Are You Overly Nice? The Keys to Healthy Giving

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Are you “overly nice” and suffer as a result? What I mean by this is that empaths and many caring people often burn themselves out by over-giving and don’t know when to back off. They mean well. But what’s missing is balance and knowing when to give less and replenish themselves. I’ve known people who’ve sacrificed the last molecule of their being trying to help someone who may not have wanted their help. Or they exhaust themselves by trying to fix others. So to maximize how your giving can heal others and yourself, learn to remain discerning and balanced.

Neuroscience has confirmed numerous ways that healthy giving enhances wellness. For instance, volunteering has been shown to lower stress levels, reduce depression, and lessen your aches and pains. Plus, MRI scans have demonstrated that donating to a worthy cause increases dopamine, the pleasure hormone. Contributing to a community also has been proven to enhance people’s ability to cope with addiction and bereavement.

The desire to give flows naturally from having empathy. You care. You want to help. So you offer your time, your knowledge, and your energy. (For me, time is my most valuable gift.). Perhaps you listen to a coworker going through a tough divorce or you do a load of wash for an ailing neighbor. Maybe you simply smile at a stranger.

It’s a myth that healthy giving is only unconditional or selfless. Healthy giving may also be conditional. Healthy giving comes from your heart but is also about setting boundaries in situations that warrant it and practicing self-care. One form of giving is showing someone appreciation, whether it’s for taking out the trash, filling in for you at work, or writing a moving novel. Appreciation helps people feel validated and to flourish. It can lift you out of a miserable mood so you can think, “Maybe this situation isn’t so bad after all.”

I teach my patients and the UCLA psychiatric residents I supervise, how to give wisely, sometimes a life-or-death concern. It’s a lesson in balancing and conserving energy that many of us overly nice people need to learn. You too can learn to empathize without sacrificing your own well-being. Here are some positive traits of healthy giving.

Traits of Healthy Giving over the Holidays and Beyond
(Source: The Genius of Empathy foreword by His Holiness, the Dalai Lama)

  • Empathize without feeling drained
  • Practice random acts of kindness
  • Set healthy boundaries such as saying a positive “no”
  • Prioritize self-care, rest, and alone time to replenish energy
  • Feel nourished by giving
  • Know your own limits
  • Accept support
  • Delegate responsibilities
  • Allow others the dignity of their own path without interfering
  • To feel more energized and balanced in your giving, experiment with incorporating these traits into your life. Learning to balance empathy with self-care is a beautiful ongoing healing process.

    I’m inspired by the 14th Dalai Lama’s prayer about helping others in the book “Ethics for the New Millennium” in which he seeks to be “a guide for those who have lost their way” and “a bridge for those with rivers to cross.” In our own unique styles, we can do this too.

    4 thoughts on “Are You Overly Nice? The Keys to Healthy Giving

    1. Thank you for this post — it is very timely for me. I am 78 yrs old and caregiver for my 98 yr old mother who is blind and still wants to live at home so I bought a condo in her complex to be available and help. She has gone from being stubbornly independent to relying on me almost completely now. My younger sister has morphed into a person I don’t know for some reason and frequently states “I have a life too” to explain her pulling back from helping. I have been such a people pleaser my whole life that I felt like I was always playing a part in someone else’s play. But I was looking forward to my “some day” when I would have a life of being me. Now, there are times when I feel that is not to be. I want to help my mother and do so willingly but I don’t even really know who I am now. I cry a lot, pray a lot, and continue to read books written by wonderful people like you. I meditate, relish the free time I have (mostly in quiet) but sometimes have such fear in being out of control. Thank you for reading this and any help you can offer would be very appreciated.

    2. I want to thank you for all of your knowledge about empathy.
      I have been going through a lot lately and really didn’t understand why I was feeling the way I did.
      I’m a pretty smart Gal and have always been curious about everything. But I get so emotional at times for no reason. You have put things into perspective and I am trying some of the ways to shield myself from toxic people and being manipulated.

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