Stand Up For Yourself, Set Boundaries, & Stop Pleasing Others (if that’s okay with you…) (Be Confident and Fearless Book 9) By: Patrick King
Hear it Here - https://adbl.co/3To6NDu
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0B7GWJN4F
Are you tired of putting everyone else's needs before your own? Do you constantly seek approval and validation? If so, you might be a people-pleaser. In this video, we dive deep into the psychology behind people-pleasing and provide practical strategies to break free from this harmful pattern. Discover how to build self-worth, set boundaries, and overcome the fear of rejection. Learn powerful techniques like the "separation of tasks" exercise and how to challenge your self-limiting beliefs. It's time to reclaim your life and prioritize your own happiness. This video is your first step towards becoming a more confident and authentic version of yourself.
Takeaways:
People-pleasing is a learned behavior that can be changed.
Your worth is not determined by others' approval.
Setting boundaries is essential for your well-being.
Overcoming fear of rejection is possible.
Self-compassion is key to personal growth.
Stand Up For Yourself,
Speaker:Set Boundaries,
Speaker:& Stop Pleasing Others (if that’s okay with you…)
Speaker:(Be Confident and Fearless Book 9)
Speaker:Written by
Speaker:Patrick King
Speaker:Narrated by Russell Newton.
Speaker:Picture a couple having an argument.
Speaker:Voices are raised and things are getting heated.
Speaker:Then,
Speaker:all of a sudden,
Speaker:Person A starts smiling sweetly.
Speaker:“Look,
Speaker:let’s just forget this whole thing,
Speaker:okay?
Speaker:It’s all so silly;
Speaker:it doesn’t matter.
Speaker:You’re right about everything.
Speaker:Can I make you some cocoa?
Speaker:With marshmallows?
Speaker:What else would you like?"
Speaker:Person B is confused,
Speaker:wondering where all the hugs and kisses are coming from and what happened to the argument they were having only seconds ago.
Speaker:Person B has witnessed what is called the “fawning response."
Speaker:In the face of trauma and conflict,
Speaker:some people respond with anger,
Speaker:some respond by fleeing ...and some,
Speaker:like Person A,
Speaker:respond with a flood of appeasing,
Speaker:soothing,
Speaker:and conciliatory behavior.
Speaker:“Fight or flight” is an option for some people,
Speaker:but for those with a history of trauma,
Speaker:another option when faced with threat is to go into fawning mode and try to make it all better.
Speaker:Picture an animal defensively rolling onto its back,
Speaker:trying to appear as meek and agreeable as possible so that it’s spared by a powerful predator.
Speaker:Fawning is an attempt to fly under the radar rather than engage in conflict.
Speaker:It’s a way of deflecting attention.
Speaker:In a crisis or disagreement,
Speaker:is your first instinct to soothe,
Speaker:calm,
Speaker:or please others?
Speaker:Do you do anything to avoid conflict—even if that means ignoring your own needs?
Speaker:In a stressful interaction,
Speaker:is your focus on other people’s emotions?
Speaker:Fawning behavior is actually a kind of trauma response.
Speaker:This behavior,
Speaker:in other words,
Speaker:is something you might have learned in childhood,
Speaker:where “rolling over” this way was the only thing that helped you survive conflict.
Speaker:Some people may also find that their fawning behavior accompanies the tendency to freeze during conflict.
Speaker:Maybe your mind goes blank,
Speaker:your heart races,
Speaker:and you dissociate.
Speaker:You are the proverbial “deer in headlights."
Speaker:At the core of this fawning and freezing behavior is the unconscious core belief - “the price for peace with others is compliance.
Speaker:If I make other people happy,
Speaker:then I will be safe."
Speaker:The mindset is one where safety is all that matters,
Speaker:and your goal is to do whatever it takes to achieve that safety.
Speaker:Michael had an abusive father growing up.
Speaker:His father would get angry,
Speaker:yell,
Speaker:and break things around the home,
Speaker:going on rampages that would terrify the family.
Speaker:Early on,
Speaker:as a young and defenseless child,
Speaker:Michael learned that the best strategy was to do whatever it took to appease his father’s anger.
Speaker:This meant agreeing with everything he said,
Speaker:quickly complying with any requests,
Speaker:and generally making himself as small and non-threatening as possible.
Speaker:After all,
Speaker:if he made one wrong move,
Speaker:his father would interpret it as a threat,
Speaker:and then more abuse would follow.
Speaker:Michael became so good at this strategy that he even learned to pre-empt his father’s moods,
Speaker:walking on eggshells and finding ways to manage his strong emotions on his father’s behalf.
Speaker:Here is the sad thing - this approach genuinely did work for Michael.
Speaker:It did prevent conflict and keep him safe.
Speaker:But in adulthood,
Speaker:Michael realized what this safety cost him.
Speaker:Those who use fawning behavior are often confused about their own boundaries,
Speaker:unable to meet their own needs,
Speaker:and,
Speaker:ironically,
Speaker:vulnerable to more abuse.
Speaker:Not all people-pleasers are doing so as a part of a fawning response,
Speaker:but if this is the case for you,
Speaker:know that there are ways to heal and rewrite the narrative for yourself.
Speaker:Your task will be to change the core belief that compliance = safety.
Speaker:Those with abusive backgrounds may also strike another unconscious bargain - “If I attach myself to this powerful person and make them need and like me,
Speaker:then I can win favor and be safe."
Speaker:But that powerful person may well be the same person who is creating the lack of safety in the first place!
Speaker:It’s not unlike Stockholm Syndrome,
Speaker:where hostages attempt to control an abusive dynamic by bonding with their captor.
Speaker:People who default to fawning behavior would sooner absorb any emotional blow than speak up,
Speaker:say no,
Speaker:and face the fallout.
Speaker:Unfortunately,
Speaker:knowing how to erect and assert healthy boundaries is a part of being a mature adult.
Speaker:How do we get out of this bind?
Speaker:Get Professional Help.
Speaker:P. T. S. D. (post-traumatic stress disorder)
Speaker:is seldom something that people can deal with on their own.
Speaker:A mental health professional,
Speaker:however,
Speaker:can point you in the direction of evidence-based therapies that can help you rewire both your body and mind,
Speaker:and untangle the learned trauma response.
Speaker:Consider EMDR therapy,
Speaker:medication,
Speaker:and talk therapy—or a combination of all three.
Speaker:Reparent Yourself.
Speaker:Today’s dysfunction was yesterday’s coping mechanism.
Speaker:Dr. Arielle Schwatz is a C-P. T. S. D. (complex P. T. S. D. )
Speaker:expert and explains that abusive or dysfunctional parenting can create children who are hyper-focused on their parents’ emotions.
Speaker:To survive an unhealthy home environment,
Speaker:these children felt compelled to take care of their parents’ emotional needs.
Speaker:To do this,
Speaker:they needed to suppress their needs.
Speaker:They also needed to put their authentic selves and their feelings on the back burner.
Speaker:These feelings are still there,
Speaker:however,
Speaker:and may show up in adulthood as the tendency to recreate these same “enmeshed” or codependent relationships (more on codependency in a later chapter).
Speaker:Cut off from their own needs,
Speaker:such people may feel numb,
Speaker:dissociated,
Speaker:and inauthentic.
Speaker:The insight of “inner child work” and re-parenting yourself is that we are able to give ourselves today what we did not receive as children.
Speaker:In the past,
Speaker:we had to adapt in certain ways to survive less-than-ideal childhoods,
Speaker:but now,
Speaker:as adults,
Speaker:we have a choice.
Speaker:We can rewrite the core belief of “To be safe,
Speaker:I must comply” to “I am allowed to be who I am.
Speaker:I am a good person.
Speaker:It is safe to have needs and to ask for them to be met."
Speaker:Overcoming a difficult childhood takes time,
Speaker:but it can be done -
Speaker:•Set boundaries.
Speaker:Have limits and defend those limits (more on this in Chapter 6).
Speaker:•Stop explaining yourself or justifying your choices.
Speaker:You don’t owe that to people.
Speaker:•Allow someone else to do the work for a change.
Speaker:Delegate or ask for help instead of doing it all yourself.
Speaker:•Promise not to abandon your inner child.
Speaker:Decide that your priority will be to protect and defend them,
Speaker:rather than to serve the interests of bullies or those who trample on your boundaries.
Speaker:•Be your own mother (give yourself unconditional compassion and love)
Speaker:and your own father (protect yourself with solid boundaries—and defend them!).
Speaker:Reconnect With Your Principles And Values.
Speaker:Fawners have substituted their own judgment with the needs and demands of others.
Speaker:But you strengthen and orient yourself when you remind yourself of what’s important to you,
Speaker:and why.
Speaker:It may take time to clarify your authentic self,
Speaker:find out what you truly want in life,
Speaker:not to mention find the courage to express it.
Speaker:But you may also find that speaking up is itself something that gives you courage.
Speaker:For fawners,
Speaker:it can be scary to be “seen."
Speaker:But in small ways,
Speaker:you can challenge yourself to speak up and express your genuine opinion,
Speaker:even if it goes against other peoples’ opinions or causes a little friction.
Speaker:People who have learned to fawn over others are unaware of their secret superpower - that they have the ability to create safety for themselves.
Speaker:That they can be safe in their own convictions.
Speaker:They do not have to strike a deal with anyone to feel safe,
Speaker:but can feel safe right now.
Speaker:Become An Expert On Your Own Feelings.
Speaker:Fawners are experts at other people’s feelings.
Speaker:They may be so tuned into other peoples’ needs that they seem psychic at times.
Speaker:However,
Speaker:what they’re not good at is knowing how they feel.
Speaker:If you’re a people-pleasing fawner,
Speaker:you may have learned early in life to turn your emotions off.
Speaker:What good would that do,
Speaker:anyway,
Speaker:since there’s no chance of them being heard or respected,
Speaker:right?
Speaker:But by dissociating,
Speaker:you sever your mind-body connection and lose touch with who you are on a very deep level.
Speaker:You may even find yourself feeling lost and vague—who are you amidst all these other people and their desires and demands?
Speaker:There are plenty of ways to reconnect with your genuine feelings and to slowly teach yourself that it is safe to feel - .
Speaker:•Try body-mind strengthening activities like dance or yoga.
Speaker:Drop any expectations or “shoulds” about how to move your body,
Speaker:and listen to how it wants to move.
Speaker:•“Befriend” the emotions that emerge in you,
Speaker:whatever they are.
Speaker:Literally picture your feelings as people sitting around a table.
Speaker:Welcome them all and ask them what they have to say.
Speaker:Your feelings were not heard as a child,
Speaker:but you can listen to them now as an adult.
Speaker:•Prick your ears and watch out for feelings of guilt—the signature emotion of the fawn response.
Speaker:Try the “separation of tasks” exercise above and consciously choose to let go of things that are not your responsibility and not under your control.
Speaker:Have Fun!
Speaker:One amazing way to gently shift the tendency to fawn over others is to encourage the opposite mindset,
Speaker:i.e.,
Speaker:one that is playful,
Speaker:carefree,
Speaker:and creative.
Speaker:As a child,
Speaker:you were meant to be loved and kept safe so that you could enjoy yourself,
Speaker:grow,
Speaker:and explore the world.
Speaker:That sense of play and exploration was cut short with a premature feeling of responsibility for others.
Speaker:You may have developed the opinion that having fun was too risky,
Speaker:and that it may actually be dangerous to relax your vigilance for even a second.
Speaker:It’s all very serious!
Speaker:But right now,
Speaker:you can reconnect with that sense of innocence that you may have missed out on.
Speaker:Take your inner child out on a “playdate” and ask them what they really want to do.
Speaker:No,
Speaker:it doesn’t have to make sense,
Speaker:and no,
Speaker:nobody else’s opinion matters.
Speaker:Maybe you buy yourself some silly craft supplies or go for a walk without any idea of where you’ll go.
Speaker:Maybe you just enjoy having a free afternoon without any plan at all and zero idea of what you’re “supposed to do."
Speaker:If it’s fun and it makes you happy,
Speaker:why not?
Speaker:This has been
Speaker:Stand Up For Yourself,
Speaker:Set Boundaries,
Speaker:& Stop Pleasing Others (if that’s okay with you…) (Be Confident and Fearless Book 9) Written by
Speaker:Patrick King
Speaker:Narrated by Russell Newton.