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If you have ever said yes when every part of you wanted to say no — if you have smiled through something that hurt, made yourself smaller to keep the peace, or felt a bolt of panic at the thought of disappointing someone — you have experienced fawning. Fawning is not people pleasing. Not exactly. It goes deeper than that. But, what is fawning exactly?

First named by trauma therapist Pete Walker, the fawn response is a fourth survival strategy alongside fight, flight, and freeze. Where fight pushes back and flight runs away, fawning moves toward the threat — appeasing it, accommodating it, becoming whatever it needs you to be. Not because you want to. Because some part of you learned, early on, that your safety depended on it.

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Where fawning comes from

For many women, fawning began in childhood. Not because something dramatic happened, but because the environment taught a quiet and persistent lesson: your needs are too much, your anger is dangerous, your power makes people uncomfortable.

So you adapted. You learned to read the room before speaking. To anticipate what others needed before they asked. To shrink yourself into a shape that felt safe — for everyone else.

This is not weakness. It is intelligence. The fawn response is a nervous system adaptation, a survival strategy formed when connection felt conditional. When love, safety, or belonging came with conditions — be good, be quiet, be helpful, don’t take up too much space — your system learned to earn it.

And for women, this conditioning does not happen in isolation. It is woven into the fabric of how girls are raised. Be nice. Don’t be difficult. Don’t be too much. Don’t be too loud, too angry, too ambitious, too yourself. Patriarchy does not only oppress women from the outside. Over generations, it moves inward — and fawning is one of the places it lives.

The frozen anger underneath

What rarely gets talked about is what fawning actually costs.

Underneath the agreeableness, the helpfulness, the endless accommodating — there is often a fury that was never allowed to exist. A power that was taught to hide. Not because it was not there, but because expressing it once felt dangerous. Because girls who were too direct were difficult. Because women who took up space were too much. Because anger, in a girl, was something to be ashamed of.

So it went underground. Frozen. Stored in the body as tension, as exhaustion, as the quiet resentment that builds when you give and give and never receive. As the numbness that comes from years of saying yes when you meant no.

This is intergenerational too. Your mother may have fawned. Her mother before her. Women taught to be helpless, to need, to defer — not because they were, but because the systems around them required it. Think of how many women were raised to believe they simply could not do things on their own. That they needed someone else to navigate the world. That independence was dangerous, unfeminine, too much.

That conditioning lives in the nervous system. It does not disappear when the original danger is gone.

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What fawning looks like now

You might recognise fawning in yourself as: saying yes before you have even checked in with what you want. Feeling responsible for other people’s emotional states. Apologising constantly, for things that are not your fault. Shrinking your opinions to match the room. Feeling guilty when you rest, when you say no, when you ask for something. Going along with things that do not feel right, because conflict feels more dangerous than self-betrayal.

It might look like care. Like kindness. Like being easy to be around.

But from the inside, it feels exhausting. Tense. Like you are always managing something.

Fawning is not who you are

The most important thing to understand about fawning is that it is not a personality trait. It is not who you are. It is what you learned — in a body, in a family, in a world that gave you very clear messages about what was safe and what was not.

Healing fawning is not about becoming harder or colder or more selfish. It is about coming back to yourself. Learning that your anger is not dangerous. That your needs are not too much. That you can take up space and still be loved. That you can say no and still belong.

It starts with awareness. With recognising the fawn response when it happens — the tightening in the chest, the automatic yes, the urge to smooth things over before you have even decided what you actually feel.

And it continues, slowly, in the body. Because fawning is not a thought pattern. It is a nervous system response. And it heals the same way it formed — in relationship, in safety, in the gradual experience of: I can be honest here. I can be myself here. And I will not be abandoned for it.

Do you recognize yourself in fawning, and feel like you want to start with learning how to overcome it? Start with our free audio “Your Yes and Your No” and begin reconnecting with what you actually feel, want, and need.

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Author

  • Myrthe Glasbergen, Msc. is a psychologist, writer, and founder of Beyond Psychology — a global platform redefining mental health. With a deep understanding of trauma, emotion, and societal conditioning, she guides people to unshame themselves, reclaim authenticity, and break free from patterns that no longer serve. Her work is rooted in radical honesty, emotional depth, and a fierce belief in our capacity to heal and transform.
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