Someone asks for something and you say YES with enthusiasm. Your stomach drops and your fists ball afterwards. You’re resentful, and you’re willing to rearrange your week to take care of that ‘yes’ anyway.
This is online therapy for women who've been the easy one, the flexible one, the one who never causes problems. The woman who is also empty, unmotivated, resentful and confused. If telling someone NO feels worse than doing the thing you dread, call me.
Online Therapy For People Pleasers in PA & NJ
Are you struggling to say NO? Pleasing others instead of taking good care of yourself?
You already know how this goes because it’s a pattern: you said yes again. You'll figure it out, and you always do. You'll squeeze it in, stay up later, cancel something for yourself and find the time and energy. And somewhere under the "no worries!" there's a quieter question you keep not asking: why did I say yes? I didn't even want this.
Now zoom out and look at things from a distance. The haircut your mom would approve of. The career your dad could brag about. The hobbies that are suspiciously identical to your partner's. In Matt Haig's The Midnight Library, Nora Seed gets to browse every life she could have lived while on the brink of death. Crazy thing is, almost none of her roads-not-taken were hers to begin with. Swimming was her dad's dream. The band was her brother's. The pub was her fiancé's. Australia was her best friend's. She spent decades starring as the supporting character in everyone else's story and called it her life. No wonder this character wasn't fulfilled when we first meet her.
This is an example of people pleasing, its consequences, its incredible power. Not just the exhausting yeses and the quiet resentment, but the slow trade where you swap out your own wants for everyone else's, one accommodation at a time, until you genuinely can't tell the difference anymore. Sound like you?
A tool for the tool box. Not the same as being kind.
People Pleasing: A Strategy
Kindness and people-pleasing are not the same thing.
Kindness is something you give. It comes from abundance, meaning you have it to give. You saw a need, you had the capacity, you chose to help. You could have said no, and the relationship would've survived. That's generosity, and it feels good because it was optional and on your terms.
People-pleasing is something you pay. It's a tax, and it's collected by fear. You learned in childhood that your needs were a little too much, a little too inconvenient, or just not the priority for the adult folks around you. So a strategy formed: keep everyone else comfortable, and you'll be safe. And it worked like a charm! It got you through childhood, through your family, through situations where your needs genuinely weren't safe to express.
You're an adult now, with your own life and your own limited hours in the day, and you're still running the same old strategy, though. The brain and body don’t know that you’re safe and ok, and that you don’t need to sacrifice you nor people please in order to get by. Everyone else's comfort first and yours last is the OLD blueprint.
People-pleasing leaves you depleted and weirdly resentful. Kindness leaves you smiling and feeling full. Let that be a simple guide to help you differentiate.
YOUR SASSY SHRINK
I’ll tell ya what’s happening when your body screams NO and your mouth says SURE.
I'm a Licensed Professional Counselor (LPC) and I've spent years sitting with women who walked in saying "I don't even know what I want anymore. Ask me what I want for dinner and I'll ask what you're in the mood for." That's not indecision. That's a want-muscle that hasn't been allowed to lift anything in years.
✓ You cannot disappoint me. This is one relationship where you don't have to manage my feelings, perform easiness, or earn your spot on the calendar
✓ We meet online, in a confidential, judgment-free space of your choosing, where "actually, I disagree" is welcomed
✓ You get therapeutic TLC built for how you're wired because your people-pleasing has a very specific origin story and deserves tailored support, not shame
What you can expect from me:
We figure out who you were pleasing first (Mom, Dad, etc). We rebuild the lost skill of knowing what you want (the one you were born with and lost when you were a kiddo). And we practice the stuff people-pleasing swears will end the world: saying no without explanation, disagreeing out loud, letting someone be briefly disappointed in you and discovering that you survive it.
Some of that happens in session. Some of it happens through Homeplay — small, doable practices between sessions that give you real reps in real situations, so you catch the automatic yes BEFORE it happens and choose to do something different. Ya know, something to please YOU, perhaps.
Pricing
Affordable rates; No hidden costs; Discounted packages
One-on-one therapy sessions
Our online therapy sessions are $200 per session. Commit to your goals and save up to 20% with packages of 10-20 sessions.
Lady Gaga was wrong on this one.
You were not born this way. Somebody applauded it.
People-pleasing is not a personality trait. It's a training program, and you got enrolled early, usually by people who genuinely loved you and had no idea what they were teaching. Your caregivers had their own stuff, too.
Maybe you grew up in a house where someone else's emotions took up all the room, and you learned to read them and manage them before they escalated. Maybe you watched what happened when someone did rock the boat : the sighs, the silence, the door slam. You decided the boat would never so much as wobble on your watch. And who could blame you for that?
Maybe you got gold stars for being easy, mature, "no trouble at all," and learned your worth was measured in how little you needed and how much you noticed. So you became fluent in other people. Their moods, their preferences, their almost-said sentences. And fluency in everyone else has a cost nobody mentions: you never got to study you.
None of this needed to be capital-T trauma. Usually it's a thousand small moments, repeated until they stopped feeling like transactions and started feeling like who you are and simply what you do. That's the cruelest part: people-pleasing doesn't feel like a strategy. It seems like who you are and how you’re meant to operate in the world.
Sassy truth: that’s just wrong.
Common Signs You’re People Pleasing (different from being kind/nice)
It lives in your calendar and it lives in your body. Here's what it looks like in the wild:
● You defer to your company when it comes to picking a dinner spot: “no really, you choose. what do you want to eat?”
● You offer to help because your blood is pumping fast and you’ll die waiting to be asked first to help do dishes or clean up
● You rehearse saying no for so long that the moment passes and you've already said yes
● Someone's tone shifts slightly and you spend the next hour thinking about everything you said
● You wear the ugly dress because Mom bought it and asked about it last time you saw her; not because you want to wear the dress
● The friend group throws a Super Bowl party at your house without asking. It’s assumed, and you simply don’t correct them.
● You apologize as a conversational lubricant, like you can’t chat with someone without the IM SORRY preface (for asking questions, for having preferences, for existing in hallways at work)
● You feel responsible for other people's moods and reactions that genuinely aren't yours to manage (your boss, your dog, your partner, your kid)
● Everyone calls you "so easygoing" and you feel a little sick every time you hear it; furrowed brows and clenching fists tell you that you hate it, actually
● Resentment builds toward people who don't even know you're giving anything as you've made it look effortless
● You know everyone's coffee order, pet’s name, and emotional triggers. Asked about your own shit though? BLANK
If half that list broke your heart: welcome. You're in exactly the right place, and we can tend to that aching heart.
The Shame Underneath the People-Pleasing
Sassy truth: underneath people-pleasing, there's almost always shame. Not shame about the people-pleasing itself, but more like shame about the alternative. Shame about what it would mean to take up space. Shame about the idea that your needs might be a burden. Shame, even, about the resentment you feel because "good" people aren't supposed to feel resentful about helping.
This is why "just say no" has never worked for you. It's not a skills gap, my girl. You know how to form the word "no." The problem is everything that lights up in your body when you imagine saying it: the fear of disappointing someone, the worry you'll be seen as difficult, the old, old feeling that your needs being visible means something bad is about to happen.
You can't logic your way past a shame response. You have to understand where it came from, and slowly, with practice, teaching your nervous system that taking up space doesn't actually end in disaster. (Sound familiar? Shame is kind of my thing — it gets its own page.)
Therapy for People Pleasing FAQ
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We meet virtually via video or phone from wherever you are in New Jersey or Pennsylvania. Together we untangle what's kindness (keep it, it's lovely) from what's fear in a kindness costume (examine it, don't obey it), and trace where the automatic yes was installed in the first place. Then we practice new responses until your nervous system believes them.
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Nope. And also, you’re gonna get real healthy selfish. Nobody has ever done this work and come out the other side a monster yet they do meet themselves. And that is inherently selfish. Your fear is the people-pleasing talking. You're never going to stop being thoughtful; honestly, it's one of your strengths. The goal isn't to flip a switch and become self absorbed in a way that hurts you and others. It's to add your own needs back into the equation, so it's not everyone else's comfort at your expense.
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Then great news: you get to keep that! The test isn't whether you enjoy giving, it's what happens when you don't give. If saying no feels like a preference, you're fine. If saying no feels like danger, that's not joy. Big difference.
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Def not. This work isn't a trial and nobody's getting subpoenaed. Most people-pleasing gets taught by people who were taught it themselves, especially mother to daughter, generation after generation. Understanding where the training came from is about proving it isn't a fact about you. We're ending the hand-me-down chain.
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Because homework is WORK and you already do enough for everyone. Homeplay is small, specific practices between sessions: saying "let me get back to you" instead of an instant yes, stating one real preference at dinner, disagreeing about something low-stakes on purpose. It's how the work gets into your actual life instead of staying in session.
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Some people might wobble! You've been subsidizing their comfort for years, and subsidies are nice. But watch what actually happens: the relationships worth keeping recalibrate and get more honest, because people finally get to know the real you instead of the performance. The ones that collapse the moment you have a need? That's data, my girl.
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$200 per session or packages of sessions with discounts. We also offer a free consultation call so you can see if we're a fit before spending a dime.
You are allowed (and supposed to) to take up space.
People-pleasing kept you safe once. It probably still feels like it's keeping you safe now, which is exactly why it's so hard to put down, even when you can see what it's costing you. But you're not in the environment that made this strategy necessary anymore. You get to find out what it feels like to have needs that matter: including to you.
Next time you feel the automatic yes forming, buy yourself thirty seconds. "Let me check my schedule and get back to you" is a complete sentence, and it's not rude, and it's not a lie. Use those thirty seconds to ask one question: what do I actually want here? And if the honest answer is "this is someone else's dream"... Congratulations, you just caught the reflex in the act. You don't have to act on the answer yet. Just start practicing the pause. Every time you notice the you with a preference of her own, she gets a little louder.
Tired of being everyone's person while no one is yours? Let's practice something different.
Not ready to book?
The Heard Woman on Substack is where I write about the stuff that brought you here — the people-pleasing, the anxiety, the relationships that leave you feeling invisible. Start there, see what lands, and when you're ready to go deeper, the call is waiting.