Anonymous wrote:Your daughter is a follower, just part of the herd so relax. She wants to fit in and be accepted and she is going to do what it takes for that to happen. I suppose you could do some kind of personality intervention but I doubt she changes. Her identity and value as a person is found in The Group. it is who she is and who she is going to be. Maybe if you moved to MoCo she might change to be a little meaner and not want to be a pleasing, agreeable person?
Anonymous wrote:I think being a pleaser is positive! Where are you getting the opposite? Especially for tweens!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think being a pleaser is positive! Where are you getting the opposite? Especially for tweens!
Yeah, it's not. I'm starting to see signs of this in my 10yo, and it concerns me. She needs to trust her own judgment, and not do things based on other people's expectations.
Anonymous wrote:I think being a pleaser is positive! Where are you getting the opposite? Especially for tweens!
Anonymous wrote:We found the classic book to be helpful: Boundaries: when to say yes, how to say no to take control of your life. The trick is to begin with kindness - that’s my child’s nature - but try to show them that not everyone has the same motives/perspective. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think being a pleaser is positive! Where are you getting the opposite? Especially for tweens!
Ugh no! People pleasing is overwhelmingly gendered, skewed to disadvantage girls and women. It contributes to so much inequality, including but not limited to rape culture, gender pay gap, and the intersectionality of race, gender, etc.
Anonymous wrote:As a people pleaser myself I am going to follow this thread . It’s not a great quality. I put myself last especially in relationships. Tend to date / have sex with guys I actually hate.
Anonymous wrote:I think being a pleaser is positive! Where are you getting the opposite? Especially for tweens!