From People-Pleaser to Empowered: Unsent Letters & a Tapping Guide to Setting Healthy Boundaries
With insights from Deborah Serani, Psychologist & Author of Living With Depression
Letter One: To the Friend I Couldnāt Say No To
It was already dark outside. My kitchen smelled faintly of burnt toast from dinner I hadnāt finished, my phone face-down on the counter so I wouldnāt be tempted to check it. It still lit up. Hey, any chance you could help me with that report tonight?
I didnāt even look at the clock. My thumbs were already moving. āOf course,ā with a smiley face ā the mask I can apply in under a second. But my body betrayed me. My shoulders curled inward. My lungs tightened, breath shallow. My stomach felt heavy, like Iād just swallowed something that didnāt belong there. You wouldnāt have seen it. You would have heard the lightness in my tone if weād been speaking. But you wouldnāt have heard the whisper inside me: I donāt have the energy for this. Not tonight. Not again. That whisper never wins. Not then. Not yet.
Flashback
Third grade, school pickup line. Iām in the back seat, cradling a crumpled art project in my lap. My motherās voice is clipped: āMrs. Carter said you wouldnāt help clean up after class? You made her day harder.ā My cheeks burn. My small hands clench. I murmur, āI was tired,ā but it doesnāt matter. The silence that follows is worse than shouting. Itās the kind that makes you scramble to fix things before it swallows you. The next day, I clean the classroom until my fingers smell like bleach. Mrs. Carter smiles. My mother smiles. My chest loosens. Lesson learned.
Dr. Seraniās note: āThis is the hidden tax of people-pleasing ā paid in guilt, quiet resentment, and the erosion of self-worth. It often feels safer to say yes than to face possible disconnection. But each yes given from fear chips away at your sense of self.ā
Tapping for the āAutomatic Yesā Reflex
Setup (Karate Chop):
- āEven though my body says yes before my heart has a chance to answer, I honor how hard Iāve worked to feel safe and accepted.ā
- āEven though Iāve been trained to keep the peace at my own expense, Iām open to the idea that my needs matter too.ā
Sequence:
- Eyebrow: āThis reflex to please without thinking.ā
- Side of Eye: āAfraid of the silence if I say no.ā
- Under Eye: āThe knot in my stomach when I imagine disappointing them.ā
- Under Nose: āOld guilt, living in my nervous system.ā
- Chin: āIāve been doing this for so long.ā
- Collarbone: āIām allowed to pause before I answer.ā
- Under Arm: āItās safe to check in with myself.ā
- Top of Head: āIām learning to answer from truth, not fear.ā
Letter Two: To the Moment I Imagined You Turning Away
It starts before I speak. Before I even decide. In my mind, I can already see it ā your eyebrows lift, the pause in your voice, maybe the faint sigh. The shift of your body like youāre quietly stepping back. And in that instant, a whole story unspools: youāll think Iām unreliable. Youāll tell someone. Youāll slowly stop calling. The space between us will widen until itās permanent. The thought of that space makes my chest hurt more than the exhaustion of saying yes. So I give you what you want ā not because I have it to give, but because I canāt stand the thought of you pulling away.
Flashback
Middle school cafeteria, 7th grade. Iām halfway through my sandwich when a classmate says, āCan I have that?ā He points to my cookie ā the one my dad packed because itās my favorite. I hesitate. He tilts his head. āCome on. Iāll be your friend.ā The words land like a hook. I give it to him. He smiles, calls me ācool,ā and Iām warm all over. The next day, he doesnāt sit with me. But the lesson lingers: giving keeps people close, even if only for a moment.
Dr. Seraniās note: āFear of disappointing others is often rooted in early attachment experiences. If love or approval felt conditional, saying no can feel like risking abandonment. But healthy relationships survive ā and even thrive ā when you can express your limits.ā
Tapping for Fear of Disappointing Others
Setup (Karate Chop):
- āEven though Iām terrified of letting people down, I accept that this fear once kept me safe.ā
- āEven though I feel panic at the thought of being seen as selfish, I choose to respect myself enough to pause.ā
Sequence:
- Eyebrow: āThis fear of being rejected.ā
- Side of Eye: āWorried theyāll think less of me.ā
- Under Eye: āFeeling responsible for everyoneās happiness.ā
- Under Nose: āCarrying weight that isnāt mine.ā
- Chin: āI donāt want to be the bad one.ā
- Collarbone: āI want to feel safe in my no.ā
- Under Arm: āLetting go of this ancient panic.ā
- Top of Head: āItās okay to choose myself.ā
Letter Three: To the Space I Never Guarded
I thought being open meant being good. I pictured walls as cold things, and I didnāt want to be cold. So I left the gates wide open. People came and went. At first, I liked it. I told myself it meant I was generous. But slowly, the ground wore thin. My own grass stopped growing. The flowers I planted wilted because they were always being stepped on. I couldnāt hear my own thoughts over the constant movement of other peopleās needs.
Flashback
First apartment, age 21. Friday night. Iām exhausted from work, dreaming of a quiet night alone. My roommate asks if I can cover her shift so she can go out. I want to say no. I can almost taste it. But my brain says, Sheāll think Iām selfish. Sheāll stop liking me. I say yes. I stay until midnight, cleaning up after strangers. She comes home drunk and laughing. I tell myself it was worth it. My body knows otherwise.
Dr. Seraniās note: āBoundaries are living agreements that protect connection and prevent resentment. Without them, you risk giving so much of yourself that nothing authentic remains.ā
Tapping for the āBoundaries Are Meanā Belief
Setup (Karate Chop):
- āEven though Iāve been told boundaries are selfish, I honor my right to protect my energy.ā
- āEven though part of me fears boundaries will push people away, Iām open to believing they can create deeper connection.ā
Sequence:
- Eyebrow: āThis belief that saying no makes me unkind.ā
- Side of Eye: āWorried theyāll see me differently.ā
- Under Eye: āThat voice saying, āYou should just help.āā
- Under Nose: āThe pressure to be endlessly available.ā
- Chin: āIām allowed to choose my limits.ā
- Collarbone: āBoundaries protect my relationships.ā
- Under Arm: āItās safe to value my own well-being.ā
- Top of Head: āI can be kind and still say no.ā
Final Letter: To Myself
I have been missing from my own life. For years, I measured my worth by how well I erased myself for someone elseās comfort. I let my no be swallowed. I let my yes be stolen. But I am here now. I am learning to hear my own voice again ā not the one smoothed for approval, but the one that comes from the center of my chest, steady and clear. My no is not rejection. My yes is not automatic. Both are mine. And both are worthy.
Closing Scene: The Gate
Itās early morning. Light seeps in through the thin curtains, brushing gold across the floorboards. The phone is on the nightstand. Face down. Silent. Itās been there since last night. You didnāt touch it. You sit up slowly, feeling the stretch in your spine. Your breath is full, not clipped. For the first time in a long time, thereās no tight band around your chest.
In your mind, you see it: the open field youāve been writing about in these unsent letters. The one where you once let everyone pass through without pause. Now thereās a gate. Itās not tall or heavy. Just enough to mark the line between out there and in here. You stand beside it. One hand rests on the latch. The hinges swing smoothly. You can open it, you can close it ā both without fear. Somewhere in the distance, you hear that familiar whisper, the one thatās been with you since childhood, telling you that closing the gate is selfish. But itās softer now. Almost like itās coming from the next field over. You take a slow breath, feeling your feet on solid ground. The gate stays closed. Not forever. Just for now. And for the first time, that feels like freedom.