“She said yes to everything and slowly disappeared.”
A friend called one Wednesday evening. She needed help with her event again. Third time that month. I was exhausted. I had my own plans for that period. I had even promised my children a day out.
Every part of me wanted to say: “I’m so sorry, I can’t this time.” Instead, I typed: “Of course, just let me know what time.” Hmmm, when I put the phone down and stared at the ceiling. What I felt wasn’t just tiredness. It was the quiet ache of someone who had just abandoned herself again.
If you know that ache, this guide is for you.
This is not about becoming selfish or building walls. It is about remembering that you matter too.
What Is People-Pleasing, Really?
It is not about being nice. It is a pattern where your need for other people’s approval quietly becomes more important than your own needs, feelings, and truth.
Kindness comes from a full heart. People-pleasing comes from fear — fear of conflict, rejection, or not being enough.
The difference:
- Kindness says: I want to help. It brings me joy.
- People-pleasing says: I have to help. Otherwise, you might leave.
People-pleasing is not a character flaw. It is a survival strategy you probably learned long ago.
The Signs That Quietly Give It Away
People-pleasing hides in plain sight. It looks like being helpful, easygoing, and a good friend. But underneath, something else is happening.
Does any of this feel familiar?
- Saying yes when you mean no and feeling resentful afterwards
- Constantly apologising, even when nothing was your fault
- Carrying everyone else’s emotions as if they were your own responsibility
- Finding it almost impossible to voice a different opinion around people who matter
- Over-explaining every decision as though choosing yourself requires a defence
- A quiet anxiety creeps in the moment someone seems upset
- Shrinking in rooms where judgment feels possible
- Pouring endlessly into others and still feeling completely invisible
- Replaying conversations, wondering if you said the wrong thing
- Exhausted, but stopping feels selfish
If several of these hit home, you are not alone. And you are not broken.
Why We Become People-Pleasers
So many of us wonder: Why can’t I just say no? What is wrong with me?
Nothing is wrong with you. This pattern has roots.
When Keeping the Peace Was Survival
Maybe you grew up where conflict meant chaos, or love felt conditional on being good and quiet. You learned: if I make myself easy, things go better.
That kept you safe as a child. But you are no longer that child.
Cultural and Religious Conditioning
Many of us, especially those raised in African homes or faith communities, were taught that a good woman always puts others first.
That value has beauty in it. But when there is no room left for your own voice, it becomes a cage dressed in virtue.
Wanting Love to Feel Safe
Some of us learned that love could be withdrawn. So we made ourselves indispensable, believing: if I stay useful, they will stay.
People-pleasing is love seeking safety. It is the little girl inside still trying to earn what should have always been freely given.
Is People-Pleasing a Trauma Response?
For many of us — yes.
The nervous system has four threat responses: fight, flight, freeze, and fawn. Fawning means appeasing, agreeing, and accommodating to avoid danger.
It develops in childhoods shaped by conflict, unpredictability, or emotional unavailability. It is not a weakness. It is your nervous system protecting you.
But when the threat is gone, and the pattern stays, it becomes a prison.
The Hidden Cost of Always Saying Yes
People-pleasing is not free. There is always a price.
- You lose touch with your own wants because you’ve spent so long adapting to everyone else’s
- Resentment builds silently toward the very people you keep bending for
- Your sense of self erodes — who are you outside of being needed?
- Burnout arrives: not just tiredness, but a deep soul weariness
- You attract unequal relationships because you’ve made yourself boundaryless
You cannot pour from an empty vessel. But more than that, you were never meant to be just a vessel.
People-Pleasing and Self-Worth
At the heart of it is a quiet, painful belief: I am not enough as I am.
This is not really about other people. It is about what you believe you deserve.
It is the outer expression of an inner wound, one that says your worth is conditional.
It is not. It never was.
Your worth is not something you perform. It is something you already carry.
A Special Word for Mothers
For mothers, people-pleasing wears a particularly convincing disguise because the world applauds it.
The mother who never says no. Who always gives. Who disappears quietly, piece by piece, until she is hollow.
I have been that woman.
You can be a devoted mother and still have needs. You can love deeply and still have a self.
The most powerful thing you can model for your children is a woman who knows her worth.
What Faith Says About People-Pleasing
This can feel complicated for women of faith. We are taught to serve, to be humble, to put others first.
There is a difference between service directed by God, which comes from love and strength, and service directed by people, which stems from fear and a need for approval.
Galatians 1:10 asks: “Am I now trying to win the approval of human beings, or of God?”
Faith calls us to steward ourselves, our time, energy, voice, and purpose with wisdom. Not to erase ourselves.
How to Start Setting Boundaries Without Guilt
A boundary is not a wall. It is a door, one that you control.
Here is how to begin:
- Notice the pattern first. Feel that familiar tightening before you say yes to something you don’t want? That’s your signal.
- Pause before responding. “Let me think about that” is a complete sentence.
- Start with a small “No”, low stakes. Build the muscle slowly.
- Remember: a boundary is information, not an attack.
- Expect discomfort and know it will pass. Discomfort is not proof you were wrong. It is proof that you are changing.
A ‘no’ said with love is more honest than a ‘yes’ said with resentment
The Healing Journey
Healing is not a switch you flip. It is a direction, a steady turning toward yourself.
It looks like:
- Sitting with the discomfort of disappointing someone and surviving it
- Catching yourself mid-pattern and gently choosing differently
- Grieving the version of you who spent so long being who everyone else needed
- Learning, slowly, to trust your own voice
- Discovering that the right people don’t leave when you have needs
You will not get it right every time. That is not failure, but you being human.
Healing is not a destination. It is learning to come home to yourself, again and again
Books That Have Helped Me
These are the ones I return to:
- “Boundaries” — Dr Henry Cloud & Dr John Townsend
- “The Disease to Please” — Harriet B. Braiker
- “Set Boundaries, Find Peace” — Nedra Tawwab
- “Daring Greatly” — Brené Brown
A Letter to the Woman Who Always Says Yes
Dear You,
I see you.
I see how hard you work to keep everyone comfortable. How much you carry quietly, without complaint.
I understand how tired you are. Not just in your body but in your soul because I have been there.
You are allowed to take up space and to have needs. You are allowed to say no without explanation. To choose yourself, not because you have earned it, but because you were always worthy of it.
The people who truly love you will not leave when you start honouring yourself.
And the ones who do? Their leaving is its own answer.
You are not here to be endlessly useful.
You are here to be fully alive.
Before You Go
If this post spoke to you, leave a comment below.
And if someone in your life needs to read this, a friend, sister, colleague running herself ragged, please share it with her.
We are on this journey together.
With love and solidarity,
Cheta Otiji