chiastic_slide wrote:
I mostly go along with everything other people say no matter what my wishes are, I assume that I will offend them by saying no and I would rather just do what they say and take it. I think it is a defence strategy to prevent hurting others and them yelling/getting upset with me, but I find it hard to recognise when I don't need to do this because the person is not bothered or a friend. I guess it also comes from not wanting to lose friends, but being a pushover also loses friends because they can't respect you. I find others intimidating and part of the reason I prefer solitude. It is exhausting trying to make other people happy when you don't know how they feel about you being so different but just being yourself. I also do not easily vocalise my thoughts and feelings. I will make little excuses rather than saying no outright but if it is something I really don't want to do I will get anxious and emotional and just make some excuse to run away
Yeah, I'm a lot like this too. I have a hard time saying no to others for many of the same reasons you describe here. And sometimes, instead of saying no, I'll just ignore the other person, which come to think of it, probably makes things worse. I've learned at work that it's OK to say no sometimes, though; I learned the hard way, because I've gotten readily overwhelmed from always saying yes (it once led to me having a mini-meltdown in the office).