Nicole Byrne, LMFT
 

What Is People-Pleasing and Why Can't I Stop?

People-pleasing isn't about being kind or thoughtful. It's a pattern where:

  • You say "yes" when you want to say "no" - and then feel resentful afterward
  • You're constantly replaying conversations in your head, wondering if you upset someone
  • You feel responsible for everyone's happiness - even when you're barely hanging on
  • You keep the peace even when it means ignoring your own needs
  • You're so used to helping others that you've forgotten how to ask for help yourself

You didn't choose this. Your nervous system learned that being agreeable, helpful, or invisible was what kept you safe.

Maybe you were the peacekeeper. Maybe love felt conditional on being “good.” Maybe being helpful was the only way you felt seen.

That’s the fawn response. And even if you understand the pattern… you can’t just think your way out of it - because it lives in your body, not just your thoughts.

But this can change.

Your body can learn that boundaries don’t equal abandonment. That you can disappoint someone… and still be okay.

 

How Do I Know If I'm a People-Pleaser?

People-pleasing goes deeper than just "being nice."

It's when you:

  • Scan the room to see how everyone else is feeling before you decide how YOU feel
  • Over-explain and over-apologize for basic needs and preferences
  • Feel like you're walking on eggshells in your own relationships
  • Struggle to make decisions because you're worried about disappointing someone
  • Feel exhausted from trying to earn love by being agreeable and accommodating

The cost? You've disappeared in your own life. You're the one who keeps everything running - but you barely recognize yourself anymore.

If you're nodding along, you're not alone. Many high-achieving women struggle with this exact pattern.

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How This Work Actually Helps

In our work, we start to interrupt the pattern:

Overthinking → overgiving → resentment → shutting down → self-blame

We slow things down enough for you to notice what’s happening in real time -
not to judge it, but to understand it.

So those reactions stop feeling automatic…
and start feeling like something you actually have a say in.

I use EMDR, ACT, and nervous system work to support that process.

 
 

Can Therapy Help Me Stop People-Pleasing?

Yes - when it works at the root, not just the surface.

Most approaches focus on being more assertive or setting better boundaries.
But that doesn’t always work - because it doesn’t address what’s underneath:

Inviting floor space with cushions and plant – people-pleasing therapy with Nicole Byrne, LMFT

The pattern that says your worth depends on being easy, agreeable, and helpful.

You can see it in real life:

You walk into a room and immediately scan for who’s upset
You say “of course” before you’ve even checked in with yourself
Someone seems off, and you start replaying everything you might have done wrong

That’s your nervous system in fawn mode.

And you didn’t choose it - you learned it.

That’s why boundaries feel so hard.
Because your body still reads “no” as a threat - not a choice.

In our work, we focus on shifting that pattern.

Not by forcing yourself to act differently -
but by helping your nervous system learn that you’re safe to:

✨ say no without panic
✨ disappoint someone without losing them
✨ stop overthinking every interaction
✨ show up as yourself without shrinking

If you’ve tried therapy before and still feel stuck…

That doesn’t mean you’re the problem.
It usually means the work didn’t go deep enough.

Here, we focus on real change - not just understanding the pattern, but actually shifting it.

You don’t have to keep living this way.

 

If you’re starting to see yourself in this, these might help you go deeper:

What Are Common People-Pleasing Patterns?

Why You Can't Stop Feeling Responsible (Even When You Know Better)

You know you're over-functioning. You can see the pattern. So why can't you stop? Because the pattern lives in your nervous system - not your thoughts.

What Is Fawning? The Trauma Response No One Talks About

For years, I've talked about people-pleasing. But lately, I've been learning something deeper: people-pleasing isn't always just a pattern. Sometimes, it's a trauma response. And when that's the case? We call it fawning.

a woman overwhelmed from over functioning

10 Signs You're Over-Functioning (And What to Do About It)

You're the one who keeps things running. The invisible glue holding it all together. But here's the truth: You're not doing this because you're "just really responsible." Here are 10 signs you're over-functioning—and what to do about it.

 

Who Is People-Pleasing Therapy For?

This is for you if…

✅ You feel responsible for everyone else’s happiness, but your own needs barely make the list.


 ✅ You say “yes” when you want to say “no”…and then spiral with guilt or resentment.


✅ You’re tired of trying to earn love by being agreeable, accommodating, or “easy.”


 ✅ You understand the pattern, but changing it still feels impossible


✅ You want relationships where you don’t have to disappear to feel connected.

 

This might not be for you if…

🚫 You’re looking for a quick fix.


🚫 You’re not ready to look at what’s underneath the pattern


🚫 You want others to change first before you’re willing to do something different

 

What Happens If Nothing Changes?

Imagine it’s six months from now…

Woman holding coffee in her lap – reflecting on people-pleasing and therapy for change

You're still overcommitting. Still walking on eggshells. Still wondering if it's even okay to want more.

Now imagine a different outcome:

You're saying no without spiraling. You're resting without apology. You're showing up in your life as YOU.

Current-you might think, "I'll call next week."

But future-you is begging you not to wait.

Over time, your nervous system adjusts to constantly scanning for other people's needs. You forget what it feels like to trust your own judgment. And you begin to wonder if this people-pleasing version of you is just how life is now.

But what if it doesn't have to be?

What if therapy helped you find space to show up as yourself - without the performance, without the guilt?

 

Learn More About People-Pleasing Recovery

I recently discussed people-pleasing patterns, burnout, and trustworthy relationships on the "Say Hello to Your Therapist" podcast. If you want to hear more about my approach:




Common Questions About People Pleasing Therapy

  • It’s hard to imagine speaking up without losing connection. But boundaries aren’t walls—they’re bridges. When we’re clear and kind, we build more trust—not less.

    → Read: How to Say No Without Ruining Your Relationships

  • You’ve been taught that your needs come last. But honoring yourself isn’t selfish—it’s how we show up honestly in relationships that matter.

    → Read: How to Set Boundaries When You Hate Disappointing People

  • When your identity is wrapped up in pleasing others, it’s scary to do things differently. But being easygoing shouldn’t cost you your energy, voice, or sense of self.

    → Read: People Pleasing Feels Safer. But It's Also Draining You

  • Disappointment is uncomfortable—but it doesn’t mean you’ve done something wrong. It often means you’ve done something honest. And that’s where real connection begins.

    You don’t have to go from over-accommodating to stone-cold overnight.

    We’ll take it one honest step at a time—together.

    → Read: What to Do When They Won't Take No for an Answer

 

You’re Not Asking for Too Much

You’re allowed to want relationships where you don’t have to shrink yourself.

✨ Boundaries that feel kind, not harsh
✨ Relationships where you don’t have to perform
✨ A voice that actually feels like your own
✨ More clarity, more steadiness, more space to breathe

You don’t have to figure this out alone.
You just have to take the first step.

How to Get Started

Desk with laptop – symbolizing online therapy for women feeling stuck in people-pleasing patterns
  1. Schedule a free 20-minute consultation

  2. We’ll talk through what’s going on and see if it feels like a fit

  3. If it does, we’ll schedule your first session

All sessions are online across California and Nevada.

No pressure. Just a real conversation.

👉 Schedule your free consultation

Prefer email? Reach out at nicole@counselingwithnicole.com