Frank Anderson, MD

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03/06/2026

People-pleasing isn’t really about the other person. It’s about what happens inside you.

What happens in your body when someone is disappointed.

What happens when there’s tension in the room.
What happens when you feel responsible for keeping things steady.

That internal discomfort is powerful. And fixing can feel easier than sitting with it.

Over time, that can turn into self-abandoning your way into keeping relationships stable. You stay responsible. You stay agreeable. You stay steady.
But it’s exhausting.

and I are partnering for the first time to host a two-part Learning Lab, Beyond People-Pleasing, on March 30 for anyone who feels worn down by this pattern and wants something different.

In the first session, we’ll explore how these patterns often begin in childhood environments where connection felt tied to being responsible or easy — and how that survival strategy follows us into adult relationships.

Then we slow it down. I’ll return for a dedicated integration session focused on working with what surfaced — understanding the survival roots of over-functioning and the guilt, fear, and loyalty that keep it in place.

If you’ve been carrying more than your share for a long time, this is a place to look at it differently.

Details are in the link in my bio.

Perfectionism is often misunderstood as ambition or control. But for many people, it formed in response to something rel...
03/04/2026

Perfectionism is often misunderstood as ambition or control. But for many people, it formed in response to something relational.

When mistakes once led to distance, criticism, or subtle withdrawal, the body learned to anticipate and correct quickly. Precision became protection.

Over time, that vigilance starts to look like personality.

That’s why reassurance rarely settles it. The pressure is not just about doing well. It’s about preventing a rupture that once felt costly.

There’s often grief underneath it too. For the years spent being careful. For the version of you that didn’t get to experiment without consequence.

And easing up doesn’t always feel relieving at first. If perfection once preserved connection, letting go can register as risk.

The work isn’t lowering your standards. It’s helping your system update what actually happens now when you’re imperfect.

When connection no longer depends on getting everything right, the intensity begins to soften.

Neglect is common. And because it’s often quiet, many people don’t label it as trauma.Maybe there wasn’t always chaos.
T...
03/03/2026

Neglect is common. And because it’s often quiet, many people don’t label it as trauma.

Maybe there wasn’t always chaos.
There just wasn’t consistent response.

Over time, the brain organizes around what it experiences repeatedly. Not just events, but patterns.

If you had to handle distress alone often enough, your nervous system may have learned that stress lingers… that help isn’t guaranteed… that you’re largely responsible for stabilizing yourself.

That can show up years later in ways that feel confusing.

Big reactions to small relational shifts.
Shutting down when things get tense.
Pushing through exhaustion instead of noticing it.

The encouraging part is this: your nervous system can change through repeated experience.

Consistent care now matters.
Completing stress cycles matters.
Responding to your own limits matters.

Your nervous system has always done its best to adapt, and adaptation isn’t final.

02/26/2026

Most of the behaviors we judge ourselves for started as attempts to feel less alone, less exposed, less overwhelmed.

The problem isn’t that they soothe us. It’s that they often reinforce the very state they’re trying to protect us from.

If you drink to take the edge off loneliness, but you’re doing it alone or numbing out in a room full of people, the loneliness doesn’t resolve. It gets postponed.

If you overwork to outrun inadequacy, your worth becomes even more tied to output.

If you people-please to avoid rejection, you may stay connected, but at the cost of being known.

If you shut down emotionally so you won’t get hurt, you also block the intimacy you want.

The strategy lowers the intensity in the moment. But over time, it can quietly build the original pain into the structure of your life.

Protective responses are intelligent. They are trying to organize around something that once felt unmanageable. But when a coping strategy repeatedly moves you away from connection, rest, honesty, or support, it can end up sustaining the very wound it formed around.

Seeing that clearly changes the tone of the work.
It’s no longer about shaming the behavior or excusing it. It’s about asking, “What is this helping me avoid?” and “Is there a way to meet that need that doesn’t deepen the isolation, pressure, or disconnection?”

02/24/2026

There’s a difference between being compassionate and being codependent.

👉Compassion says, I care about what you’re going through.

👉Codependency says, Now it’s my responsibility to fix it.

When someone you love is upset, struggling, or overwhelmed, it’s natural to feel it with them. But when their mood, their outcome, or their stress starts to determine your internal state — something shifts.
You’re no longer just caring, you’re managing.

And often, fixing feels easier than tolerating the discomfort of someone else’s emotion.

But over time, that pattern is exhausting. It blurs the line between support and self-abandonment. It quietly trains you to monitor everyone else before you check in with yourself.

If this sounds familiar, and I are going deeper into it in our Learning Lab, Beyond People-Pleasing, on March 30.

Terri is a psychotherapist and boundary expert, and together we’ll explore how patterns like this often begin in childhood environments where connection felt tied to being responsible, agreeable, or useful — and how those adaptations follow us into adult relationships.

We’ll look at what it actually takes to move toward greater self-respect without losing care for others.

🔗Learn more: https://www.frankandersonmd.com/learning-lab/beyond-people-pleasing

For a lot of people, this just feels normal. It feels like being dependable. Capable. The person who handles things and ...
02/22/2026

For a lot of people, this just feels normal. It feels like being dependable. Capable. The person who handles things and tries to do the right thing. The one who doesn’t make life harder for anyone else.

And stepping up isn’t the problem. We all do that.
It’s when it becomes automatic — when you’re always the one smoothing things over, taking on more, reworking your “no,” staying longer than you want to — that it’s worth paying attention.

Over time, it can turn into chronic resentment and a steady pressure to keep everyone okay. You carry more than your share, and your own needs start to fade in the background.

Most people don’t connect this to the relational environments that shaped them early on. They assume it’s just their personality. Their work ethic. Being a good person.

But if staying agreeable, capable, or low-impact once helped preserve connection, it makes sense that your system would keep repeating it.

What once protected closeness can quietly keep you overextended.

and I are going deeper into this in Beyond People-Pleasing, a two-part learning lab on trauma-informed boundaries.

Click here for more details: https://www.frankandersonmd.com/learning-lab/beyond-people-pleasing

02/20/2026

Sometimes it’s not just a stressful day. It’s the anger you buried, the grief you don’t want to touch, the loneliness that creeps in at night, or the activation in your body after a hard conversation. You just want it to stop.

In those moments, it makes sense to reach for something that takes the edge off. And it works. You feel better in the moment.

What I want people to understand is that numbing isn’t neutral.

When you repeatedly numb out, you’re not just dampening stress. You start losing access to your internal signals. You get disconnected from your truth, from what you’re actually feeling, and over time, from other people.

Unprocessed emotion doesn’t evaporate. It shifts lanes.

It shows up physically. Stress chemistry stays elevated. Your immune system takes a hit. You carry more tension than you realize.

It shows up emotionally. Irritability. Reactivity. A shorter fuse.

And it shows up relationally. You’re less available. Less connected. You snap more easily. Or you withdraw.

The issue isn’t the drink or the joint by itself. It’s the pattern of disconnection. If every uncomfortable feeling gets pushed away, there’s no opportunity to process it. And if it doesn’t get processed, it doesn’t go away. It resurfaces in different forms.

The work isn’t about never coping. It’s about increasing your capacity to stay with what’s there, so you can remain connected to yourself and the people around you.

——
I talk more about this in my conversation with . You can watch or listen to the full episode at the link in my bio.

Validation is essential in trauma healing. Many people grew up having their reality minimized or dismissed, so being acc...
02/19/2026

Validation is essential in trauma healing. Many people grew up having their reality minimized or dismissed, so being accurately seen can be deeply regulating. But validation isn’t meant to freeze your perspective in place. 

When every thought and conclusion is reinforced without challenge, validation can quietly turn into an echo chamber.

Healthy validation says, “Your reaction makes sense.” It also leaves room for growth, complexity, and revisiting old conclusions. 

The goal isn’t constant agreement. It’s support strong enough to help you face what’s uncomfortable and expand beyond it.

Most coping patterns don’t start as problems. They start as relief.Something felt overwhelming, unpredictable, or emotio...
02/19/2026

Most coping patterns don’t start as problems. They start as relief.

Something felt overwhelming, unpredictable, or emotionally costly. And a behavior reduced it.

Maybe it dulled anxiety. Maybe it ended a conflict. Maybe it created distance. Maybe it created a brief sense of control.

Even small reductions in distress get encoded. The brain prioritizes what lowers pressure.

With repetition, that response becomes efficient. Fast. Automatic. Not because it’s ideal, but because it worked.

Then comes the second layer.
“I can’t believe I still do this.”
“This is unhealthy.”
“Why am I like this?”

That self-criticism feels responsible. But it increases stress. And when stress rises, the system reaches for what it has already learned reduces it.

So the cycle strengthens:
distress → behavior → relief → shame → more distress → stronger pull toward the behavior.

This is why shame rarely interrupts a coping pattern. It reinforces the learning by increasing the very pressure the behavior was built to manage.

Lasting change usually begins earlier in the sequence. Not by escalating pressure, but by understanding what the behavior has been protecting you from.

Two siblings can experience the same parent and the same rupture, and their lives can unfold in radically different ways...
02/13/2026

Two siblings can experience the same parent and the same rupture, and their lives can unfold in radically different ways.

Years later, siblings can look at each other and feel genuinely confused by how different their lives look.

It’s not that one remembers incorrectly, exaggerates the pain, or was simply stronger. It’s that each learned something different about closeness, loss, and safety while trying to get through the same rupture.

In the moment, both were coping. Just differently.

One sibling may be the one who remembers the fights clearly. The waiting. The sense that something fragile could fall apart at any time. They track the parent who left or withdrew, trying to understand them, stay close, or make sense of what went wrong. With little support, the work happens internally. That strategy helps them get through then, but later it can show up in how pain is held, how relationships are navigated, or how much effort it takes to feel steady.

Another sibling may have had more support without it ever being named as such. A teacher who noticed. Friends whose homes felt calmer. A grandparent who offered consistency. Or an older sibling who absorbed some of the emotional weight. Their coping still forms, but alongside moments of relief and steadiness, which can shape how closeness, stress, and responsibility are carried later.

Sometimes siblings were treated differently by the same parent. One was leaned on. One was protected. One was expected to understand. One was allowed to avoid. Both adaptations were intelligent responses to what was happening at the time.

Those early lessons don’t disappear. They quietly shape how adulthood is navigated.

Healing can start to feel strangely exhausting, even when you’re doing everything “right.”Not because you aren’t trying ...
02/12/2026

Healing can start to feel strangely exhausting, even when you’re doing everything “right.”

Not because you aren’t trying hard enough, but because growth doesn’t organize itself the way we’re often taught to pursue it.

It doesn’t respond well to urgency, multitasking, or constant self-monitoring. It responds to sequence, repetition, and time spent with fewer things that actually get to land.

A lot of people aren’t stuck. They’re just carrying too much at once, moving on too quickly, or expecting clarity to do the work that experience usually does.

If any of these slides felt familiar, that’s not a verdict. It’s information. And information can quietly change how you move forward.

You don’t need to do all of it. You just need to stay with what’s already working long enough for it to take root.

One of the most misunderstood parts of healing is how relational it actually is.When pain happens, the body looks for mo...
02/10/2026

One of the most misunderstood parts of healing is how relational it actually is.

When pain happens, the body looks for more than understanding. It looks for connection.

Another person’s presence helps the nervous system register that the experience didn’t just happen in isolation. That something landed. That the intensity could come down. That there was a shift after the pain.

This is why connection is so powerful for healing. Not because it fixes what happened, but because it helps the body register that the moment passed.

When pain is met in this way, it’s more likely to settle into the past. When it isn’t, the body keeps responding as if the moment is still relevant.

This is also why healing rarely happens alone. We are wired to make sense of pain, release it, and move forward in the presence of others.

And that connection doesn’t have to come from the person who caused the harm. What allows pain to finally rest is accurate witnessing, wherever that comes from.

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30 Domino Drive
Concord, MA
01742

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