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Ep #179: Stop People-Pleasing and Start Parenting with Confidence (Encore)

co-parenting podcast relationships Jan 28, 2026
people-pleasing

In this encore episode, I’m talking about something that shows up for so many of us as moms and co-parents: people-pleasing. I share my own experience as a recovering people-pleaser and explain how this pattern often develops as a way to feel safe, loved, or accepted — especially in childhood. While people-pleasing can come from good intentions, it can quietly undermine our confidence, drain our energy, and pull us away from who we really want to be as a parent.

I also explore how the pressure to be a “good mom” or a “good co-parent” often fuels people-pleasing and sets us up for unrealistic expectations and resentment. Instead of chasing external approval, I invite you to define what being a good mom and co-parent truly means to you — based on your values, integrity, and the example you want to model for your children.

This episode is about compassion, awareness, and reclaiming responsibility for what is actually yours: how you think, feel, and act. When we stop trying to manage other people’s emotions and opinions, we create more calm, clarity, and confidence for ourselves — and for our kids.

In this episode, you’ll learn:

  • People-pleasing is learned, not who you are
  • You are not responsible for other people’s emotions
  • Defining your own values builds confidence and resilience

If this resonates with you and you’re ready for support to help you break free from people-pleasing, I’d love to help. Reach out and let’s take the next step together. https://calendly.com/coachwithmikki/co-parent-breakthrough-call

 

 
Download the Episode Transcript Here

 Full Episode Transcript:

Welcome to Co-parenting with Confidence, a podcast for those courageous moms out there who want to move past the conflict and frustration of divorce and show up as the mom they truly want to be. My name's Mikki Gardner. I'm a certified life and conscious parenting coach with my own personal dose of co-parenting experience. Throughout my co-parenting journey, I have learned to become confident in who I am as a woman and a mother, and I'm here to help you do the same.

If you're ready to learn what it takes to become a great co-parent and an amazing example to your children, well get ready and let's dive into today's episode.

Welcome back, friends. I'm really excited to be back here with you. And today I want to talk about something that is near and dear to my heart. And I spend a lot of time working on frankly in my own life because I am a recovering one, but also with so many of the people that I work with moms and dads. So what is it? It's people pleasing. Well, yes, I admitted it. I am a recovering people pleaser and somehow I know that I'm not alone in this because

I talk to so many other people pleasers and we're frankly awesome, amazing, effective, extraordinary humans, right? But there is a downside to people pleasing. There is a negativity and a stuckness that doesn't help us in moming, in co-parenting, in adulting, in any of the things. And that's what I wanted to talk about today. But before we get into people pleasing, I want to talk about something that I see so much right now. And this is the idea of being a good mom.

or a good co-parent. And when I say good, I'm using air quotes here because there are so many experts telling us what a good mom is. There's so many other people that we're comparing ourselves to to say what a good mom or a good co-parent is. But really this idea is setting us up for a lot of suffering because the whole idea of being a good mom often is an expectation of something that you should be

that is different from how you are today. And way too often, what we're seeing now, these expectations of what it means to be a good mom are frankly unachievable. There is no one that can be all things to everyone or be everything your child needs at every stage in their life. That is completely unrealistic, unachievable, and sets you up to feel like crap. And we don't want that. What I'd much rather is that we could talk about

what's going on so that you can see how you're showing up now, how it's serving you and how it may not be serving you if you have a little people pleasing in you like I do and like many of my clients do. But more importantly for you to decide what it means to be a good co-parent, what it means to be a good mom, not from an expectation point of view, but from a deep knowing in your bones so that you can move forward every day being that person.

Because when you do, you just feel better. You feel more confident. You feel stronger. You feel calmer. You feel more guided. You feel more grounded. And when you can do all of those things, you know what you end up doing? Being a better mom. So that's what we wanna talk about today. And we're gonna talk about it in relation to people pleasing. So how do you know that you're a people pleaser? Maybe you have a hunch. Maybe people have said something to you.

Maybe you're just really tired and feeling exhausted from trying to control everybody else's opinions and behaviors. Maybe you're frustrated because despite your tireless efforts, the other co-parent just will not get on board, will not see you as a good parent. Maybe you wish that you could feel more connected. You do everything for your children, yet you feel disrespected and you feel disconnected from them. And now that you're co-parenting,

you get them less time and so it feels even more urgent. Well, no matter where you are, things can change. But we wanna look at how people pleasing may or may not be affecting you. And so let's start with a working definition. So when I go to the Googles and I ask, the Merriam-Webster dictionary defines people pleaser as someone or something that pleases or wants to please people. Okay, harmless, seems like it.

Often a person who has an emotional need to please others, often at their own expense. Now here we're getting somewhere. Who doesn't want to please other people? We're wired to please other people. We're wired to be in community with other people, in relationship. So there is a part of us where people pleasing is a really good idea. We don't want to be an island saying, don't care about what you want. I'm only going to please myself. No, that's a narcissist.

that's not somebody that anyone wants to be around. So instead, we want to look at how people pleasing and this idea of being a quote unquote good mom or good co-parent can actually start to pull you under instead of setting you up. So just know that people pleasing isn't a personality trait. It's not a diagnosis. It's not something that is going to hold you back or stop you. But we do have to understand where people pleasing comes from.

So basically, why do we people please? Well, in a nutshell, everybody when they're growing up has experiences, people in their lives, events, and these things from their childhood leave an imprint on them. And so these imprints or these experiences or these thoughts or beliefs that have been handed to us, sometimes when we were a kid, we don't understand them. And so our subconscious kicks in to figure out how can we feel safe in the uncertainty of all these things happening?

And the ego will create safety in a number of ways and people pleasing is one of them. So basically what it is is that we become as a child, a people pleaser to feel better, to get people to like us, to love us, right? If you change and someone gives you praise for it, then you learn, okay, if I do what they want, if I am pleasing to them, I get the love and attention that I desire.

So as a little kid, we start to do this more and more. And this is how we get love, safety and security sometimes. So there's a lot of complex things going on and I don't wanna get into all of that at this point, but what I want you to know is that people pleasing is kind of like a mask that your subconscious puts on to be able to gain control, to feel like it has some control and some sense of safety. It's not a bad thing, but

When we wear the mask too long, when we don't grow out of it and evolve into a more independent wise place, this is when people pleasing can actually restrict us. So why might we become a people pleaser as a kid? Well, if there's a lot of yelling in a home, a child might take on the role of pacifier or peacekeeper because they feel like they have more control in the uncontrollable. In a home where conflict is considered a quote unquote bad thing and you should avoid it at all costs,

well, then the kid might become a quote unquote good girl or good boy to avoid that conflict. If love and affection is only given based on achievement or doing what the other person wants, well then they're going to learn how to people please to seek the affection that they desire. You can see that all of these things are really just your little version self trying to get the love, the safety and the protection that you desire. And so what we don't want to do is

Think of it as a way that is bad or going to be the rest of your life. No, we're just noticing. Like everything we talk about on these episodes, we're just noticing, gaining awareness so that we can change. We have to be aware before we can change. So not sure if you are a people pleaser? Well, I'm gonna go through a list and I just want you to sort of put a mental check next to the ones that you find yourself doing. Are you quick to agree?

just to avoid conflict. Do you often feel responsible for how other people feel? Do you apologize a lot? Do you accept fault even when you're not to blame? Do you find it hard to say no? Do you feel burdened by the things you quote unquote have to do? Do you feel extremely uncomfortable when someone else is upset with you? Do you find yourself acting like the people around you just to fit in even if it's self-destructive? Do you fear anger?

Do you not admit when your feelings are hurt? Do you push your needs aside for others? Do you have trouble identifying what you even want or how you feel? Do you give all the time hoping people will reciprocate with the love and the affection that you desire? Do you feel like you're always busy and have no time for yourself? Do you often feel frustrated, resentful, or do you become passive aggressive? Well, if you checked marks,

next to any of these, then it's possible that you have a little people pleasing tendency. And so again, I want to talk about the ways that you can start to move through it. Because like I said, it's not a diagnosis, it's not a personality trait, it's just something that we can learn how to move through. But before we do that, the biggest thing that I want you to do for yourself right now is give yourself a lot of compassion. Because like I just described, you learn to people please when you were a little, little girl or little boy, and that's okay.

Whatever happened in the past is the past and I'm not sugarcoating it. I'm not asking you to forget it. I'm not asking you to condone it. All we're doing is looking at it with honest, clear vision so that we can choose how to show up today. We can either continue the patterns that we have from the past. And if you continue those patterns, you continue to get the same results or you can decide to do something differently. And that's what I wanted to talk about today because

All of these ideas on whether you are a good or not good mom, good or not good co-parent sets us up for expectations and expectations are just resentments waiting to happen as the wise Brene Brown said. And so instead of waiting to be resentful, we need to manage our expectations and understand and decide on purpose what it means to be a quote unquote good co-parent.

And what I want you to think about here, I know what I believe is a good mom and a good co-parent, but that doesn't matter for you. What matters for you is what you believe makes you a good mom or a good co-parent. And that is what I want you to get clear on. And part of that is understanding what do we want to be responsible for and what do we not want to be responsible for? Well, you are responsible 100 % of the time for how you

think, feel, and act, period. Other people are responsible for how they think, feel, and act. So when the other co-parent is upset with you or is telling you all the reasons that you're not a good mom, that is their business, not yours. But as people pleasers, we take it on as ours. We think, if I could just say it differently, then they would understand and then they would be helpful. Then they would support me. Then they wouldn't be such a jerk.

this is giving yourself way too much credit. And when I say that, I mean, it's trying to do something that you physically and emotionally do not have the capability of doing. Other people's thoughts, feelings, and actions are their responsibility. And so learning how to stop people pleasing is learning how to start taking control for what you have and letting go of the rest. Because like I said at the very beginning, we often are people pleasing to try to either avoid

or change other people's feelings, thoughts, and perspectives. And so instead, we wanna decide what does it mean to be a good mom? What does it mean to be a good co-parent and then get really busy doing that? And letting go of trying to coerce or manipulate or change other people's opinions because frankly, it's futile. So as I look around at certainly social media and all of the quote unquote

parenting experts out there telling us what it means to be a good parent. They're telling us all the things we have to do, right? From the moment the child is born until they go off to college. And there's things like you have to be breastfeeding a certain amount of time. have to have all organic. You have to be making the baby food. You have to do attachment styles. You have to do this. You have to make sure that you're not allowing any trauma to happen in your children's life. All of the things. But listen, we screw our kids up.

We do because we're human. So I don't think the goal is to never to screw up our kids. It's just to minimize the degree to which we screw them up. Maybe this is uplifting, maybe it isn't. But I think when we're realistic that we understand we're human, we can only do what we can do and start to look at how do I wanna show up? What's really important to me? How do I want my kids to experience the world as children and adults?

And how do I focus on that? Because that is learning, teaching your children how to be resilient, a huge lesson that our children would get immense value from. Learning how to manage their feelings, learning how to manage the stress of life. Kids these days are under more and more stress because adults are under more and more stress. And so teaching our children how to be resilient and how to manage

the stress in life as well as their emotions. This is being a good mom, in my opinion. And so if we focus there, how do you do that? Well, you do it. You be the model for them of what that looks like. Learning how to be resilient, which means not people pleasing. It means learning how to make a mistake, to fall down, to have bad stuff happen, and to get up.

and to keep moving forward in a loving, respectful, kind way. That is resilience, right? That is that level of energy and strength and cooperation that I think we all want our kids to have. And then learning how to manage stress and manage emotions. Well, we teach our children how to do this by doing it ourselves. If they see us constantly stressed out,

constantly offloading our emotions or having huge giant reactions and then sweeping it under the rug or blaming other people, right? That's not really helping them. That's just showing them what not to do. But instead, being a quote unquote good mom and good co-parent is showing what you do want, how you want them to live their life. And listen, you're not supposed to do it perfectly. You're human. Like I said a couple minutes ago, we're gonna screw up all the time. The best thing that they can see is you screw up

You make a mistake, you own it, you don't offload it, you manage yourself through it, and then you learn and move forward. Right? This is resilience. And this is what I think being a good mom is. Yes, keeping your kids safe. Yes, making sure that they have great grades. Yes, giving them the food that's going to nourish their bodies. Yes, limiting, you know, screens and sugar and all of those things. But we get so mired down in those activities, letting that dictate whether we are or are not a good mom.

that I think too often what I see is we lose perspective of the big stuff. And so that's why I wanted to talk about people pleasing and as it relates to being a quote unquote good mom or good co-parent, because we've got to keep the big picture in mind. Parenting and co-parenting is a long game. And so we can get lost. You know, they always say that the days are long and the years are short. It's so true, but we have to keep our eye on the prize.

what it is that we truly want for our children, right? That resilience, that strength, that confidence, that ability to manage stress and emotions, if that's true for you. If it is, you use that as your vision of who you wanna be and what it means to be a good mom, and then show up each step of every day acting and being a model for that. And what it means to be a good co-parent, I think that looks a lot like having integrity, being cooperative.

being respectful, being able to manage conflict in a respectful way. And this, just like being a good mom, is modeling it. No matter what the other co-parent is doing, you always have a choice on how you handle your side of the street. And so it really comes down to deciding. And this is one of the first things I do with each and every one of my clients. We create their vision and then we create the values so that we'll align their steps.

because we have to have that internal GPS to be able to move forward and stay in the direction that we want to go no matter what comes our way. And mama, you are so capable of doing this. I know that you are. And I know that if you're listening to this, you're willing to try every step of every day. I know that you're working towards it. And if there's a way I can support you in this journey, you just say the word. But I really want you to just stop after this podcast for a moment.

and just try on what does it look like to not people please, to not be as concerned about what other people are thinking and feeling, but really decide what does it mean to you to be a good mom, to be a good co-parent, and maybe just pick one or two things and then focus on doing that, maybe for the next week, maybe just for today, but try it on, right? If I am focused on being cooperative and having integrity,

Let that filter each decision of your day and see what may or may not be different. So that's what I have for you today. And I thank you for being here. I'll see you next week. And in the meantime, take really, really good care of you, friend. and one more thing, the legal stuff. This podcast is solely intended for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to be a substitute for any medical advice.

please consult your physician or a qualified medical professional for personalized medical advice.

Thanks for listening to Co-Parenting with Confidence. If you want more information or resources from this podcast, visit Co-Parenting with Confidence.com. I'll see you next week.

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Enjoy the Show?

Don’t miss an episode, follow the podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, or RSS. Leave me a review in Apple Podcasts.

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