Are You Too Nice For Your Own Good?
Are you one of those people who always puts the needs of others first, and your own needs last? If so, then you are probably too nice for your own good. Instead of bringing you the love and acceptance you crave, this behavior may attract people who will exploit you.
Are you too nice? How can anyone be "too nice"? Isn’t being "nice" a good quality to have in a relationship?
Yes, it’s true that people will value niceness in others, but if your way of being nice is to suppress your own needs constantly, you are being too nice for your own good. If you always put the needs of others first, and your own needs last, if you don’t speak out when your own needs are ignored, then you are being too nice for your own good.
When you express your niceness as a sign of genuine respect, kindness and interest in another person, it is a wonderful quality to have. When the "niceness" is a by-product of low self-esteem, passivity, or desperate loneliness, it can be a liability, and can make other people feel uneasy, guilty, or even attract the sort of people who are willing to exploit you.
Have you ever met a person who never expresses their real preferences, opinions, or desires, even in the smallest matters? When someone asks them, "Where do you want to go tonight?" they reply, "I don’t care, anything is fine with me, where do you want to eat?"
A person who won’t state their opinion or preference may think they are being nice, but this is not niceness, this is a form of fearfulness, and a lack of self-respect. Some people develop the trait of never asking for what they want because they were raised in a family where expressing wants or opinions was discouraged, or even disallowed.
They may have been literally taught that they shouldn’t speak up, that they shouldn’t want anything for themselves, and that everyone else’s opinion mattered more than theirs did.
A child who grew up in a family where they weren’t allowed to express their needs or opinions, may grow up believing that this is how the whole world wants them to behave, even after they have become adults. They may find it difficult to take the initiative in any situation involving other people. They may feel uncomfortable or fearful expressing their desires. They may even feel they are being "bad" if they ask for anything.
Although they may think that being extremely passive and refusing to make decisions is their way of "being nice", it isn’t always fun having a person who is this self-effacing as a friend. It can be tiring for the other person in the friendship to have to make every decision just because their passive friend won’t make any.
In relationships that are healthy and satisfying, both people share responsibility equally when making plans and decisions.
If you believe that being nice means never asking for anything for yourself, it’s important to learn to pay attention to your needs, to respect yourself, and to ask for what you want and need. Take your turn making decisions with others. Make your needs and preferences heard.
If you find your wishes are always being ignored, take a close look at why this is happening and see how you can change it.
This article was written by Royane Real, author of the new book "How You Can Have All the Friends You Want – Your Complete Guide to Finding Friends, Making Friends, and Keeping Friends" If you want to improve your social life, download it today at http://www.royanereal.com
Yes, it’s true that people will value niceness in others, but if your way of being nice is to suppress your own needs constantly, you are being too nice for your own good. If you always put the needs of others first, and your own needs last, if you don’t speak out when your own needs are ignored, then you are being too nice for your own good.
When you express your niceness as a sign of genuine respect, kindness and interest in another person, it is a wonderful quality to have. When the "niceness" is a by-product of low self-esteem, passivity, or desperate loneliness, it can be a liability, and can make other people feel uneasy, guilty, or even attract the sort of people who are willing to exploit you.
Have you ever met a person who never expresses their real preferences, opinions, or desires, even in the smallest matters? When someone asks them, "Where do you want to go tonight?" they reply, "I don’t care, anything is fine with me, where do you want to eat?"
A person who won’t state their opinion or preference may think they are being nice, but this is not niceness, this is a form of fearfulness, and a lack of self-respect. Some people develop the trait of never asking for what they want because they were raised in a family where expressing wants or opinions was discouraged, or even disallowed.
They may have been literally taught that they shouldn’t speak up, that they shouldn’t want anything for themselves, and that everyone else’s opinion mattered more than theirs did.
A child who grew up in a family where they weren’t allowed to express their needs or opinions, may grow up believing that this is how the whole world wants them to behave, even after they have become adults. They may find it difficult to take the initiative in any situation involving other people. They may feel uncomfortable or fearful expressing their desires. They may even feel they are being "bad" if they ask for anything.
Although they may think that being extremely passive and refusing to make decisions is their way of "being nice", it isn’t always fun having a person who is this self-effacing as a friend. It can be tiring for the other person in the friendship to have to make every decision just because their passive friend won’t make any.
In relationships that are healthy and satisfying, both people share responsibility equally when making plans and decisions.
If you believe that being nice means never asking for anything for yourself, it’s important to learn to pay attention to your needs, to respect yourself, and to ask for what you want and need. Take your turn making decisions with others. Make your needs and preferences heard.
If you find your wishes are always being ignored, take a close look at why this is happening and see how you can change it.
This article was written by Royane Real, author of the new book "How You Can Have All the Friends You Want – Your Complete Guide to Finding Friends, Making Friends, and Keeping Friends" If you want to improve your social life, download it today at http://www.royanereal.com

Use the feedback form below to submit your comments.

Use the form below to email this article to your friends.

- Managing Relationships
- The Power of Kindness in Relationships
- 5 Actions For Successful Relationships
- How To Stop The Fighting In Your Relationships
- 7 Unfailing Laws of Happy Relationships
- Relationships Today Follow the Rules of a Sexy Game, Not Love
- Secrets of Intimate Relationships
- How to Deal With Feelings of Jealousy and Insecurity About Past Relationships
- Relationships: Am I Cheating?
- Emotional Promiscuity and Relationships
- Relationships at the Crossroad
- Relationships: Prescribing the Symptom
- "3 Poems About Relationships"
- The Mirror of Relationships
- Rogerian Marriage Therapists Benefit Relationships in Trouble
- Spiritual Relationships -- A New Level of Intimacy and Sharing
- Developing Relationships, Wealth and Happiness
- Karma, relationships & 'the secret'
- Some Common Reasons Men Leave Relationships
- Interracial Relationships - an Overview of Issues
- Love Relationships at Work
- Relationship Questions and Answers
- Emotional Affair Signs
- Relationship Quizzes to Take Together
- Relationships in the Workplace
- How to Stop Being Jealous
- 6 Month Anniversary Ideas
- Cohabitation Before Marriage
- How Insecurity can Ruin a Relationship
- What are the Advantages of Being Single
- Bible Verses About Love
- Causes of Infatuation
- The Magic of Love and Togetherness
- What Does True Love Imply?
- Types Of Relationships




