For a long time, I thought my ability to anticipate the needs of others was a gift.
I thought being easygoing, flexible, low maintenance, and endlessly accommodating made me easier to love.
What I did not yet understand was that much of what I called kindness was actually fear. What I thought was a strength was, in many ways, a survival strategy shaped in childhood.
I was not just caring.
I was people-pleasing.
My journey toward healing didn’t happen overnight, it came in layers and from unlikely sources. It began with a new friend recommending the book Attached, which opened my eyes to attachment styles and how I sought safety in relationships.
Next, I dove into Vienna Pharaon’s The Origins of You, which helped me go deeper into understanding the wounds beneath the pattern.
But insight alone was not enough.
I needed to see how these patterns had actually been living in me.
So I sat down and looked carefully at my significant intimate relationships.
For each one, I asked myself three hard questions:
Once I stopped looking only at how I had been treated and started looking at the energy I had been bringing into those relationships, a pattern became impossible to ignore.
At the beginning of relationships, my people-pleasing often looked attractive. I was attentive, adaptable, and willing.
But over time, something would shift.
In some relationships, respect began to erode.
The harder truth was this: every time I repeatedly abandoned myself, I quietly taught others that my needs were negotiable, my truth was flexible, and my self-respect was optional.
Once I saw the pattern clearly, the work changed.
It was no longer about being liked.
It was no longer about being chosen.
It was no longer about proving I was good enough by how much I could give.
It became about coming back to myself.
Learning that self-respect is not selfish.
Learning that honesty is kinder than performance.
Learning that peace built on self-erasure is not peace at all.
Respecting myself does not mean I no longer care deeply about others.
It means I no longer disappear in order to care.
I feel more grounded now.
Calmer.
Clearer.
The performance is falling away, and in its place someone more honest is emerging, someone I respect, admire, and am no longer afraid to let the world see.
You were not made to fit into someone else’s box.
You were made to know yourself.
You were made to respect yourself.
You were made to live from what is true.
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