
āWhen you say ‘yes’ to others, make sure you’re not saying ‘no’ to yourself.ā ~Paulo Coelho
People-pleasers regularly subvert their own needs for the needs of others. We spend years saying āyesā when we mean āno,ā signing up for commitments weād rather avoid, and occupying our minds with othersā desires.
When we finally clear out the clutter to put ourselves first, we look around at the empty space, bewildered, with endless questions. What do we want? What does true happiness look like for us? What would a life lived on our own terms be like?
For me, these questions once provoked anxiety. Iād spent a lifetime catering to my parents, friends, colleagues, and loversāanyone but myself. By asking what I really wanted, I was looking my fear straight in the eye: my fear of being responsible for my own happiness. My fear of not getting what I wish for.
These fears are both potent and entirely surmountableāif we’re brave enough to connect with our innermost desires.
When weāre strongly connected to our dreams and desires, we begin to set boundaries with other people so we can reach them, and we slowly start finding the confidence to speak our truth. Our dreams and desires remind us how communicating authentically will change our lives, and the lives of our loved ones, for the better.
For this reason, we recovering people-pleasers need to reclaim our familiarity with our inner voice and innermost needs. We cannot communicate authentically with others if we canāt communicate authentically with our inner selves.
In my journey to overcome people pleasing, Iāve learned a few helpful tricks to connect with my innermost self and uncover what I really want in all areas of my life. Perhaps one (or more) of these methods may help you do the same.
1. Label your feelings.
As I mention in my post on setting boundaries, many of us have become so attuned to the feelings of others that our own feelings are elusive strangers, entirely unrecognizable to us.
Our feelings are critical guideposts as we learn to prioritize our own needsāif weāre able to identify and own them. We can rebuild our connection to our feelings by noticing their presence in our bodies and hearts.
First, we must learn to give ourselves permission to be excited, inspired, and desirous. I often notice these feelings when they appear as fluttering in my chest or tingling down my spine. These feelings signal that Iām moving toward something that excites me.
If, like me, youāve spent a lifetime motivated by guilt and anxiety, your positive emotions can starkly illuminate the activities and relationships that bring you pure joy.
We can also learn from feelings that are challenging or unpleasant, once weāre able to identify them. Instead of glossing over anxiety, overwhelm, and anger, we can notice these feelings as pits in our stomachs, pressure in our chests, and tightness in our throats. Those feelings might be signals that something isnāt right for us, or that we need to set boundaries with others.
2. Leave the system.
Sometimes our deepest desires are buried under layers of fear, particularly the fear of seeming selfish or the fear of disappointing others. One way to dig beneath the fear is to mentally remove ourselves from the systems of which weāre a part.
Begin by considering one of your social systems: your romantic relationship, your workplace, your church, your family. Then, ask yourself: āWhat would I do differently if I werenāt a part of this system?ā
Previously unacknowledged desires emerge when you extricate yourself from the pressures and influences of your system.
Years ago, when I first did this exercise, I wrote in my journal, āWhat would I do differently if I werenāt in a relationship with my partner?ā I was amazed as my hand flew across the page, scribbling: āSign up for a dance class! Go out with friends more! Sleep in on Sundays!ā
My answers helped me realize that I was suffocating my own desires out of fear of my partnerās reactions. What I really wanted was right there on the page. Having this list enabled me to consider how I might carve out more space for my own desires within my relationship.
3. Make a wish.
The first time I saw a life coach, she began our session with the simplest of questions: āIf you were granted three wishes, what would you wish for?ā
At first I thought her question was contrived, but when I answered, two of my responses were illuminating: I wished for a healthier relationship with my family, and I wished to become fully self-employed in the career of my dreams.
Then she looked me in the eye: āYou want these two things very much?ā
I nodded.
āMore than anything else in the world?ā
I nodded again.
She grinned. āThen what have you been waiting for?ā
I was speechless. Iād never given myself permission to suspend reality, if only for a moment, to dream big. Making a wish allowed me to dive into my dreams without stopping myself with āWhat if?ās Ā āHow?ās and āI could never do that.ā Once I spoke my desires aloud, I could no longer ignore their truth. I begin strategizing how to get there.
Practice suspending reality to discover what you crave. Imagine that you could make a wish that would be instantly granted, or imagine that you could walk through a door and your ideal life waited on the other side. What do you notice about these dreams? What desires do they demonstrate?
4. Weave a web of impact.
One of people-pleasersā greatest challenges is the fear of being perceived as selfish or uncaring. I know this was true for me. Many of us believe that our worth comes from meeting othersā needs. Sometimes we forget that speaking our truth positively impacts other people.
Take a moment to ask yourself the question: āIf I spoke my truth and set firm boundaries, who else would benefit, and how?ā Consider your partner, your friends, your colleagues, your children, passersby on the street. Consider who you might serve as a role model. Who might benefit from witnessing your strength and independence?
You will quickly realize that speaking your truth has far-reaching benefits. Keep your list visible to remind yourself of the web of impact your new habits will have.
5. Start small.
If youāve been in a habit of people-pleasing for a long time, it may be challenging to immediately identify your own big dreams. You may feel that you truly donāt know what you want right now, and that is totally normal. Living your truth and communicating authentically are muscles; when you exercise them regularly, they become stronger over time.
Give yourself permission to start small. For example, you might not yet know what you want out of your career, but you do know you love strolling around the lake in the morning and winding down your nights with chamomile tea. You may not yet know which city you want to relocate to, but you do know youād like to take a mid-afternoon power nap and buy thermal socks.
These wants are sacred whispers from your innermost self. Give your innermost self time to surface. By pursuing these small desires, you learn to trust yourself. You begin to realize that you are fully capable of being your own advocate and building the life you want.
Pay special attention to how it feels to meet your needs. Be patient. With the passage of time, bigger dreams make themselves known in your heart.
Authentic communication is a two-way street; we must speak truthfully to ourselves before we can speak truthfully to others. Once we become familiar with what we really want, we can imagine a world where we replace old habits, like people-pleasing, with new visions for a brighter future.
About Hailey Magee
Hailey Magee is a Codependency Recovery Coach who helps individuals conquer people-pleasing, set empowered boundaries, and master the art of speaking their truth. She has worked with over 100 clients from the US, Canada, Ireland, France, South Africa, and more. Sign up for a complimentary consultation to learn how coaching can help you live from a place of authenticity and inner freedom. You can follow Hailey on Facebook and Instagram, or visit www.haileymagee.com.
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Though I run this site, it is not mine. It's ours. It's not about me. It's about us. Your stories and your wisdom are just as meaningful as mine.
Aww. I almost cried, this is what I really need today, I am 30 years old now and most of those years were spent in people pleasing disregarding my own dreams and desires but I believe that it’s not yet too late to change and prioritize the things I want over the others’, thank you so much Hailey your thoughts helped me a lot – it changed something inside me – deep within my soul š
Loved reading your beautiful words, Ann. It is absolutely never too late to begin prioritizing your own wants and needs! You, and every person, absolutely deserves it! It’s been a lifelong journey for me, and with every day, it gets easier. Sending you a huge virtual high five. Excited for you!
I had liked the image near the top of the article and had wondered if someone connected to this site could provide some details regarding its creation (such as its creator).
Many people in this mind set are often trying to get a better grasp of things. Focus on your relationship with God and his nature to sort out what is really worth getting into and be honest about your limitations and failings. Especially with the One we’re inherently the closest to. Belief itself is example one of our limits, it is given to us from our respect for the full reality that is allowing us all to live as well as we do given our present state as a mortal creature that needs soo muuch more* than what is now existing as notable to hold “sanity” and “a completeness of health” as fully viable. I personally have to lean on science’s evidence in quantum entanglement that easily shows that the spiritual and its vast relational beliefs are not a figment of the imagination. Rather it is the sympathy of matching conditions of all types that give each a door to the greater entity that came to match ours and go on to conquer the gates of Hades for us. Each of us is a unique combination of a vast multitude of such sympathetic states relating across an infinity of such ~loving conversation~ toward One’s eternal, infinite wholesomeness. This is God’s gift for us beyond this mortal realm’s seemingly abundant confusing imp-Prince upon our limited human senses.
* especially in the realm noting the needed sacrifices and its necessary rewards.
PS: Though God can conquer anything, fewer crosses is One’s goal everywhere. God help you be wise and well guided to that end.
I’m a seventy year old with exactly that problem. I was never able to cut the cord, with my parents. I lived to please them my entire life, always seeking permission. Now that they are gone, I have been at a loss what to do with the rest of my life. Thank you!
I was wondering the same, @Mario500:disqus!
Thank Deb š
Never too late. I have been through this. I bought a multi-family with my brother and my ex-husband. I ended up being the one doing it all. I had gotten married because I had a child. After about 10 years of doing everything, I had enough. It really did steal some of my life, them not doing their share and I had to pick up all the pieces while trying to be me. I got the divorce, I was trapped in the house for another ten years.(that is another story), but after five years it did make me some money to get my daughter to college. I finally gave up the house, I still could not live for me.
I finally moved last month, my daughter is 20 and I have a few vacations planned.
I am at pay check to pay check more or less, but live on my own. Not anyone using my time while they sit there and do not contribute.
I am still in the process of what do I want now since I do not have to look at that house anymore, but I can sit back and take time to re-group.
I am 46 and I plan on having the best of my life to come.
Never give up. Do not give not shit, but do not take no shit.
Unless there is a major illness in family etc, it is ok to put yourself first.
The happier you are, the more better you are going to be to the people in your life.
Good luck.
Thanks for sharing your perspective, @gdmellott:disqus!
@disqus_fdldRxsfua:disqus thanks for sharing your story. I hear you; when the people we’ve worked so hard to please are no longer in our lives, it often leaves a void. I’m sorry for the pain that void may cause, but also fully believe that this may be a powerful moment to discover what it is you really want. I wish you all the luck on your journey!
So much goodness in your words, @disqus_xkGq56Mn53:disqus, thanks for sharing. It’s incredible to hear the story of how you found such independence and grew to put yourself first. Extremely inspiring – thank you.
Thank you for listening. It drove me crazy going through it. lol
I agree with everything written. It’s so true about meeting your needs before others. So many times I’ve felt trapped by my parents and since I’m an only child, I knew every situation that was happening in the household. Financial issues was the most talked about subject in the house and would be brought up daily when it pertained to dinner.
Now that I have moved out, I feel a sense of freedom and am able to do the things I need to do, guilt free, and focus on me. You have to be selfish sometimes, but it’s not the selfish everyone thinks of. In order to make your dreams come true, you have to know what you want and be confident on the path you take. Others may oppose your path, but in the end, the decisions you make can help them too.
Mmm, I agree with so much of what you shared, Nicole! Beautiful to hear the way you’ve been able to find that guilt-free freedom. I also totally agree that meeting our own needs and unashamedly pursuing our passions can help others, too. <3
As a recovering people-pleaser I appreciate your openness and your suggestions. Thank you!
I’m grateful it resonated with you, @souldoors:disqus! Good luck on your journey!
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