Nice Guy Syndrome
5 episodes tagged "Nice Guy Syndrome".

The Difference Between Walls and Boundaries
Let’s fix this by learning the most holy word in the English language: no. No is a complete sentence. When you say yes while meaning no, you don’t become loving—you become resentful. Boundaries aren’t walls; they’re gates. They define where I end and where you begin. Without boundaries, you don’t have a self—and without a self, you can’t love, only merge. Here’s your challenge: the next time someone asks for something you don’t want to do, say “I’m not able to do that.” Don’t explain. Don’t apologize. Sit in the awkwardness. That anxiety you feel? That’s your spine growing back. We’re moving from passive to assertive—because real intimacy requires needs, honesty, and self-respect. If this helped, like, comment, and subscribe for more straight talk on boundaries, recovery, and mental health. —Michael, Sober Psychology

Setting Boundaries Brace for the 'Extinction Burst'!
I need to warn you—when you start setting boundaries, things often get worse before they get better. In psychology, this is called an extinction burst. The moment you stop being the vending machine, the people who benefited from your lack of boundaries will escalate: guilt trips, accusations, emotional pressure. That doesn’t mean you’re wrong—it means the old system is breaking. Hold the line. Don’t JADE (justify, argue, defend, explain). Use the broken-record response and let the tantrum pass. If you cave during the burst, you teach people to scream louder next time. If you stay steady, the behavior extinguishes—and respect follows. If this helped, like, comment, and subscribe for more real talk on boundaries, recovery, and mental health. —Michael, Sober Psychology

Nice guy behavior signals deception to women
Let’s talk about dating—because this is where Nice Guy Syndrome does the most damage. I hear it all the time: “Women say they want nice guys but date jerks.” That’s not confusion—that’s biology. From an evolutionary psychology perspective, being overly agreeable signals deceit, not safety. Hiding intent, hovering, and pretending to be a friend to sneak intimacy kills attraction and trust. Here’s the truth: intent is respect. Say what you want. Be direct. Take the L if it’s a no and walk away with dignity. Attraction dies when you play games. If this hits, like, comment, and subscribe for more unfiltered psychology on dating, boundaries, and growth. —Michael, Sober Psychology

Buried Anger Doesn't Disappear—It Detonates
Here’s the part most people don’t want to hear—and I’m saying this because I care about you. Carl Jung warned us about the shadow: everything we deny about ourselves—rage, greed, selfishness, aggression. When you call yourself a “nice guy” or a “good Christian” while pretending you don’t have those parts, you don’t destroy them—you bury them. And buried energy doesn’t disappear. It detonates. This is why repressed anger explodes. Why people who look holy fall hard. Why holding the beach ball underwater always ends the same way—it shoots back up and hits you in the face. Psychological health and spiritual maturity aren’t about killing the wolf. They’re about walking the wolf on a leash. Integrating strength. Admitting you have the capacity to be dangerous—and choosing discipline anyway. If this hit close to home, like, comment, and subscribe. Share it with someone who’s tired of pretending. I’m Michael. This is Sober Psychology. Stay honest. Stay grounded. Go help somebody.

The "Nice Guy" Syndrome: Why You Are Secretly Manipulative
Are you exhausted from doing everything for everyone? Do you feel resentful when people don't return your favors? In this 60-minute deep dive, I'll expose the dark psychology of the "Nice Guy" Syndrome and People Pleasing. We aren't just talking about being polite; we are talking about how your "kindness" is often a manipulative strategy to avoid conflict and buy love. We break down Covert Contracts (the hidden agreements you make in your head), the Fawn Trauma Response, and why Jesus wasn't actually "nice." We also explore Locus of Control, the Extinction Burst (what happens when you finally say "No"), and why the "Nice Guy" strategy is actually destroying your dating life. If you are ready to kill the martyr, set real boundaries, and stop living for everyone else's approval, this episode is the episode you need.