People Pleasing Therapy in Illinois & Michigan
Support for People Pleasing, Boundaries & Learning to Put Yourself on Your Own List
Sometimes people pleasing looks like kindness.
Sometimes it looks like saying "yes" when every part of you wants to say "no."
You may find yourself constantly anticipating other people's needs, avoiding conflict, apologizing for things that aren't your responsibility, or feeling guilty anytime you prioritize yourself. Even when you're exhausted, overwhelmed, or stretched too thin, it can feel almost impossible to disappoint someone else.
For many people, people pleasing isn't simply a personality trait- it's a survival strategy that developed over time.
At Sohail Counseling & Care, we provide virtual people pleasing therapy throughout Illinois and Michigan for adults learning how to build healthier boundaries, strengthen their sense of self, and create relationships that feel more balanced and authentic.
Virtual appointments available throughout Illinois & Michigan · BCBS, Aetna & UHC accepted
YOU DON'T HAVE TO EARN YOUR WORTH
When Taking Care of Everyone Else Has Become Your Full-Time Job
People pleasing often develops so gradually that you don't even realize you're doing it.
Maybe you've become the person everyone depends on.
Maybe you're always the one checking in, fixing problems, making sure everyone is okay, or avoiding conversations that might upset someone else.
You may find yourself:
Feeling responsible for other people's emotions
Saying yes when you really want to say no
Feeling guilty when you set boundaries
Avoiding conflict at almost any cost
Constantly worrying about disappointing others
Overcommitting until you're emotionally exhausted
Apologizing even when you've done nothing wrong
Struggling to identify your own wants or needs
Feeling anxious when someone seems upset with you
Believing your value comes from being helpful
Over time, constantly putting yourself last can leave you feeling disconnected from who you are and unsure of what you actually want.
Many people who struggle with people pleasing aren't trying to make everyone happy.
They're simply trying to stay safe, accepted, or loved.
FINDING A DIFFERENT WAY FORWARD
How People Pleasing Therapy Can Help
Therapy isn't about becoming selfish.
It's about learning that your needs matter, too.
Together, we'll explore the patterns that have shaped your relationships while helping you build the confidence to respond differently.
Through therapy, many clients begin to:
Set healthy boundaries without overwhelming guilt
Feel more comfortable saying no
Reduce anxiety around disappointing others
Build healthier, more balanced relationships
Strengthen confidence and self-trust
Recognize their own wants and needs
Stop feeling responsible for everyone's emotions
Develop healthier communication skills
Make decisions based on their own values
Experience relationships that feel reciprocal rather than one-sided
Healing doesn't happen because you stop caring about people.
It happens because you learn to care for yourself with the same compassion you've always offered everyone else.
HEALING HAPPENS IN RELATIONSHIP
Our Approach to People Pleasing Therapy
At Sohail Counseling & Care, we don't believe anxiety is something that needs to be fixed.
More often, anxiety develops as an attempt to protect us.
Sometimes anxiety grows out of difficult experiences. Sometimes it develops through family dynamics, high expectations, perfectionism, trauma, chronic stress, or simply navigating a world that asks too much of us. Whatever brought you here, we believe your experiences deserve curiosity rather than judgment.
Together, we'll explore the experiences, relationships, beliefs, and coping strategies that may be contributing to your anxiety while building practical tools that help you move through life with greater clarity and confidence.
Our therapists draw from evidence-based approaches including:
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT)
Mindfulness-Based Therapy
Attachment-Based Therapy
Trauma-Informed Care
Somatic Awareness
Narrative Therapy
Most importantly, we believe healing happens in relationship.
Therapy isn't about someone telling you what to do. It's about creating a space where you can better understand yourself, your experiences, and the patterns that have shaped you while feeling supported every step of the way.
YOU MAY ALSO BE INTERESTED IN
Related Services
Many clients seeking support for people pleasing also explore:
→ Boundary Setting Therapy
→ Codependency Therapy
→ Self-Worth Therapy
→ Attachment Therapy
→ Emotional Regulation Therapy
→ Self-Compassion Therapy
Frequently Asked Questions About People Pleasing Therapy
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People pleasing is the pattern of consistently prioritizing other people's needs, emotions, or approval over your own. While being thoughtful or generous isn't inherently unhealthy, people pleasing often comes from a place of fear rather than genuine choice. You might say yes when you want to say no, avoid conflict at all costs, apologize excessively, or feel responsible for making sure everyone around you is happy.
Many people don't even realize they're people pleasing because the behaviors have become second nature. You may be known as the dependable friend, the accommodating partner, or the coworker who never turns down extra work. On the outside, it can look like kindness. On the inside, it often feels exhausting.
At Sohail Counseling & Care, we help clients understand that people pleasing isn't a character flaw. More often, it's a protective pattern that developed for a reason. Through people pleasing therapy, we help you understand where these patterns came from while learning how to build healthier boundaries, strengthen your self-worth, and create relationships where your needs matter too.
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There usually isn't one simple answer.
For many people, people pleasing develops early in life as a way to maintain connection, avoid conflict, or feel accepted. If you grew up in an environment where love felt conditional, emotions weren't welcomed, or you were praised for being "easy," "helpful," or "mature," you may have learned that taking care of others felt safer than expressing your own needs.
People pleasing can also develop through experiences of trauma, family dynamics, perfectionism, cultural expectations, difficult relationships, or chronic anxiety. Over time, your brain begins to associate keeping others happy with staying emotionally safe.
The good news is that these patterns can change. Therapy isn't about becoming less compassionate- it helps you recognize when your kindness is rooted in genuine care versus fear of disappointing someone else. As you build greater self-awareness and confidence, it becomes easier to make choices that honor both your relationships and yourself.
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It certainly can be.
Many people who have experienced trauma develop what's sometimes called the "fawn response." Alongside the more familiar fight, flight, and freeze responses, fawning involves staying safe by keeping other people happy, avoiding conflict, and minimizing your own needs.
Not everyone who people pleases has experienced trauma, but many clients discover that their patterns developed in environments where conflict felt unsafe, emotional needs weren't consistently met, or they learned to prioritize other people's feelings to avoid rejection or criticism.
People pleasing therapy isn't about labeling every behavior as trauma. Instead, we become curious about your experiences and ask an important question: How has this pattern helped you survive- and is it still helping you today?
Understanding the origins of people pleasing often reduces shame and creates space for healthier ways of relating to yourself and others.
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Very often, yes.
Children naturally adapt to the environments they grow up in. If expressing your needs led to criticism, conflict, emotional withdrawal, or feeling like a burden, you may have learned to become highly attuned to everyone else's emotions instead.
Some adults who struggle with people pleasing were parentified, meaning they took on emotional or practical responsibilities that weren't appropriate for their age. Others grew up with emotionally immature caregivers, unpredictable family dynamics, or environments where being "good" felt like the safest option.
These early experiences don't determine your future, but they can shape how you approach relationships as an adult.
Therapy provides a space to understand these patterns with compassion rather than judgment. As you begin recognizing how your childhood experiences continue to influence your relationships today, it becomes possible to respond differently without feeling overwhelmed by guilt or fear.
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Kindness comes from freedom.
People pleasing usually comes from fear.
When you're acting from kindness, you're making a choice because it aligns with your values. You can say yes when you want to help, and you can also say no when something isn't right for you.
People pleasing feels different. Your decisions may be driven by anxiety about disappointing someone, fear of rejection, guilt, or a belief that your worth depends on being helpful. Instead of feeling good after helping, you may feel resentful, exhausted, or emotionally drained.
One of the goals of people pleasing therapy is helping you reconnect with genuine generosity rather than obligation. Healthy relationships don't require you to abandon yourself. They allow room for mutual care, honest communication, and boundaries that support everyone involved.
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Feeling guilty doesn't necessarily mean you've done something wrong.
For many people, guilt is simply the emotional alarm that goes off whenever they do something unfamiliar.
If you've spent years putting other people first, saying no or setting limits can feel deeply uncomfortable—even when your boundary is healthy and reasonable. Your nervous system may interpret that discomfort as danger because it's learned that keeping everyone happy is the safest option.
Learning to set boundaries often means learning to tolerate temporary discomfort while recognizing that protecting your time, energy, and emotional well-being isn't selfish.
In therapy, we help clients understand the difference between healthy guilt and conditioned guilt. Over time, many people discover that the discomfort becomes much more manageable as they build confidence and experience healthier relationships built on honesty rather than self-sacrifice.
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Absolutely.
People pleasing often makes it difficult to express your needs honestly within relationships. You may avoid difficult conversations, agree to things you don't actually want, struggle to ask for support, or become anxious anytime there's conflict.
While these behaviors may seem like they protect the relationship, they often create distance over time. Partners can't truly know you if you're constantly editing yourself to keep the peace.
People pleasing can also contribute to resentment, emotional burnout, codependent dynamics, and difficulty trusting that you're loved for who you are rather than what you provide.
Therapy helps you build healthier communication, increase emotional honesty, and develop the confidence to bring your full self into relationships. Healthy relationships aren't built on perfection- they're built on authenticity.
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There's rarely a quick fix, and trying to simply "stop caring what people think" usually isn't realistic.
Instead, lasting change comes from understanding why people pleasing developed in the first place.
Therapy often focuses on increasing self-awareness, recognizing automatic patterns, identifying your own values and needs, strengthening self-worth, learning emotional regulation skills, and practicing healthy boundaries in manageable ways.
Many clients are surprised to discover that people pleasing isn't just about saying yes too often- it's also about how they view themselves. As your confidence grows and your nervous system begins to feel safer, making different choices becomes much more natural.
The goal isn't to become less caring. It's to care for others without abandoning yourself in the process.
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Yes.
People pleasing therapy offers a supportive, nonjudgmental space to understand the experiences that shaped these patterns while helping you develop new ways of relating to yourself and others.
Together, we'll explore the beliefs, relationships, and life experiences that have influenced how you show up in the world. You'll learn practical strategies for setting boundaries, communicating more openly, managing anxiety around conflict, and strengthening your sense of self.
Many clients find that as therapy progresses, they feel less overwhelmed by guilt, more confident expressing their needs, and more connected to relationships that feel mutual rather than one-sided.
Healing doesn't happen by becoming someone different.
It happens by realizing you were never meant to carry everyone else at the expense of yourself.
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Yes.
Sohail Counseling & Care provides secure virtual people pleasing therapy for adults throughout Illinois and Michigan. Online therapy offers the flexibility to receive support from the comfort of your own home while still building a meaningful therapeutic relationship with your therapist.
Our therapists work with clients experiencing people pleasing, codependency, perfectionism, boundary difficulties, anxiety, attachment concerns, childhood trauma, relationship challenges, and low self-worth. Because these experiences are often deeply connected, therapy is tailored to your unique history, relationships, and goals rather than using a one-size-fits-all approach.
If you're unsure whether people pleasing therapy is the right fit, we'd be happy to answer your questions during a free consultation and help connect you with a therapist whose approach aligns with what you're looking for. We also accept many BCBS, Aetna, and UHC insurance plans, making therapy more accessible for many individuals across Illinois and Michigan.
READY WHEN YOU ARE
You Don't Have to Keep Carrying Everyone Else
You have spent so much of your life making sure everyone else feels okay.
Therapy offers a space where you don't have to anticipate, fix, explain, or hold everything together. You can simply be yourself- and begin learning what it feels like to extend the same care inward that you've so generously given to others.
Our therapists provide virtual people pleasing therapy throughout Illinois and Michigan and would be honored to support you as you begin building relationships that include you, too.