2 Oct 2025 08:00

315: FAWNING: Why the Need to Please Makes Us Lose Ourselves

On the surface, you may look like the model employee, partner, or friend: always dependable, always agreeable. But beneath the surface, you may be carrying a lifetime of survival strategies that keep you invisible in your own life. This is the story Dr. Ingrid Clayton knows both personally and professionally, and it's the story she helps so many of us begin to rewrite.

Dr. Ingrid Clayton is a licensed clinical psychologist with advanced degrees in transpersonal and clinical psychology. She has maintained a thriving private practice for more than fifteen years and writes the popular Psychology Today blog, Emotional Sobriety, which has been read by over a million people. Her latest book, FAWNING: Why the Need to Please Makes Us Lose Ourselves—and How to Find Our Way Back, unpacks the subtle but profound ways we abandon ourselves by prioritizing others' approval.

In our conversation, Ingrid reflects on her own experience as a childhood trauma survivor and how it revealed the fawning response: the instinct to please and appease in order to stay safe. Unlike fight, flight, or freeze, fawning resembles caretaking, compliance, and endless yeses, but it often leaves us feeling resentful and disconnected from our own needs. She explains how this adaptation becomes ingrained in the nervous system, how it shapes our relationships and careers, and why breaking the cycle can feel like stepping into the firing line.

Yet within that discomfort lies the path to healing. Ingrid offers tangible practices for reclaiming your agency: pausing before you agree, noticing where resentment signals self-abandonment, and daring to let your voice be heard even when it shakes. Listen in to discover how to stop surviving on others' terms and begin living on your own!

 

Key Highlights From This Episode:

  • An introduction to Dr. Ingrid Clayton and her new book on fawning. [02:17]
  • Ingrid's personal story of childhood trauma and survival. [04:40]
  • Defining the fawning response and how it differs from fight, flight, or freeze. [06:19]
  • The spectrum of trauma responses and how conditioning reinforces fawning. [12:16]
  • Signs of an ongoing fawning trauma response and why conflict feels unsafe. [15:02]
  • How fawning embeds in the nervous system and what it takes to heal. [19:59]
  • What happens in the body during the fawning trauma response. [22:22]
  • Fawning behaviors and skills, where they originate, and why they're so common. [26:43]
  • Practical grounding tools to restore safety through your body, senses, and curiosity. [32:05]
  • How to get in touch with a psychologist in your area and find Dr. Clayton online. [37:50]

For More Information:

Dr. Ingrid Clayton

Dr. Ingrid Clayton on Instagram

Dr. Ingrid Clayton on Facebook

Dr. Ingrid Clayton on YouTube

Dr. Ingrid Clayton on TikTok

 

Links Mentioned in Today's Episode:

Check out Dr. Ingrid Clayt


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