The Urge to Fix Others Isn’t Kindness. It’s Survival.
There is a particular kind of exhaustion that does not come from doing too much, but from feeling responsible for things that were never yours to carry. It shows up quietly. It looks like helping, supporting, stepping in. It is often praised. And because of that, it rarely gets questioned. And if you’re honest, it doesn’t feel like helping. It feels like you don’t know how to stop. The urge to fix others is often misunderstood as compassion. On the surface, it can look generous, attentive, and deeply caring. But underneath that behavior is something more complex. Something learned. Something wired through experience. At its core, the need to fix is not about the other person. It is about regulation. It is about restoring a sense of internal balance when something feels off, unstable, or emotionally charged. When someone else is struggling, upset, or out of alignment, it can activate discomfort that does not feel tolerable. Fixing becomes the fastest way to quiet that internal te...