• You are currently viewing our forum as a guest, which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community, you will have access to additional post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), view blogs, respond to polls, upload content, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free, so please join our community today! Just click here to register. You should turn your Ad Blocker off for this site or certain features may not work properly. If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us by clicking here.

Obligation to Others

Siúil a Rúin

when the colors fade
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
14,037
MBTI Type
ISFP
Enneagram
496
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
It is common for people to feel obligated socially on many levels: they must make nice with the in-laws, have the new pastor over for dinner, hang out with work buddies to avoid being gossiped about, appease a friend who's feelings get hurt easily, remember the anniversary because it means a lot to a partner, etc. I'm sure everyone is familiar with the concept. It also is the basic plot-line for many comedies.

I had an epiphany about myself recently. Feeling beholden to others is something I almost never experience. I understand it is often a survival mechanism, and so it's also not clear why I don't feel it more often. I believe some social contexts require it more than others, so environment can produce the behavior. So far I have little or no inner struggle to tell someone "no". If I'm talking to someone or spending time, I feel in control like it is my choice. People occasionally get irked, but that also doesn't bother me because it seems like that annoyance could be motivated by a desire to have control over the other person. By not allowing others to make me feel obligated, I am better able to sincerely like them. This is why it's easy to say "no". I do it with a sense of personal honesty that I respect and like them and so would not put them through the shame of being a bother.

The thought of someone feeling obligated towards me is markedly unpleasant. I am strongly motivated to keep it from happening. Some people associate love with feeling obligated. My mindset also makes it difficult to ask or pressure someone to respond, spend time, or give me something I need if that is not their natural response. When I am close to someone who socializes by often feeling beholden to people, my knee jerk reaction is to be more concerned they will be responding to me out of obligation. It can create a negative loop that can result in them feeling obligated to reassure me in some way. I haven't figured out yet how to straighten this out. In such scenarios it isn't my intent to seek reassurance or explanation, but once someone starts feeling obligated to me, I do feel hurt by that so in a way it does pressure a reaction even though that is the last thing I want to have happen. I appreciate the concern, but then my focus is a need to be able to feel hurt without someone feeling responsible to fix it. Social assumptions run deep in people, and so I haven't figured out how to address this one.
 

Athenian200

Protocol Droid
Joined
Jul 1, 2007
Messages
8,828
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
4w5
I know what you mean, I think. A lot of those things go right over my head. I definitely don't tend to like people to feel obligated to me (or vice-versa) regardless of their own will. I mean, if I'm in a situation and people are actively expecting me to do something that I don't consider wrong, I'll probably go ahead and do it. But I don't really maintain those "passive" expectations that no one directly asks of me (and if asked, might refuse). A lot of people do, and tend to interpret behavior within that framework.

Sometimes when I'm really stressed, I kind of worry that my obliviousness to such things will eventually culminate in a bunch of my enemies (who I thought were friends) conspiring together to kill me over a bunch of such things, but that's such an extreme paranoid fantasy that I usually dismiss it.
 

Halla74

Artisan Conquerer
Joined
Jan 20, 2009
Messages
6,898
MBTI Type
ESTP
Enneagram
7w8
Instinctual Variant
sx/so
The thought of someone feeling obligated towards me is markedly unpleasant. I am strongly motivated to keep it from happening. Some people associate love with feeling obligated.

You have an interesting outlook on life. Regarding the quote above from your OP, could you please expand on your feelings of love and feelings of obligation. What would be a positive definition of love, one without obligation? Is it simply the desire to want to do things with/for another with no sense of external pressure? Just curious. :)
 

Siúil a Rúin

when the colors fade
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
14,037
MBTI Type
ISFP
Enneagram
496
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
You have an interesting outlook on life. Regarding the quote above from your OP, could you please expand on your feelings of love and feelings of obligation. What would be a positive definition of love, one without obligation? Is it simply the desire to want to do things with/for another with no sense of external pressure? Just curious. :)
People, especially the ones I love, deserve better than my resentment. If it is a situation that I can honestly admit will produce a feeling of resentment in me, I try to choose another path. It requires admitting my limitations.

One significant underlying factor is a sense of respect rather than control. Control places one person above another as being more entitled. Respect places the other person at eye level or higher. I see love as a source of strength and inspiration, not something that drains and pressures. I see it as generating a natural desire to be with or give to someone when both people have a sense of inner freedom. I see it as a natural process.
 

Halla74

Artisan Conquerer
Joined
Jan 20, 2009
Messages
6,898
MBTI Type
ESTP
Enneagram
7w8
Instinctual Variant
sx/so
People, especially the ones I love, deserve better than my resentment. If it is a situation that I can honestly admit will produce a feeling of resentment in me, I try to choose another path. It requires admitting my limitations.

I totally agree, yet never would have stated the same as such. I like your writing.

One significant underlying factor is a sense of respect rather than control. Control places one person above another as being more entitled. Respect places the other person at eye level or higher. I see love as a source of strength and inspiration, not something that drains and pressures. I see it as generating a natural desire to be with or give to someone when both people have a sense of inner freedom. I see it as a natural process.

Got it, nicely put. :)
 

Lady_X

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 27, 2008
Messages
18,235
MBTI Type
ENFP
Enneagram
784
Instinctual Variant
sx/sp
i feel obligated to appease loved ones all the time yes...but i certainly hope it doesn't go both ways.
 

Bubbles

See Right Through Me
Joined
Mar 13, 2009
Messages
1,037
MBTI Type
INFP
Enneagram
4w3
People, especially the ones I love, deserve better than my resentment. If it is a situation that I can honestly admit will produce a feeling of resentment in me, I try to choose another path. It requires admitting my limitations.

One significant underlying factor is a sense of respect rather than control. Control places one person above another as being more entitled. Respect places the other person at eye level or higher. I see love as a source of strength and inspiration, not something that drains and pressures. I see it as generating a natural desire to be with or give to someone when both people have a sense of inner freedom. I see it as a natural process.

This makes so much sense to me. I don't like to put myself in positions that are merely out of politeness or duty. You can feel how oppressive that can be as well, sitting in a room with someone who clearly would rather be elsewhere, but feels obligated to entertain or be entertained by you. I usually just stand up and leave because it's so stifling.

When it's love, you want it to be a mutual thing. If you're with someone out of necessity, that's like...going to work. You're getting something done, but because you need to, not necessarily because you want to. You put it quite eloquently in the OP, I think. :D
 

Totenkindly

@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
50,187
MBTI Type
BELF
Enneagram
594
Instinctual Variant
sx/sp
I could say a lot about this topic: Right now I'll say I'm struggling.

I'm more socially integrated than I used to be, since I'm happy, and I've developed a lot more relationships than I had... but I also now feel a bit backed into a corner.

I know I feel a push/pull when I fall in love; I want the closeness and revel in it, but at the same time I get scared and want my space to avoid being absorbed.

And now I have had friends call me to say hi at unexpected times and sound disappointed if I don't call them back (yes, I'm a dork -- I screen my calls, even from friends!), but I feel encroached on. I do e-mail because I can maintain control over my time and space while still engaging someone. I do want to talk to them and often enjoy it; but that doesn't mean I like the way the phone intrudes into my life. I feel this obligation to talk to them even if it will drain me, so they'll still be my friend, and if I blow them off too much, I could lose a potential deeper friendship; yet I don't like the pressure.

Social interaction to me has always had obligation built into it.
 

Jaguar

Active member
Joined
May 5, 2007
Messages
20,647
People, especially the ones I love, deserve better than my resentment. If it is a situation that I can honestly admit will produce a feeling of resentment in me, I try to choose another path. It requires admitting my limitations.

One significant underlying factor is a sense of respect rather than control. Control places one person above another as being more entitled. Respect places the other person at eye level or higher. I see love as a source of strength and inspiration, not something that drains and pressures. I see it as generating a natural desire to be with or give to someone when both people have a sense of inner freedom. I see it as a natural process.

You have a clear and honest sense of self.
I really enjoyed reading your thoughts.
Quite inspiring.

:hi:
 

substitute

New member
Joined
May 27, 2007
Messages
4,601
MBTI Type
ENTP
People don't tend to have much luck with trying to make me feel obligated.

If somebody offers to help me out or something, and they don't ask for anything in return at the start, then they later try to bring it back as a sort of point against me, to make out that I now owe them, then I just ignore it, or else if they insist then I'll say that, if I had known there were conditions attached to their help in the first place, I'd have looked elsewhere or managed alone. This often has the very satisfying effect of making them feel ashamed of themselves :cheese:

I keep to my word and stick to my arrangements and I expect the same of others. Whether they choose to redefine their part or my part in their heads later on, I'll still stick to the original understanding. I find this is pretty effective - most people will avoid being called out or denounced as "score keepers". People who do that tend to know deep down that it's immature and doesn't win them any friends, so even if they're doing it, you can call their bluff.

I don't consider myself obligated to like anyone or love them - those are things you can't force from people. Whoever you are, I feel my only obligation to you is to behave in a civil manner, with general consideration like I do for any human being - in fact that's actually an obligation to myself, because I wouldn't respect myself if I didn't respect others. You can't consciously earn anything more than that, it's just a question of personal taste. If I dig you, I dig you, and if I don't, I'll still be civil but I won't pretend any more than that, however many favours you do me. I might even return the favours in tangible terms, but you'll never be able to get those points converted into affection. And I'm never going to force myself to like someone just because they occupy a certain position in my life, such as mothers of friends etc etc...
 

Athenian200

Protocol Droid
Joined
Jul 1, 2007
Messages
8,828
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
4w5
I could say a lot about this topic: Right now I'll say I'm struggling.

I'm more socially integrated than I used to be, since I'm happy, and I've developed a lot more relationships than I had... but I also now feel a bit backed into a corner.

I know I feel a push/pull when I fall in love; I want the closeness and revel in it, but at the same time I get scared and want my space to avoid being absorbed.

And now I have had friends call me to say hi at unexpected times and sound disappointed if I don't call them back (yes, I'm a dork -- I screen my calls, even from friends!), but I feel encroached on. I do e-mail because I can maintain control over my time and space while still engaging someone. I do want to talk to them and often enjoy it; but that doesn't mean I like the way the phone intrudes into my life. I feel this obligation to talk to them even if it will drain me, so they'll still be my friend, and if I blow them off too much, I could lose a potential deeper friendship; yet I don't like the pressure.

Social interaction to me has always had obligation built into it.

I understand some of that. The preference for the control over presentation, disliking the way a phone call tries to drag you out of whatever you're focused on at an inopportune time, and even the tendency to be conflicted about whether you feel like talking to them. On one hand, they might have something interesting to say or actually need you, but on the other, it might be dreadfully boring and nothing more than a distraction.

Only thing I don't really get is the strong sense of obligation and need to fulfill invisible "duties" to a person that come with such a connection. I think that might have come from having too many ISFJs (or maybe just SJs in general) in your life as your only positive role models.

I have noticed a strange tendency within myself, though. I find I really only like interacting with people when we're first meeting and realizing how much we connect, enthusiastically discussing/analyzing something intellectual in depth, or one of us is trying to comfort the other's emotional pain. I find that anything else tends to bore and tire me quickly.

Which creates a pattern in which I get really close to people emotionally at first, enjoy it as long as I can, and then (often unconsciously) distance myself when I've gotten as much emotional/intellectual stimulation I could out of it. Then, I find myself just forgetting about the person entirely unless I happen to see them again... and then I'm extremely uncomfortable interacting with them again (because they're too far in the past for me at that point), so I just don't usually. I'm not entirely sure this is a good thing (especially since I'm somewhat unhealthy in many ways anyway), but I never really thought about it until now.

I don't usually perceive obligations unless they're expressly stated, and I have a tendency to construe an obligation I don't like as being the other persons fault, and might end up disliking them because of it. I very much don't like seeing other people feel obligated in a personal way, and do what I can to prevent them from feeling that way.

I wonder what all of this means?
 

Siúil a Rúin

when the colors fade
Joined
Apr 23, 2007
Messages
14,037
MBTI Type
ISFP
Enneagram
496
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
I think much in a person's experiences growing up affect how we relate to a significant degree. This is a chicken and egg question, but I have some sense of how these patterns were reinforced in my socialization. I moved around a lot growing up and didn't ever get involved with people to the extent that I had an obligation to a group or something. I was inundated with a sense of obligation to a set of religious ideals, so that plays some role, but it was more abstract than social. During adolescence and early adulthood, I didn't manage to belong to a social group or clique. Part of the reason was that I could see how many particular behaviors were expected. There was a lot of obligation involved in order to gain acceptance. I think in order to be socially involved in the world, you almost have to embrace some of the obligation to others. The people who naturally came to me were often socially ostracized. In some cases these people had boundary issues, but not ill intent. Because of that I acted out drawing clear boundaries without obligations. If someone talked to me too long, I would tell them that I "appreciated seeing them, but that I need to go now" or something like that.

I also don't think people should feel pressured to not be obligated because there are pragmatic reasons for it. I guess it is a topic that effects most everyone, something I have felt a little out of step with, and an area that can cause confusion.
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
I also don't think people should feel pressured to not be obligated because there are pragmatic reasons for it.

Faking it is pragmatic :D

I have a pretty strong sense of obligation to others... at least along the reciprocation axis. I don't feel it very strongly in a general sense, in that I have next to no group identity or social bonds don't hold me strong (I don't rate family obligation higher than friends etc.) So in that regard, I'm the kind of person who goes too far when visiting ("imposing") on others, or when hosting. I also tend to return favors disproportionately, and am sensitive to when others do not.

I don't relate to some of the other things being said in this thread... probably because I'm more about discharging obligation than anything else. That would make sense, given how my parents raised me and the obligations they kept placing on me.
 

substitute

New member
Joined
May 27, 2007
Messages
4,601
MBTI Type
ENTP
Same as you Toonia, up to the point where you say to be socially active in the world you need to embrace some of the obligation to others. I mean I guess you do, but I am incredibly socially active and yet don't really feel like I'm hemmed in by obligations and seldom feel any obligation at all. I think it's because obligations placed on me by other people's expectations, I don't really acknowledge them. That doesn't mean I never feel obligated, but if I do then the sense of it has come from within me: I feel that I owe somebody, and so I make a point of fulfilling that.

I guess this has the effect that people who don't agree with me over what's obligatory and what isn't, fall by the wayside in my life and never become more than acquaintances, whilst the ones who are on my wavelength about it become good friends. It doesn't really bother me that the other ones think I'm rude, ungrateful, whatever. I know I'm not, and there are plenty of people who can back me up on that.

It's kinda funny... say a person invites me to their party. If I get the sense from them that they're pressuring me to go and implying they'd be offended if I didn't go, I almost don't go just on principle. But if they invite me in such a way that I feel they genuinely are leaving it up to me and won't be offended if I don't go - well, I want to go :)

Edit - PT, you sound just like my prickly ISTP, God love him :laugh:
 

Athenian200

Protocol Droid
Joined
Jul 1, 2007
Messages
8,828
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
4w5
I think much in a person's experiences growing up affect how we relate to a significant degree. This is a chicken and egg question, but I have some sense of how these patterns were reinforced in my socialization. I moved around a lot growing up and didn't ever get involved with people to the extent that I had an obligation to a group or something. I was inundated with a sense of obligation to a set of religious ideals, so that plays some role, but it was more abstract than social. During adolescence and early adulthood, I didn't manage to belong to a social group or clique. Part of the reason was that I could see how many particular behaviors were expected. There was a lot of obligation involved in order to gain acceptance. I think in order to be socially involved in the world, you almost have to embrace some of the obligation to others. The people who naturally came to me were often socially ostracized. In some cases these people had boundary issues, but not ill intent. Because of that I acted out drawing clear boundaries without obligations. If someone talked to me too long, I would tell them that I "appreciated seeing them, but that I need to go now" or something like that.

I also don't think people should feel pressured to not be obligated because there are pragmatic reasons for it. I guess it is a topic that effects most everyone, something I have felt a little out of step with, and an area that can cause confusion.

I think I've had similar experiences, except in my case the people around me were always constantly moving on. Pretty much had the same effect inasmuch as I never belonged to a group. I've actually had a strong tendency to avoid being bound to a clique/group. It's so strong that I couldn't even handle being in a guild when I played WoW, and ended up paying random strangers ridiculous amounts of gold to help me with quests. I'm actually still learning about boundaries, but I've recently gotten close to the approach you describe in terms of drawing them.

The bolded part concerns me, though. I don't think I could or want to really embrace those obligations. I could learn to tolerate them as a means to an end, but I couldn't accept them as having value in and of themselves. Do you suppose that would be enough?
 

ptgatsby

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2007
Messages
4,476
MBTI Type
ISTP
Edit - PT, you sound just like my prickly ISTP, God love him :laugh:

Cause no one else would? :D I'm just happy I found someone who didn't want to exchange gifts and really doesn't keep a tally book in the relationship! :yes: I have some friends who are like that, but one advantage to be over-sensitive to it is that you tend to do too much in return, which is a strong social signal. It's 90% of my charisma. :) Heh, I guess in many ways, obligation is social glue. See it way too much in the Asian side...
 

Snow Turtle

New member
Joined
May 28, 2007
Messages
1,335
Only thing I don't really get is the strong sense of obligation and need to fulfill invisible "duties" to a person that come with such a connection. I think that might have come from having too many ISFJs (or maybe just SJs in general) in your life as your only positive role models.

Obligations are attached to values. These values aren't influenced by the SJs community. SJs =/= Common cultural standards. Having gotten that out of the way I don't like knowing that somebody is obliged to be around me, I'd rather they do things compassionately out of their own free will. It got me into an arguement with my parents over whether I should look after them out of family obligations or not. I kept arguing that I don't need to, which was interpreted as I won't...

Otherwise I think there is value in obligations. There are going to be plenty of situations where a friend will not want to do something, but will do so because they value the friendship much more. That is obligation right there.
I'm not 100% certain but was it not Kant that said that actions not done out of obligation (i.e. Dislike of the said task) are not moral or something to that effect. I can definitely see how there is an element of love in doing something obliged.

There are lots of invisible obligations with friendship and families. That usually go unspoken, I don't believe that most people are up front about their expectations.
 

Athenian200

Protocol Droid
Joined
Jul 1, 2007
Messages
8,828
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
4w5
Obligations are attached to values. These values aren't influenced by the SJs community. SJs =/= Common cultural standards. Having gotten that out of the way I don't like knowing that somebody is obliged to be around me, I'd rather they do things compassionately out of their own free will. It got me into an arguement with my parents over whether I should look after them out of family obligations or not. I kept arguing that I don't need to, which was interpreted as I won't...

That's very important to me as well. In fact, I don't even consider the things people do valid in emotional terms when done out of obligation. Perhaps valid in monetary terms, though.

Otherwise I think there is value in obligations. There are going to be plenty of situations where a friend will not want to do something, but will do so because they value the friendship much more. That is obligation right there.
I'm not 100% certain but was it not Kant that said that actions not done out of obligation (i.e. Dislike of the said task) are not moral or something to that effect. I can definitely see how there is an element of love in doing something obliged.

I would likely be willing to do something I don't want to do for someone, if I feel like they really need it and couldn't easily get it from someone else. But that's not really out of friendship so much as my own ideals about compassion. If they just want/expect it, though, forget about it.
There are lots of invisible obligations with friendship and families. That usually go unspoken, I don't believe that most people are up front about their expectations.

Ah, well those would be the ones I dismiss. I don't consider unspoken obligations to be valid. If a person has one, I honestly consider that their problem to handle on their own, because I won't take any responsibility for it.

I guess we wouldn't get along very well, huh?
 

Totenkindly

@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
50,187
MBTI Type
BELF
Enneagram
594
Instinctual Variant
sx/sp
Only thing I don't really get is the strong sense of obligation and need to fulfill invisible "duties" to a person that come with such a connection. I think that might have come from having too many ISFJs (or maybe just SJs in general) in your life as your only positive role models.

It could very much be related to that. I was shamed/guilted a lot in the course of my life with the "social etiquette" thing. (So I still feel guilty when I don't acknowledge someone who called/wrote me just to fill me in on something, and I feel bad for not writing a 'thank you' letter for stuff I don't think is necessary to issue a response on, etc.) And when I've slacked off and trusted that people understand, I still have been bitten by some people who apparently WERE judging me. So it's not all in my head, unfortunately.

I have noticed a strange tendency within myself, though. I find I really only like interacting with people when we're first meeting and realizing how much we connect, enthusiastically discussing/analyzing something intellectual in depth, or one of us is trying to comfort the other's emotional pain. I find that anything else tends to bore and tire me quickly.

I identify a lot with that statement, although I increasingly get better with just doing the "small talk" thing.

Which creates a pattern in which I get really close to people emotionally at first, enjoy it as long as I can, and then (often unconsciously) distance myself when I've gotten as much emotional/intellectual stimulation I could out of it. Then, I find myself just forgetting about the person entirely unless I happen to see them again... and then I'm extremely uncomfortable interacting with them again (because they're too far in the past for me at that point), so I just don't usually. I'm not entirely sure this is a good thing (especially since I'm somewhat unhealthy in many ways anyway), but I never really thought about it until now.

I identify with the first half, up to the "uncomfortable" part -- when I run across them again, I actually like talking to them. (So drop me a line sometime! ;) )

I don't usually perceive obligations unless they're expressly stated, and I have a tendency to construe an obligation I don't like as being the other persons fault, and might end up disliking them because of it.

I remember doing that for awhile. I'd just avoid people who I knew would ask me to do something because then I'd have to disappoint them or potentially anger them by saying no... or else (more typically) just do it and feel resentful about being "controlled."

Learning how to say "no" helped me alot with that.
 

cascadeco

New member
Joined
Oct 7, 2007
Messages
9,083
MBTI Type
INFJ
Enneagram
9w1
Instinctual Variant
sp/sx
It's kinda funny... say a person invites me to their party. If I get the sense from them that they're pressuring me to go and implying they'd be offended if I didn't go, I almost don't go just on principle. But if they invite me in such a way that I feel they genuinely are leaving it up to me and won't be offended if I don't go - well, I want to go :)

Ha. I can relate to this.

I inwardly bristle when I sense something is expected of me, and I am quite liable to want to go the opposite direction. It just seems like some sort of limitation thrown on me by another - that I must be/act a certain way to be 'approved' of, as if my natural inclination, and natural state of being, is somehow not acceptable.

And, the reverse. Ultimately I want people to WANT to do something out of their natural inclination and free will. I want them to make the choice. I wouldn't want to slant a message in a way that implied I'd be offended if they didn't do it...because it would be meaningless in the end if they did it out of a sense of obligation/guilt/resentment - as others have said. Then I'd just feel bad as well, and then we'd both have had the wrong motiviations for doing things. Ok, I'm all about the motivation. :p Whereas if they did it because they *wanted* to, well, that's a million times better. This isn't to say I wouldn't be inwardly disappointed or hurt if someone chose not to do something I would have liked them to have done - because I might be. But I would also have the added data to know exactly how they feel about things, prioritize things, etc etc. I'd know more about them, and I'd also know more about the nature of the relationship itself.

As far as ME feeling social obligations, yes, I do feel them. I am able to say 'No' and assert my boundaries, sometimes to the point of being isolated, perhaps (maybe a self-protective maneuver, as I have a strong drive to make sure my independence/'freedom' remains intact), but I also go out of my way to make sure misunderstandings don't arise by trying to maintain good communication. When I DO say 'No', where I know I'm letting someone down, I often experience residual feelings of anxiety and I will often second-guess myself and my reasoning for saying 'No'. So I'll often feel bad when I don't do something that I know someone would have liked me to have done (BUT: the feelings are probably derived from rather a self-imposed obligation), but didn't do because it's just not what I truly want and I'm wanting to stay true to myself.

So it can be a tough balance for me to be true to myself, as the feelings can be unpleasant when I do that, and I don't like hurting/disappointing others. I guess in summary, I don't feel a need to follow through on expectations/social obligations, but it does cause a personal emotional toll on me when I don't. It would cause a different toll if I did it, though - i.e. resentment, etc. So I can't win. :p

I agree social obligations/expectations have a lot to do with how one is raised and just an overall cultural bent - as those forces can be quite powerful - and sometimes it causes more anxiety to push back/resist than to just go with it.

This is so vague and general..I apologize..but it's a broad topic. I think my post is all over the place.
 
Top