Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Economic Times
The Economic Times
Aastha Raj

Psychology says people who always fix everyone else’s problems often secretly struggle to heal themselves: Is it about the saviour complex?

Every family, friend group, or workplace seems to have that one person who always gives advice, solves emotional crises, motivates others, and acts like a personal life coach. They know exactly what to say when someone is heartbroken, stressed, anxious, or confused.

But psychology says something surprising often happens behind the scenes: many of these emotionally intelligent “problem-solvers” quietly struggle with their own unresolved emotions.

They may guide everyone else perfectly while avoiding their own pain, burnout, insecurities, or emotional chaos. Experts say this behavior is not hypocrisy. In many cases, it reflects deep psychological coping patterns connected to trauma responses, emotional validation, identity, and self-worth.

READ ALSO: Psychology says men who try to control their wives or girlfriends aren’t ‘protective’, but their ‘toxic masculinity’ often starts with fear and a fragile ego

Why Helping Others Feels Easier Than Helping Themselves

Psychologists explain that solving other people’s problems creates emotional distance. When individuals focus on someone else’s struggles, they temporarily avoid confronting their own fears, anxiety, loneliness, or unresolved emotional wounds.

This connects to the psychological concept of Projection and Displacement, where emotional energy is redirected outward instead of inward. In simple terms, helping others can sometimes become a distraction from personal healing.

The “Fixer Personality” and Emotional Identity

Experts often describe this pattern as the Fixer Personality.

These individuals usually:

  • Feel responsible for everyone’s emotions
  • Constantly give advice
  • Become the emotional support system for others
  • Struggle to ask for help themselves
  • Feel guilty resting or prioritizing themselves

Psychology says many “fixers” unconsciously build their identity around being useful. This connects to Codependency Theory, where self-worth becomes linked to helping, rescuing, or emotionally managing others.

READ ALSO: Psychology says people who feel jealous of their spouse’s success aren’t always toxic, sometimes it reveals a hidden identity crisis

Childhood Experiences Often Shape This Behavior

Psychologists say childhood environments strongly influence people who become emotional caretakers later in life.

Some individuals grow up:

  • Mediating family conflicts
  • Comforting emotionally unavailable parents
  • Taking adult responsibilities too early
  • Learning that love comes through usefulness

This is often linked to Parentification, where children emotionally care for adults before they are emotionally ready. As adults, they may continue feeling responsible for “saving” everyone around them.

Why They Give Great Advice but Ignore Their Own Problems

One of the biggest psychological contradictions is that emotionally insightful people often struggle applying the same wisdom to themselves.

Experts say this happens because self-awareness and emotional action are not always the same thing.

This relates to Cognitive Dissonance Theory, developed by Leon Festinger, where people can intellectually understand healthy behavior while emotionally struggling to practice it.

For example, someone may advise friends to:

  • Set boundaries
  • Leave toxic relationships
  • Rest more
  • Seek therapy

while personally tolerating unhealthy situations in silence.

The Hidden Need for Validation

Psychology says some people become “life coaches” because helping others gives them emotional validation.

Being needed can create a sense of:

  • Purpose
  • Control
  • Importance
  • Emotional security

Experts connect this to External Validation Dependence, where self-esteem becomes dependent on appreciation from others. When people constantly praise them as “wise,” “strong,” or “supportive,” it temporarily fills emotional gaps inside themselves.

READ ALSO: Psychology says students who get Exam Fever right before tests aren’t weak or unprepared but their minds are entering survival mode

Modern Examples Seen Everywhere

This behavior has become extremely common in modern culture. On platforms like Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube, many people regularly post motivational advice, healing content, or relationship guidance while privately discussing burnout, anxiety, or emotional exhaustion later.

Psychologists say social media can intensify the pressure to appear emotionally wise even when someone is personally struggling. Many professionals in caregiving roles, teachers, therapists, managers, coaches, or caregivers also experience this emotional imbalance.

Why Emotionally Strong People Avoid Asking for Help

Ironically, people who support others emotionally often feel uncomfortable receiving support themselves. Psychologists connect this to Hyper-Independence, a trauma-related coping mechanism where individuals believe they must handle everything alone.

Some fear:

  • Burdening others
  • Appearing weak
  • Losing control
  • Being emotionally vulnerable

As a result, they become everyone’s support system while silently suppressing their own emotional needs.

The “Savior Complex” Can Become Emotionally Exhausting

Experts also warn about the Savior Complex, where individuals feel responsible for fixing everyone’s life problems.

While empathy is healthy, constantly rescuing others can lead to:

  • Emotional burnout
  • Compassion fatigue
  • Anxiety
  • Chronic stress
  • Identity loss

Psychology says healthy support should not come at the cost of personal well-being.

Emotionally Healthy Helpers Know Their Limits

Psychologists emphasize that helping others is not unhealthy by itself.

The difference is whether the person also:

  • Addresses their own emotions
  • Sets boundaries
  • Accepts support
  • Maintains balance

This connects to healthy emotional regulation and self-awareness. Experts say emotionally mature individuals understand that they can care for others without sacrificing themselves completely.

Sometimes the People Who Give the Best Advice Need the Most Healing

The psychology behind people who constantly solve everyone else’s problems reveals a complex mix of empathy, trauma responses, emotional validation, codependency, and identity. Psychology says many “fixers” are not pretending to be strong, they simply learned to survive by becoming emotionally useful to others. But real emotional health begins when people finally give themselves the same compassion, boundaries, and care they so freely offer everyone else.

FAQs

Why do some people always try to fix others?

Psychology says many people connect self-worth with being helpful, emotionally needed, or responsible for others’ happiness.

What is a fixer personality in psychology?

A fixer personality describes individuals who constantly solve others’ emotional or personal problems, often while neglecting their own needs.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.