The Hidden Cost of Enabling in Development Circles

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The Hidden Cost of Enabling in Development Circles

In spiritual development circles, facilitation is often framed as “holding space.”

But there is a subtle line that many facilitators cross without realizing it—when holding space quietly turns into holding people up.

And over time, this shift creates a cost that is not always visible at first.

It shows up in the energy of the facilitator, the dependency of the participants, and the overall balance of the space itself.

What Learned Helplessness Looks Like in a Group Setting

If you have facilitated development circles, you’ve likely seen this pattern.

Someone enters the space curious and open, but hesitant to trust their own perception.

They ask repeated questions.

They look for validation before they act on their own impressions.

They defer to the facilitator, even in moments where their own awareness is present.

On the surface, this can look like engagement.

But underneath, it often reflects learned helplessness.

This is not a character flaw.

It is conditioning.

At some point, the individual learned that it felt safer to rely on external guidance than to trust internal awareness.

The Facilitator’s Energetic Role (and Cost)

Facilitators often begin by simply supporting participants through uncertainty.

Offering clarity.

Offering reflection.

Offering reassurance.

But over time, a subtle shift can occur.

The facilitator begins to compensate for the participant’s lack of self-trust.

Instead of guiding, they begin stabilizing.

Instead of reflecting, they begin carrying.

This can result in fatigue after sessions, emotional depletion, or a sense of imbalance that is difficult to articulate.

Because the role has quietly expanded beyond facilitation.

It has become energetic compensation.

Where Support Becomes Enabling

Support is an essential part of any developmental environment.

Without it, people cannot safely explore new awareness.

However, there is a threshold where support stops building capacity and begins replacing it.

Enabling begins when the responsibility for interpretation, validation, or decision-making shifts away from the participant and onto the facilitator.

This may look like:

  • answering questions the participant has not explored internally
  • repeatedly validating their intuition instead of encouraging direct trust
  • stepping in too quickly to resolve discomfort or silence

Each moment like this reduces the participant’s opportunity to develop internal authority.

Why Discomfort Is Part of Growth

Real development requires a degree of uncertainty.

Not because discomfort is the goal—but because self-trust cannot be built without direct experience.

When facilitators step in too quickly, they unintentionally remove that developmental space.

The participant never fully engages their own perception.

Instead, they rely on external confirmation.

Over time, this reinforces the very pattern the space is meant to help dissolve.

The Role of a Facilitator

A facilitator is not meant to carry the process for others.

Their role is to:

  • create safe structure
  • observe without over-interpreting
  • reflect without replacing experience
  • guide without taking ownership of outcomes

When this boundary is clear, the entire system stabilizes.

Participants develop greater self-trust.

Facilitators retain their energetic clarity.

And the space becomes truly developmental rather than dependent.

How to Shift the Pattern in Practice

One of the most effective shifts a facilitator can make is to return responsibility back to the participant through questions instead of answers.

For example:

  • What are you sensing in your own experience?
  • What stands out for you here?
  • What happens if you stay with that feeling a little longer?
  • What would you trust if you weren’t looking for confirmation?

These questions do not remove support.

They redirect it.

They strengthen internal authority rather than external dependency.

Final Reflection

The hidden cost of enabling is not always obvious in the moment.

It builds gradually through small decisions made in service of comfort, clarity, or ease.

But sustainable facilitation requires awareness of this dynamic.

Because when participants learn to trust themselves, and facilitators learn to hold boundaries, the entire space changes.

And that is where real development actually begins.

Journal Prompts

  • Where do I notice participants relying on me more than themselves?
  • How do I feel energetically after supporting those moments?
  • In what ways might I unintentionally be enabling dependence?
  • How comfortable am I with silence and allowing space in my sessions?
  • What boundaries would help me maintain my energy while still supporting growth?

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