Coach Kim: Stop being a people pleaser

Coach Kim: Stop being a people pleaser

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In this edition of LIFEadvice, Coach Kim shares a simple procedure for honoring your truth instead of pleasing others.

Question:

Coach Kim, I am in a very difficult family situation. My mother and her sister have a bad relationship, and my mom feels her sister is toxic and avoids her at family gatherings. I completely respect my mother’s decision; however, she expects me to also not have any relationship with my aunt. She says if I was loyal and loved her, then I wouldn’t have anything to do with my aunt either. This puts me in a hard spot because my aunt has always been kind to me. I don’t like confrontation and I don’t want to ignore her at family gatherings. It’s hard being caught in the middle, and no matter what I do no one wins. Thank you for any advice you can give.

Answer:

The real question behind your question is: When forced to choose between doing what feels right to you and pleasing someone else (sacrificing yourself to make another person happy), what should you do?

This is a situation we all find ourselves in on a regular basis. It is the reason we need boundaries, or rules to protect us from our tendency to over give.

I’d like to give you a simple procedure to break these situations down and help you make the right choice. If there is another person involved in this situation, take a minute to answer the following questions:

  • Are you seeing them as the same as yourself — a struggling, scared, divine and infinitely valuable human soul?
  • What are they afraid of in this situation: failure or loss? Failure means they are afraid of looking bad or feeling rejected, judged or inadequate. Loss means they are afraid of being mistreated, taken from, or not having things the way they want them to be.
  • What ego-driven behavior is showing up to protect them?
  • What could you give them that would quiet their fear?
  • What fear is in play for me in this situation?
  • How is it driving my behavior or reactions?
  • What are my options, in terms of responses?

Write down as many possible options as you can think of, then write an ego/fear-driven way to carry out each option and a trust/love way to do each option. Finally, cross out all the ego/fear-driven options.

I will take you through this process in your specific situation.

The fears in play

I think your mom has both fears in play. She is likely having a fear of loss issue because she is trying to protect herself from further mistreatment. She could also have fear of failure in play, which is saying she has to be right about her sister being the bad guy or she will feel inadequate or flawed. These fears cause her ego to step up to protect her.

Whenever we feel hurt or offended, our ego’s job is to create stories that make us feel safer. It often suggests stories that cast the other person as the villain so we can see ourselves as the victim.


Understanding the other person’s behavior as fear-driven will bring compassion into the picture. They aren’t messed up, broken or bad; they are just scared.

Ego tells us to hold onto our anger toward the other person or we won’t be safe; it keeps us in a defensive position and stubbornly insists on staying there to make us feel safe.

Understanding the other person’s behavior as fear-driven will bring compassion into the picture. They aren’t messed up, broken or bad; they are just scared. This is easy to see, too, because all bad behavior is driven by fear. (If you haven’t seen the truth around this yet, keep looking. It’s there)

When you see your mom is scared of failure and loss, you will also see what she needs: validation and reassurance. Your mom is afraid of mistreatment and afraid of being wrong. Her ego needs you to justify she is right in her anger because that would make her feel safer. If you can reassure her that she is loved, valued and safe in the world, that would help her.

Related:

It sounds like you have some fear of loss in play, as well. You don’t want to lose your relationship with your aunt and you don’t want to lose your relationship with your mom, either. You also don’t want to lose your agency and the right to choose behavior that is best for you. This is why the situation is causing you so much angst. You will feel better if you trust the universe will use this situation to bless and grow you, no matter what happens.

You also have every right to choose who you have relationships with, and your mom should honor that, but her fear and ego would feel safer if you would join her in anger. This isn’t fair, but you can understand why it happens. A sense of safety is our most foundational need as human beings. When we don’t feel safe, we are incapable of caring about others. Your mom is struggling to see your needs because fear keeps her overly focused on her own.

Ways to respond

As far as your options in this situation, I can see three (but notice that each option can be done two different ways, so really there are six):

  1. Tell your mom you can’t support her in rejecting your aunt because her behavior is immature and petty. Put mom in her place and call her out for her bad behavior, and even shame her for not forgiving her sister.
  2. Tell your mom you can’t support her in rejecting your aunt because you have to honor your heart, and it says to behave lovingly to everyone. Assure her you can understand her feelings and would never tell her she is wrong to have them, but let her know you must love yourself enough to make choices that feel right to you.
  3. Support your mom in rejecting your aunt because you don’t want mom to reject you. Go against your own ideas about right and wrong in order to get mom’s approval
  4. Support your mom in rejecting your aunt because you love her and you can see she needs this to make her feel safe.
  5. Get your mom and her sister to sit down together and hash this problem out because you need that to make yourself feel safe. Shame both of them for their immature behavior and insist they grow up and work this out.
  6. Get your mom and her sister to sit down together and hash this problem out because you love them and know healing this fight would make everyone feel better. Support both of them equally and find a therapist or coach who could mediate and help them process their feelings and fears.

Cross out options 1, 3, and 5 because they are fear-motivated and you shouldn’t make any decision for a fear reason.

Look over the love-motivated options and choose the one you feel the most capable to do or the one that feels right to you. Personally, I think option 2 or 6 are the best.

Executing your response

When you are ready to talk to your mom about this, start by asking her questions about how she is feeling about your aunt. Give her room to make her case and vent all her pain and fear. Do not agree or disagree, just validate her right to be where she is and feel how she feels. Tell her you can understand why she feels this way.

After she feels fully heard, ask if she would be willing to let you explain your decision on your own behavior. Ask her if she would honor your right to feel what you feel too.

Using mostly “I” statements, not “you” statements, explain to your mother that you must honor your truth and choose a love-motivated response to this situation. Explain that you love her, but you can’t reject or give a cold shoulder to other people. Having said that, you would never judge or condemn her for feeling what she is feeling. You honor and respect her right to be where she is, and you hope she can give you the same back.

Then, after you have spoken your truth and honored your own boundary, what she says, does, or thinks about you and your decision is not your problem. If she chooses to be mad at you, keep being loving toward her anyway. Do not let anyone else’s bad behavior stop you from being loving toward them. Stay consistently kind to everyone and, in the end, though her ego might be mad, she will respect your strength and maturity.

You can do this.

Last week's LIFEadvice:


Kimberly Giles

About the Author: Kimberly Giles

Kimberly Giles is a life coach, speaker and author. For more information on her practices and how to determine your dominant core fear and Relationship Shape Behavior, visit www.12shapes.com or www.claritypointcoaching.com.

Editor’s Note: Anything in this article is for informational purposes only. The content is not intended, nor should it be interpreted, to (a) be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition; (b) create, and receipt of any information does not constitute, a lawyer-client relationship. You should NOT rely upon any legal information or opinions provided herein. You should not act upon this information without seeking professional legal counsel; and (c) create any kind of investment advisor or financial advisor relationship. You should NOT rely upon the financial and investment information or opinions provided herein. Any opinions, statements, services, offers, or other information or content expressed or made available are those of the respective author(s) or distributor(s) and not of KSL. KSL does not endorse nor is it responsible for the accuracy or reliability of any opinion, information, or statement made in this article. KSL expressly disclaims all liability in respect to actions taken or not taken based on the content of this article.

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Coach Kim Giles is a master life coach and speaker who helps clients improve themselves and their relationships. She is the author of "Choosing Clarity: The Path to Fearlessness" and has a free clarity assessment available on her website. Learn more at claritypointcoaching.com.
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