Sunday, February 25, 2018
Saturday, February 17, 2018
Are You Unable To Say No?
If yes is your answer to
the above question, then you are a People Pleaser
One common behavioral
pattern I have seen over and over again among people who are unable to lose
weight or otherwise manage their health is the People Pleaser.
A People Pleaser is one of
the nicest and most helpful people you know.
They never say “no.”
You can always count on
them for a favor.
In fact, they spend a
great deal of time doing things for other people.
They get their work done,
help others with their work, make all the plans, and are always there for
family members and friends.
So far this sounds
like a good thing.
Unfortunately, it can be
an extremely unhealthy pattern of behavior.
Consider the story of
Janet.
Janet is a 42 year old mother
of 2 boys, 11 and 13. She works full-time as a nurse. She is 50 pounds
over weight and hasn't lost any weight after 10 weeks in our weight loss
program, so we sit down to figure out what might be wrong. She says she hasn’t
started exercising or keeping a diet journal and she continues to eat fast
food several times a week. She tells me, “I'm too busy. My only
chance is to get up at 5am and go walking but I then get up and realize how
much there is to do. I find myself getting distracted making lunches,
getting on the computer to respond to emails, and other things around the
house. I can’t exercise after work because I have to drive straight to the
boy’s games. Jack has soccer on Wed and Sat. Jason has baseball on
Tuesdays and then karate on Friday. By the time we get home we are starving so
I just throw something together quick or get drive thru if I haven’t planned
dinner in advance. After dinner I feel guilty and start planning dinner
for the next day, after that it’s probably 9pm and I’m ready to crash. I
also have to make it out to the nursing home to see my grandmother twice a
week, which I fit in on the weekend or a day the kids don’t have a game.
I’m exhausted. There just is no time.”
Janet is a People
Pleaser. All of her time revolves around taking care of other
people. When she says she has no time to exercise, she is right.
She definitely can’t exercise if she wants to keep to all of these commitments.
Why am I a People Pleaser?
Typically, the intense
need to please and care for others is deeply rooted in either a fear of
rejection and/or fear of failure.
Fear of Rejection is the underlying feeling that, “If I don’t do everything I can to make this
person happy they might leave or stop caring for me.”
Fear of Rejection can come
from early relationships in which love was conditional or in which
you were rejected/abandoned by an important person in your life (parent left or
was emotionally unavailable or inconsistently available).
Fear of Failure is the underlying feeling that “If I make a mistake, I will disappoint people
and/or be punished.”
Fear of failure can arise
from early experiences with severe punishment for even small
mistakes.
People who had highly
critical parents may develop a people-pleasing pattern.
Early experiences with
harsh criticism or punishment can lead to significant anxiety upon attempting a
task.
Even though the parent or
other important person in your life who doled out the criticism may no longer
be in your life, anxiety is an emotion that can live on for a very long
time.
To deal with that anxiety,
we do everything we can to get things right, finish the job, and make sure
everybody is happy.
Regardless of the origins,
consistently putting others needs above your own can develop into the following
5 pretty bad consequences. I suggest some solutions for each.
1. Neglect self
People Pleasers devote
very little time to taking care of their own health. Their efforts
towards taking care of others usurps time they need to be active, de-stress,
plan healthy meals, etc. As a result they may be more prone to health
problems.
If you are a People
Pleaser your heart is in the right place. Wanting to take care of others is not
a bad thing and if more people had a little bit of what you have, the world
would be a better place.
However, you cannot do
this at the expense of yourself. A balance is needed. Consider that
taking care of yourself makes you better equipped to take care of others by
giving you the energy and vitality to do it even better than you are now.
Imagine you are driving a
Red Cross truck delivering food and water to hurricane victims. If you
are in such a hurry to get to every single victim that you don’t stop once in a
while to refuel the truck, eventually you will be stalled on the side of the
road helping no one.
Think of the time you put
into exercise, de-stressing, and eating healthy as your fuel stops.
2. Passive
Aggression And/Or Resentment
Over time, Janet is likely
to find herself silently angry at the people in her life. Her desire to
be kind will suppress that anger but unexpressed anger often turns into
passive aggression.
We are being passive
aggressive when we make sharp comments, crack sarcastic jokes, or make subtle
actions that let a little of our negative feelings seep out (e.g., doing the favor
but in a half-assed fashion).
Making matters worse,
mounting resentment is the biggest destroyer of relationships.
Communicating your
feelings is the only way to avoid resentment, although it requires taking the
risk that the other person might not be happy to hear that you are upset or
they may not take responsibility for what has upset you.
The outcome doesn’t matter
as much as the fact that you spoke up for yourself.
Speaking up also puts
people on notice that they will be informed when they have done something that
has upset you. This alone can make people tread more lightly.
3. Reduces
Ability To Enjoy Other People And Activities
At one point Janet made
the guilt-laden confession that she didn’t even enjoy going to her son’s ball
games. She said she feels so stressed while she’s there, thinking of all
the things she still needs to get done that it takes away from her ability to
enjoy the game.
I really can’t imagine
that her son doesn’t pick up on his mom’s lack of enthusiasm.
Your level of engagement
in an activity or a person is impossible to hide. What message do we send our loved ones by being
present but disengaged?
Being present but
disengaged is not better than being absent.
By attending less
frequently and recharging herself in the interim, she would get more enjoyment
from his games and be more of an active and engaged participant in her son’s
life.
4. Stress And
Depression
The definition of stress
is having more demands than you can handle.
People Pleasing can turn
into a vicious cycle of chronic stress and unhealthy behaviors.
If you have the constant
feeling like you are too busy and doing everything for everyone else but
yourself, you might be stuck in this cycle.
Stress and depression can
be medicated but that won’t break the cycle. If pulling out of the cycle
seems overwhelming, identify one small place you can start.
Identify one responsibility you have taken on
that you can cancel to free up some time for yourself. Work from there.
Find one person in your
life to share your plan with and ask them to help you implement it.
5. Be Taken
Advantage Of
By always saying yes
to requests for favors, people may begin to take advantage of your kindness by
asking for more than is reasonable.
Even worse, you may become
the target of exploitive people because they will quickly see that you can’t
say no and take as much as they can from you.
Even people who are
generally not exploitive may take advantage because they don’t realize that you
are overtaxing yourself and have difficulty understanding where your
boundaries are because you have set none.
Either way, requests from
other people will become overwhelming.
We teach people how to treat
us by the behavior we accept or reject from them.
If someone takes advantage
of you, it is only their fault once. After that it is your fault for not
teaching them different.
Teaching different means
setting boundaries about what you can and cannot do, and what you will and will
not accept.
Once you have established
this, sticking to it is important.
The other challenge is
that if everyone is used to you saying yes, they may feel disappointed or angry
when you begin to say no.
It is extremely important
to ignore feelings of guilt. You deserve to take care of yourself, it is
nothing to ever feel guilty about.
Keep reminding yourself of
the Red Cross Truck.
Source: Psychology Today
Thursday, February 1, 2018
Guess Who's Coming For Breakfast? - FEBRUARY
Thursday 1st
February 2018
February Is Here
People
The 2nd month of the year
2018 has just arrived and it has brought with it gifts that are worth working
for.
Do not for any reason miss
your own gift from February because like you know "all good and perfect
gifts come from God"
By the reason of His
Unction, I proclaim to you that in this month of February, God shall
*In blessing - bless you
beyond your imagination
*In providing - provide
for you that your cup would be running over
*In protection - protect
you from the hands of your enemies
*In shielding - shield you
from the vagaries of the weather, that they hurt you not
*He shall strengthen your
right hand that whatever you do shall prosper
*He shall quicken your
feetsteps that you go to where His goodness, mercy and favour shall follow you
*He shall make you a
conqueror and not the conquered
*He shall make you
victorious and not a victim
*He shall make you the
head and not the tail
*He shall make you the
lender and not the borrower
This month
Your destiny helper shall
locate you and
You shall fulfill your
destiny
The Almighty shall fulfill
His Words
Key into them
Whatever you need that is
yet to come, call it by name, be specific about it and He shall grant the
requests of your hungry soul in accordance with His Holy Will and His Riches in
Christ Jesus
It is well with your soul
You are blessed
Join me to welcome the
Month of February 2018
Let God continue to reign
supreme in our lives
#CarpeDiem
#DrJTF
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