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The Disease to Please: Curing the People-Pleasing Syndrome
The Disease to Please: Curing the People-Pleasing Syndrome | Harriet Braiker
1 post | 1 read
What's wrong with being a "people pleaser?" Plenty! "A fascinating book... If you struggle with where, when, and how to draw the line between your own desires and the demands of others, buy this book!"Kay Redfield Jamison, bestselling author of An Unquiet Mind and Night Falls Fast People pleasers are not just nice people who go overboard trying to make everyone happy. Those who suffer from the Disease to Please are people who say "Yes" when they really want to say "No." For them, the uncontrollable need for the elusive approval of others is an addiction. Their debilitating fears of anger and confrontation force them to use "niceness" and "people-pleasing" as self-defense camouflage. Featured on NBC's "Today," The Disease to Please explodes the dangerous myth that "people pleasing" is a benign problem. Best-selling author and frequent "Oprah" guest Dr. Harriet Braiker offers clear, positive, practical, and easily do-able steps toward recovery. Begin with a simple but revealing quiz to discover what type of people-pleaser you are. Then learn how making even small changes to any single portion of the Disease to Please Triangle - involving your thoughts, feelings, and behavior - will cause a dramatic, positive and long-lasting change to the overall syndrome. As a recovered peoplepleaser, you will finally see that a balanced way of living that takes others into consideration but puts the emphasis first on pleasing yourself and gaining your own approval is the clearest path to health and happiness.
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review
ImperfectCJ
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Bailedbailed

I picked this one up on a whim and made it to 28% before bailing. It feels either outdated (published 25 years ago) or cartoonishly oversimplified (or both?). It has some potentially helpful insights, but I can't get past the style of the writing. In the author's defense, I think the audiobook version I had was abridged, so maybe the original is better.

Photo: Camille is definitely not a people pleaser.

lil1inblue 😹😻😹 1w
Jas16 I love Camille already. 1w
Kerrbearlib Camille is adorable! Have you read Fawning by Ingrid Clayton? It was just published a few weeks ago and I‘m about 1/2 way through it now. I really like how she explains that people pleasing can be a trauma response. 1w
See All 9 Comments
JenReadsAlot Omg great picture!! 1w
ImperfectCJ @Kerrbearlib I have it on hold on Libby, but it's so new it's going to take a while. I'm glad to hear you're enjoying it. 1w
dabbe #hailthebail! 🙌🏻 #betterbooksahead

And OMG, Camille! What a sassy lassie! #photocontestwinner 🖤🐾🤍
1w
AnnCrystal 🤩 Camille 💕😹💝. 1w
Gissy The book was bad but that bad feeling was substituted by that pretty fur face😻 1w
ImperfectCJ @Gissy Camille proves that we don't have to set aside our own needs to bring joy to the people around us. :-) 1w
56 likes9 comments