Are you saying ‘yes’ when you mean ‘no’, avoiding confrontation and putting the needs of others above your own? Being a chronic people-pleaser could be affecting your mental and physical wellbeing – it’s time to quit.
Ever been told you’re ‘so nice’? It’s a compliment, right? Well, yes – as long as you’re not too nice. Agreeableness itself isn’t the problem, says Renée Tobin, a psychology professor at Illinois State University. People who get along with others tend to do well in life. But when you sacrifice your happiness to keep others happy, it can become a problem. ‘Trouble can arise if niceness is driven by insecurity, or if people suppress their negative emotions, which can manifest itself as ill health,’ she says.
Being a nice-a-holic is something women in particular struggle with. ‘We’re socialised to feel responsible for the feelings and wellbeing of those around us,’ says Julie de Azevedo Hanks, PhD, a licensed clinical social worker and author of The Assertiveness Guide for Women.
‘It’s all about fear, really,’ says Dr Mark Hyman, founder and medical director of the Ultra Wellness Center in Lenox, Massachusetts, and a self-confessed nice-a-holic (and proof that it’s not an inherently female problem). ‘Being nice and saying “yes” when I mean “no”, or not telling people when I’m disappointed, or not holding them accountable for things they agreed to, at work or in my personal life, causes me all sorts of problems. First, it makes me unhappy, sleep poorly, angry and irritated, and the stress it causes me makes me feel tired and icky…When I’m not honest, I create a war within myself and create conflict around me. I deprive myself, and everyone around me, of authentic, profound relationships.’
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