28/12/2025
I want you to hear this slowly.
When you say no â
and someone keeps pushing, negotiating, sighing, or guilt-tripping you â
it was never about the cheesecake.
It becomes about access.
About control.
About whether your nervous system is allowed to choose safety over approval.
Many of us were taught, quietly and repeatedly, that love had to be earned by being: ⢠agreeable
⢠accommodating
⢠easy
⢠grateful
So when you finally set a boundary, your body may shake.
Your chest may tighten.
Guilt may rush in and whisper, âYouâre selfish. Youâre mean. Youâre ungrateful.â
That voice isnât intuition.
Itâs memory.
Itâs your inner child remembering a time when saying no meant: withdrawal of love
emotional distance
or punishment.
So if boundaries feel hard, confusing, or painful â
nothing is wrong with you.
Your nervous system learned what it needed to survive.
Healing doesnât mean becoming cold.
It means becoming clear.
Healthy people adjust when you set limits.
Unhealthy people escalate.
And while that can be painful to see, it is also deeply informative.
You donât lose love by setting boundaries.
You lose the illusion that you had to abandon yourself to keep it.
If this post touched something tender inside you,
I created two spaces to support you:
⨠My FREE Boundary-Setting Masterclass
â where I teach you how to say no without guilt, freezing, or over-explaining
⨠My Inner Child Masterclass
â where we gently heal the part of you that learned love must be earned through self-abandonment
You donât need to become someone else to be worthy of respect.
You simply need permission to choose yourself.
Both links are waiting for you â
link in bio đ¤
With care,
your therapist,
Sylwia