy

Married 22 years to an alcoholic, I tried to make as normal a family life as I could for my children. Still, I slowly became very isolated from all my family and friends. Funny, though, as soon as I decided I couldn’t face the isolation any more and started going places without him, he found another woman and divorced me. As it turned out, she really didn’t want his crap either and he died sadly alone about a year later when his liver gave out at 42.

He did appreciate the things I did for him - after we were divorced and he discovered nobody else was willing to do for him like I was. It was sort of cold comfort to be recognized too little too late - and I wouldn’t take him back, which I think was his plan.

I agree - if you give too much the other person, they will either feel you are manipulating them or buying them and they will resent it, not appreciate it. I try to keep things balanced now, although it is hard for me to resist smothering my SO.

 
5.
goddess
goddess

i’ve both been in these relationships (not recently-thank god!) and seen them. absolutely, the “reciever” ends up resenting the “giver” without exception. because what the reciever hears, quite accurately, is that you’re not okay as you are. regardless of issues, who wants to be a fixer-upper project?

but i think the giver is frequently motivated by insecurities and feeling like they’re not good enough themselves. instead of dealing with that, they can find someone else less stable to project on and try to “buy” their love through service. having someone “nobody else would want” becomes an insurance policy against being alone.

because what’s really happening? giver doesn’t feel worthy of love, so they hook up with wounded reciever. giver says, “i’m really a good person-see how i try to help this other person who doesn’t really appreciate me?” read: I deserve love, and I prove it by loving someone else who doesn’t deserve it. at a deeper level, however, it leaves them feeling less lovable than before and further entrenching the insecurities, since the receiver simply comes to resent them more and more. and they’re left to play the wounded party.

always a bad idea to date a person’s potential instead of a person.

 
6.
kashmiri
kashmiri

(((Kathy))) That’s so tough. I’m glad you’ve survived!

I never realized it until you wrote this Elsa, but yes, I have been in a relationship like this. It’s now over. It seems to me the other person was living in a world of pain, and the closer I got (the more caring I became) the more sudden and irrational the reactions to my efforts.

 
7.
Neith
Neith

always a bad idea to date a person’s potential instead of a person

I agree with goddess on this 100%. Been there, done that, and NEVER AGAIN!! For all of you who posted on this experience, you have my heartfelt sympathies. I see the impulse to go on “rescue missions” in my chart as Moon conjunct Neptune in Libra.

Your friend, cf Perez is right on the money with this observation! :)

 
8.
Jennifer
Jennifer

Yeah, my last relationship was like this…

I am not a born nurturer by nature, at all, but the last ex had NO IDEA how to be an adult. God knows he didn’t learn it in school (dropout) and his parents also had no idea how to be adults. I kind of stumbled into the whole thing without knowing the extent of it, committed too fast, and then being a fixed-axis person, was all, “well, I’m stuck now, I guess I’ll just try to nudge him into improvement.”

Eventually he snapped and realized that he was never going to live up to my high standards of him wanting to move out of his parents’ house and hold down a job for longer than six months without getting canned from it, and he broke up with me. And he’d whine about how I should be a SAHM (never mind that I had no interest in staying home even without children) and he should be the manly breadwinner… and I would sit there thinking, “Yeah, well, given how you blow your entire paycheck within 12 hours of getting it, how’s THAT going to happen?”

I refuse to attempt rescue ever again.

 
9.
koheli
koheli

a healer friend of mine drew this symbol on my hand 10 years ago with a bic pen over lunch. I think he saved my life it was this:

Saviour
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
. .
Victim . . . . . Martyr

He told me that me “saving” was a subtle form of egotism, which I understood.
He said, the victim, would either remain a victim to get your free service, of bite your hand because noone likes people being “better” than them or they would “run away” from a bill that could never be paid back.

Then he said, I would become a Martyr…I would say “Oh, I spent 10 years of my life, blah blah..
And then he said, well around the triangle I would go…AND WOULD THEN BECOME A VICTIM MYSELF..
And would need someone to SAVE ME!!!

Round and round the triangle…ugh..

Well, it sunk in. I wish it wasn’t only with a bic and that he would have actually tatooed it to my hand.

 
10.
koheli
koheli

The triangle didn’t come out…in the html
Saviour….victim…Martyr…in triangle!!!

 
11.
wyrdling
wyrdling

yes.
debts don’t work well in friendships or relationships, and this is why. they poison both sides. there needs to be a balance of exchanges to keep a connection healthy, in my opinion.

which is something someone on the virgo/pisces axis really needs to drill into her head on a regular basis. debts of service definitely count.

 
12.
jamie
jamie

Oh, this is a good one. My SO thinks he saved me from a life of financial poverty (he has 8th H Sun, Venus, Merc and Saturn which in itself is a marker for such a set up) and I am aware of what he thinks…so does that negate the whole saviour/victim/martyr syndrome? Or is only one of us being aware of this dynamic not enough to balance the situation?

 
13.
satori
satori

oh crap yeah. I think the clearest example for me was with the coworker I helped who told people I worshipped the devil.

 
14.
wyoTess
wyoTess

Do ya know how sometimes you kinda slam around in the dark looking for a bit of light? Thanks Elsa and everyone for a good perspective on finding it.

 
15.
stheno
stheno

I can see how a person’s attentions (and giving) can provoke anger in the recipient - but I don’t think the paradigm your friend offered is a hard and fast rule.

 
16.
Carielle
Carielle

I think there needs to be a “give-and-take” balance in a relationship, or you end up with guilt / anger / negativity under the surface on both sides. I kind of see it this way:

If both people are consistently “givers” — they replenish one another, both giving to each other.

If one consistently “gives” and the other consistently “takes” — neither person ends up feeling good because one is glutted and the other starved.

If both people are always “takers” — well….they deserve each other. ;)

 
17.
goddess
goddess

neith - amen, brother!

koheli- that’s a very powerful observation your friend shared. wow.

wydling - “debts of service count “- thank you! this never conciously occurred to me and it’s important, since i’m a great, big bundle of vigro-pisces.

satori- worshipped the DEVIL? oh my god! sounds like an utter nutbucket!

i’ve really enjoyed reading the comments on this one. :)

 
18.
Carrie
Carrie

Hey Carielle, wouldn’t it be great if Life worked like that. I, more often than not, observe the Giver/Taker dynamic playing out.

Why is it that two Givers’ don’t hook up more often? There must be some kind of pay-off the Givers’ get from the Takers’ as you see this partnership SO often.

I define it more as ‘healthy’ people vs ‘toxic’ people. I find that the ‘toxic’ people i’ve tried to help often turn round and burn me. I still try to help people BUT I have stricter boundaries around how far I’m willing to go.

Nothing as funny as folk…..

 
19.
goddess
goddess

“I define it more as ‘healthy’ people vs ‘toxic’ people.” but remember, what’s toxic to you may be healthy for someone else and vice versa. some people are toxic to most everyone, granted, but even in the overgive/overtake dichotomy, both are getting something out of it. you can argue what they’re getting doesn’t serve long-term and you may be right, but it’s their choice what energy they want to chase.

 
20.
Ana
Ana

I think victims find saviors all the time - and they are smart enough to manipulate the situation to keep being the receiver! lol

Perhaps the overgiver needs to learn how to receive…and the overtaker how to give and that’s why they keep meeting up? Perhaps that IS the purpose: both people push on each others’ weak points, stretch each other’s boundaries, and each person becomes more balanced. You can’t intellectualize your way out of it - you have to experience the thing finally working out to completion, then you are free of it. Maybe that’s why we keep finding the same damn thing attractive again and again, even when we know better.

Giver’s learn over time where to draw the line and stop giving (hopefully), but what do takers do? What happens when all the givers finally leave and the taker is identified and avoided? Are they finally forced to learn how to give? Or do they just stew in resentment over the loss of the giver, cut off all their needs, and pretend all is fine so that they don’t have to grow up and give?

 
21.
Ana
Ana

Shell - same here, my parents too. Seems like the taker/alcoholic WANTS someone who loves them enough to actually get angry and do something already! They provoke anger only in those who really need to learn how to get angry. Maybe the giver doesn’t know how to assert themself - and the taker actually does them a favor by challenging them to stand up for themself. The person who’s actively angry and can’t give/share tends to attract the person who can’t admit they’re angry and gives too much to compensate.

I used to think anger came in 2 flavors: destructive explosions and doing nothing. It took me all my life to figure out that I can get angry and use it constructively, that no one has to get hurt, and that I will still be loved afterwards.

Funny, I used to wonder why takers kept trying to provoke me to get mad (and I would suppress it)…and now I realize that I was supposed to learn HOW to get angry, lol. They were giving me practice getting in touch with my mars. And I’m a triple Aries dammit - I’m supposed to know how to use my mars!

 
22.
shell
shell

Anger rarely comes out of me in a destructive way, if it has ever done anything for me it has motivated me to push myself to do better. Anger can be good in small doses I think.

 
23.
kashmiri
kashmiri

goddess…I think that way, too. Timing is everything. I remember relationships where I was the needy/annoying/unaware person who someone ‘non-toxic’ would call toxic.
I’m really thankful for the people in my life who acted like guiding lights when I was down. Now I get to reap the benefits of being called ‘non-toxic’ and so the circle continues

 
24.
luci
luci

I have never been in a relationship that was whack.

I’ve also got a great deal on a beautiful bridge in the Sahara Desert. If you’re interested, let me know.

 
25.
isabelle
isabelle

Yes, this makes me reconsider…maybe my co-dependency was worst then his substance abuse because I became the loathing one. Loathing and fed up. Did not know how to receive properly back then.

I searched “Familiarity Breeds Contempt” and found one version “With base and sordid natures familiarity breeds contempt” as well as a psyblog article on how it’s true…

It makes me curious about composites. Would composites show relationships susceptible to such dynamics? Like a heavily tenanted 6th or 12th house & its aspects? Is a controlling savior identifiable in composites, if genders are even assignable to the luminaries (in hetero comps.)?

 
26.
isabelle
 
27.
Bretagne
Bretagne

My Mother raised us in a Home with an Alcoholic, though my Father worked he did nothing else. She provided EVERYTHING and did nothing about his addiction, ya she bitched about it but he was always so angry at her, never appreciated a damn thing about her. A very Unbalanced relationship, by her example and not even realizing it, I did the same thing in my first relationship, his addiction was porn and sex and I learned within one grueling year that I CAN’T do this(give,give,give and get nothing but his anger), and I haven’t since.

 
28.
Lynne E
Lynne E

Wonder what the dynamics are in your experience, guys, where one party is utterly dependent for health reasons? Should the carer expect to be targeted with anger? I can see the addict/spouse dynamic,but sometimes there actually is no alternative but to have an imbalance. A dear friend of ours is such a giver, runs a busy health practice, raises funds for the community and her husband is for the last year, paralysed. What choice do they have, and do you ultimately believe there will be anger?

 


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