Ending the People-Pleasing Cycle That’s Suffocating You

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These 3 simple keys will set you free from addiction to approval from people.

Besides the moral calling of my God and Savior and the laws of the land, no one else needs to give me permission. There is no award in heaven for the person who gave everyone else everything they wanted. By doing that, you rob yourself of the God-given gifts and talents He’s given to you.

If we make decisions by giving other people’s expectations full weight, we remain stuck—in a job that we hate, in a relationship that is unhealthy, or stuck feeling miserable and depressed. That’s not the best for your life.

Choose the best. Choose your best.

It’s Okay to Disappoint People

My former pastor is one of the wisest men I have ever known. Justin and I still use the advice from our pre-marital counseling sessions and in the first year of our marriage, arguments were always won with, “If I call Shan, what do you think he’ll say?” I think he may have received a couple of phone calls after the other person staunchly refused to back down.


In the hallway after a Wednesday night service, I heard the words that began the seismic shift in my thinking. I was sitting on one of the benches lining the walls waiting for my friends. There was a bit of tension and a small group of adults had gathered outside of the church offices.

From the context, I gathered that someone was mad about a decision Shan had made or something he had done, yet the leaders weren’t upset with him. In church world, someone is always causing a stink about something. Often times, over the nonessentials like, “The soda machine is out of diet Coke. I can’t praise Jesus until I have my caffeinated artificial sweetener.” True story.

Whatever the case, I remember the beginning of Shan’s words: “My God loves me, my wife loves me, and it doesn’t matter … ” I assumed that the end of that sentence was ” … it doesn’t matter what so-and-so thinks.”

Regardless, it was a beautiful representation of perspective that fell on thirsty ears. It also became my personal bridge from people-pleasing to accurately deciding if my decisions would hurt or negatively affect the people who truly matter.


We are an opinionated society and the technology at our fingertips allows everyone with internet access the ability to bestow their thoughts on our lives. If we constantly live and act in the fear that someone somewhere will be disappointed, the only true shame will be that we didn’t live our lives fully.

To Protect My “Yes,” I Need an Army of “No’s”

The 80/20 rule applies in almost every aspect of life. Just 20% of the people do 80% of the work and a number of other variations to the expression. However, it begs a question. Are the 20% just really bad at saying no?

Often we’re burdened by the cause of the organization. We want our women’s church group to do well. We want a ladies’ Bible study. We want the Girl Scout fundraiser to make a lot of money. So we saddle our appointment calendars with events that don’t fulfill our purpose, but the purpose of someone else.

Where is our filter?

How do we decide, with all the wonderful things with which we are presented, the ones we are fully equipped to do?


Nehemiah is an amazing example of this. In fact, when I read his words, I pulled out my trusty label maker and affixed the quote to my laptop. I had to split it into two pieces so I wouldn’t cover the internal camera. It sits at eye level so I will never forget.

“I’m doing a good work and I cannot come down” (Neh 6:3)

The people were asking him to stop building the wall because they needed his help. They truly needed him. Yet he said no. He turned away the good to focus on the better.

Will someone die if we say no? Is there a life that hangs in the balance? Have I been so specially trained that I am literally the only person who can accomplish the task? Am I so wrapped up in my own self-importance that I can perform the job better than everyone else?

No. No. No. Maybe.


What is your “why”?

What is unique and special about your gifts and how will you protect them?

What amazing blessings are you losing out on because you said “yes” to the mundane? What relationships are you never going to experience because you said “yes” to the first person who asked?

“No” won’t kill you.


Write down what’s important to you. Decide your filter.

When someone asks you to participate in something, run it through the gamut. Here’s what I was taught to say, perhaps in a Beth Moore Bible study, I can’t remember who, but I remember the words:

“Thank you so much for thinking of me. I’m going to have to pass.”

No. Explanation. Required.


We tell people about our whole lives. We make excuses. Just say, “I have to pass.”

It’s hard at first, but it will become liberating!

The Recovering People-Pleaser Mantra

For the recovering people-pleasers out there, this is our mantra:

It’s okay for me to choose what I want.


I have the freedom to disappoint people.

In order to protect my “yes,” I need an army of “no’s.”

And in the meantime, we’ll still give people precedent, treating others like we want to be treated, but we’ll choose to spend our time doing what truly matters and what falls in line with the purpose of our lives.

Bethany Jett is an award-winning author whose life changed dramatically when she attended her first writers conference. She won Writer of the Year, signed with the MacGregor Literary Agency, and sold her debut book The Cinderella Rule: a Young Woman’s Guide to Happily Ever After (Revell)which became a Selah Awards finalist. She is now a collaborative writer for MacGregor Literary, working on proposals for celebrity and high-profile clients. Her latest project is as the writer for Eyes of Hope, which releases early 2017.


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