Solo Sessions #01: The Psychology of People-Pleasing (And How to Break the Cycle)
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概要
People-pleasing isn’t just about being “too nice.” For many of us, it’s a learned survival strategy.
In the very first episode of Applied Mind: Solo Sessions, Eddie unpacks the psychology behind people-pleasing — why it forms, why it feels so hard to stop, and how it’s often rooted in attachment patterns, fear of abandonment, and nervous system responses rather than personality flaws.
This episode explores how people-pleasing shows up in everyday life — at work, in friendships, in relationships — and why it can quietly erode self-esteem, create imbalance, and leave you feeling exhausted, resentful, or invisible. Through relatable scenarios and grounded psychological explanations, Eddie breaks down concepts like anxious attachment, the fawn response, emotional suppression, and why logic alone doesn’t calm attachment anxiety.
Most importantly, this episode isn’t about “fixing” yourself. It’s about understanding why your system learned these patterns and how real change comes from creating safety, self-awareness, boundaries, and authenticity — not self-criticism.
In this episode, we cover:
What people-pleasing really is (and what it isn’t)
How fear of abandonment and attachment shape our behaviour
Why people-pleasing can feel automatic and hard to stop
The fawn response and emotional suppression
How over-giving impacts relationships
Practical strategies for setting boundaries without guilt
The difference between being kind and abandoning yourself
This episode is grounded in psychological research and lived experience. It’s not therapy or professional advice — but it is an honest, compassionate deep-dive into a pattern many of us struggle with, especially in our twenties.
If you’ve ever said yes when you meant no, felt anxious about disappointing others, or struggled to feel safe being fully yourself — this one’s for you.