If you’ve been conditioned to believe other people’s comfort matters more than your own, you swallow your “no”—or worse, forget how to feel it at all.
But your boundaries aren’t just words. They live in:
✔ The pit in your stomach when something feels off
✔ The tension in your shoulders when you force a “yes”
✔ The quiet whisper of “this isn’t right for me”
Kelvin picks up the check after dinner. His hand lingers too long on her lower back as they leave the restaurant. The air shifts—an unspoken contract now hangs between them: Dinner = Debt.
Amy’s body reacts before her mind can process:
Her stomach knots
Her breath goes shallow
Her skin prickles with unease
But her conditioning overrides:
“Don’t be rude.”
“He paid, after all.”
“Maybe I’m overreacting—he seems nice.”
So she swallows her no.
Six Months Later:
She’s in an abusive situation-ship that drains her
She dreads his texts but replies anyway
She’s lost count of how many times she’s said “I’m not in the mood” but given in
This wasn’t bad dating luck. It was the inevitable result of ignoring her first “no.”
John’s Story:
John’s lead investor slides a revised proposal across the table. The terms look good—too good. But his body screams:
3 AM adrenaline spikes reviewing the fine print
A metallic taste in his mouth during negotiations
A crushing fatigue no cold brew can touch
His rationalizations?
“This is just startup stress.”
“Maybe I’m being too sensitive.”
“I can’t afford to walk away.”
So he signs.
Six Months Later:
The investor forces a pivot that guts the company’s mission
His co-founders side with the investor
The culture becomes toxic—his best engineers quit
This wasn’t bad business luck. It was the result of every ignored gut punch.
Amy and John’s stories mirror each other because boundary violations follow the same script:
The Body Knows First
Amy’s shallow breath
John’s 3 AM adrenaline
Conditioning Overrides
“Don’t be rude” (Amy)
“This is just stress” (John)
The Slow Bleed
Amy’s resentment builds
John’s company unravels
The Crisis Point
Amy loses herself in an abusive, dead-end relationship
John loses control of his life’s work
The Common Emotions After (That YOU can use to rewire your conditioning!)
Amy identifies his feelings as trapped and despair
John identifies his feelings as disappointment, loss of control
For Amy:
Name the Physical Cost
“My body tenses when he touches me—that’s not chemistry, that’s a boundary.”
Practice the Pause
“I don’t owe immediate answers—even to nice guys.”
Walk If Needed
(The right man won’t punish you for honoring your no)
For John:
Trust the Somatic Data
“If a deal makes me nauseous, it’s not ‘just nerves’—it’s intel.”
Anchor in Non-Negotiables
“We don’t compromise on X. Take it or leave it.”
Be Willing to Lose
(No amount of funding is worth your soul)
Your no isn’t just a word—it’s your nervous system’s alarm… protecting you.
—> Ignore it in dating? You’ll attract users & build prisons.
—> Override it in business? You’ll also attract users & build prisons.
But honor it? That’s how you create:
Relationships that energize (not exhaust)
Companies that thrive (not just survive)
A life where your body feels like home
The choice is yours—one uncomfortable no at a time.
Amy and John’s story aren’t unique. Many high achievers override their intuition because:
They may confuse pain with the discomfort which comes with growth (More on on this later)
“If it feels wrong, it must mean I’m stretching!”
(Spoiler: Soul-aligned growth feels like expansion—not dread)
They may worship “Yes” people
Corporate culture rewards those who ignore their bodies’ signals in service of “the deal.”
They may have been taught to be always say “Yes” to get connection, and punished (by losing connection) for saying “No.”
They may fear being “difficult”
Better to swallow their no than risk being the “emotional” founder.
Here’s how to reclaim your boundaries without guilt, without blame, without burning out:
1️⃣ Get still. Notice when anxiety/flatness creeps in—before it stacks up
2️⃣ Ask brutal questions:
—> “Am I doing this for me…or to avoid discomfort? Is this discomfort stemming from my old conditioning, or is it from the place of a genuine no?”
—>: “Does this align with my truth—or someone else’s agenda?”
3️⃣ Start small. A delayed reply. A changed subject. A “let me think about it.”*
Every ignored “no” dims your light. Every honored one makes you un-messwithable.
Your turn: Where have YOU been overriding your “no” lately? 👇
P.S. Want more? My Taster Workshop is coming up! Join me!