If You Feel Responsible for Everything (Even Things That Aren't Your Fault)
Feeling responsible for how other people feel, or quietly bracing for whatever might go wrong, is a pattern that usually starts long before adulthood. This post explores where excessive responsibility comes from, and why simply deciding to "let things go" rarely makes it stop.
Why People-Pleasing Is So Hard to Stop
People-pleasing often develops as a way of maintaining connection and avoiding conflict. While it may keep relationships feeling smooth in the short term, constantly prioritizing others’ needs can lead to exhaustion, resentment, and difficulty expressing your own needs.
Why You Feel Guilty for Setting Boundaries
Setting boundaries is often described as healthy, yet many people feel intense guilt when they try to say no or protect their time and energy. Understanding where this guilt comes from can help you develop more balanced relationships.
Why You Feel Emotionally Drained After Being Around Certain People
Leaving a conversation feeling more depleted than when it started, even when nothing obviously went wrong, is a familiar experience for many people. This post looks at the relational dynamics and personal patterns that make certain interactions so consistently draining.
Emotionally Immature Parents and the Long-Term Impact on Adult Children
If your parent avoided emotions, minimized your feelings, or relied on you for support, you may still feel the effects. Growing up with emotionally immature parents can shape how you experience relationships, boundaries, and self-worth later in life. Here’s how emotionally immature parenting shapes adulthood.

