A Journey of Healing and Recovery from C-PTSD

The Me I Thought I Had to Be: Letting Go of Perfectionism and People-Pleasing

2–3 minutes

For as long as I can remember, I tried to be the good one.
The polite one. The responsible one. The one who didn’t cause a fuss.

I thought that was just who I was — someone who liked order, who cared deeply, who wanted to get it right.

But healing has a way of holding up a mirror.

And what I saw staring back…
Wasn’t just a personality trait.
It was a mask.


When Perfectionism Becomes Protection

Perfectionism became my safety.

If I did everything right, maybe no one would get upset.
If I was liked by everyone, maybe I’d be protected from rejection.
If I stayed small, invisible, agreeable — maybe I wouldn’t be hurt again.

The scariest part was realising just how much of my self-worth I tied to how others saw me.

I didn’t just want to be liked.
I felt like I had to be liked — to be safe.

It was exhausting.
Managing everyone else’s perception while slowly losing sight of my own truth.


Learning to Let the Mask Go

Letting go of that mask has been hard.

Even now, I still feel the urge to:

  • “Perform” when I feel anxious
  • Default to what I think others want from me
  • Earn my place by being agreeable or useful

But healing has taught me to pause and ask:

“Do I actually want this? Or am I trying to be what someone else expects of me?”


What Healing Looks Like for Me Now

Healing has meant learning to:

  • Be okay with being misunderstood
  • Be okay with not being perfect
  • Be okay with being me — even if not everyone approves

I’m learning that worth isn’t something I have to earn through perfection.
It’s something I already have, just by being here.


If You’ve Been Wearing a Mask Too…

Whether your mask looks like:

  • People-pleasing
  • Perfectionism
  • Playing the strong one
  • Hiding your needs
  • Keeping the peace at your own expense

You’re not alone.

You put it on for a reason.
It protected you when you needed it to.
And now, piece by piece — you get to take it off.

This is part of the work.
And you’re not doing it alone.

Ness


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