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.