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These are People Pleaser Problems

Irina Zhuravleva
por 
Irina Zhuravleva, 
 Matador de almas
7 minutos de leitura
Blogue
Novembro 05, 2025

Are there other people-pleasers out there who recognize this pattern — where you can’t bring up feeling alone or neglected on the good days because you’re terrified of spoiling the moment, and you also can’t raise it on the bad days because they’re already unpleasant and you don’t want to make them worse? So you tell yourself it must not be a big deal, while a bitter, persistent resentment quietly grows inside you. Eventually one of two things tends to happen. Option one: you never voice the underlying hurt, but it leaks out in small, passive-aggressive comments — like when your partner leaves the butter knife on the counter instead of putting it in the dishwasher and you snap something pointed like “I guess everything’s always my responsibility.” They brush you off, invalidate your feelings, and that dismissal lights a fuse; you erupt in an explosion of anger that blindsides them. In that moment all the careful practice you’d imagined — the vulnerability, the calm communication skills — disappears, replaced by a torrent of assumptions, criticisms, and judgments that you know will start a fight. Once the outburst is over you’re left feeling ashamed, and worse, they tell you you overreacted. They’re probably right, and you know you could have handled it better, but pride stops you from saying sorry because in your head they’re the ones who should apologize for all the other things. Option two: you manage to find the courage to address the issue honestly and vulnerably, owning your feelings, being mindful of their triggers, asking for what you need without demanding it — and their response is something like “your feelings aren’t my problem, sorry.” So what can be done? The only viable path is to learn to advocate for yourself. You have a right to bring up what matters to you with your partner. That doesn’t mean being a constant complainer — healthy, thriving relationships actively choose to show appreciation, admiration, affection, and respect for one another. But strong partnerships are also able to absorb a partner saying, “That hurt me — can we talk about it?” without dismissing or invalidating the person who’s vulnerable. If your relationship can’t tolerate that — if one of you is too afraid to speak up or one of you refuses to accept your partner’s complaint or negative feeling — then the relationship is not, in my view, on sustainable footing. Keep in mind we can’t control other people; we can only control ourselves. We can decide not to bury our pain, not to be silenced in our most significant relationship, to speak up for our needs, and not to pretend everything is fine when it isn’t. We can learn to express emotions in healthier ways, to set firm boundaries around toxic behaviors, and to accept that we cannot compel someone else to show up differently. Certain actions only drive more distance and disconnection, and we can’t force another person to refrain from particular words, reactions, or responses. The key question becomes: will this relationship ever meet my legitimate needs — kindness, respect, consideration, appreciation, attention? If the honest answer is no, it’s possible to remain for a variety of reasons people stay, but you cannot reasonably be surprised when you feel lonely or emotionally disconnected — avoiding that outcome requires two willing partners.

Practical steps to stop burying your feelings and start advocating for yourself:

Short scripts you can try

Short scripts you can try

Final note: change rarely happens all at once. Start small, be consistent, and reward effort. If your partner responds with curiosity and care, you’ll likely feel safer bringing up things earlier and in less charged ways. If they respond with dismissal or hostility, that response is meaningful data about whether the relationship can meet your legitimate emotional needs. You deserve a partnership where your voice can be heard without fear of punishment or persistent minimization — and learning to speak up is both an act of self-respect and a test of whether your relationship can grow alongside you.

Final note: change rarely happens all at once. Start small, be consistent, and reward effort. If your partner responds with curiosity and care, you’ll likely feel safer bringing up things earlier and in less charged ways. If they respond with dismissal or hostility, that response is meaningful data about whether the relationship can meet your legitimate emotional needs. You deserve a partnership where your voice can be heard without fear of punishment or persistent minimization — and learning to speak up is both an act of self-respect and a test of whether your relationship can grow alongside you.

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