Lição 1
Seeing The Pattern
Today we look clearly at what people pleasing actually is, and how it shows up in your daily life. The constant apologising. The shape-shifting to keep everyone comfortable. The exhaustion of scanning every room for signs of displeasure. We name these behaviours without shame, because this isn't a character flaw, it's a survival mechanism that's outlived its usefulness. Recognition is the first step toward freedom.
Lição 2
Where This Came From
People pleasing doesn't come from nowhere. Somewhere along the way, you learned that your worth depended on keeping others happy. Today, we gently explore those roots, how that resourceful child you once were figured out what was needed to stay safe, to be loved, to survive. This isn't about blame. It's about understanding and offering compassion to the younger version of you who did the best they could with what they had.
Lição 3
The Lies We've Believed
Beneath every people-pleasing pattern are beliefs so deep they don't even feel like beliefs; they feel like truth. "If I just try harder, they'll finally be happy." "Saying no makes me selfish." "I'm responsible for other people's feelings." Today, we examine these lies, one by one, and begin to loosen their grip. What was learned can be unlearned.
Lição 4
New Tools For A New Way
Understanding the pattern is important, but change requires new ways of responding to the world. Today, we build practical tools: the pause before the automatic yes, sitting with discomfort instead of rushing to fix it, the kind no that requires no justification, and small experiments in putting yourself back in your own life. These tools are simple - but simple isn't the same as easy. Change happens through practice.
Lição 5
Living As Your Authentic Self
Our final day looks forward. What does life look like on the other side of people pleasing? How do you navigate the people who push back against the new you? We explore what it means to give from abundance rather than depletion, to build relationships based on mutual respect rather than endless accommodation. You've spent long enough giving yourself away. It's time to come home.