The Hidden Cost of Always Being Strong: What Chronic People-Pleasing Does to Your Body

There is a particular kind of exhaustion that comes from

always being the strong one.

The one who holds everything together. The one who says yes when she means no. The one who manages everyone else’s feelings before she even checks in with her own.

If you recognise yourself in those words this post is for you.

People-pleasing isn’t a personality trait. It’s a nervous system response.

Most of us learn to people-please very early in life. We discover that keeping others happy keeps us safe from conflict, from disapproval, from being seen as difficult or too much. Over time, this becomes automatic. We stop asking ourselves what we want and need. We simply respond to what others seem to require of us.

What we don’t realise is that this constant monitoring this hypervigilance to other people’s moods and needs is exhausting the nervous system on a profound level.

Your nervous system cannot distinguish between physical danger and social threat. Disapproval, conflict, and disappointing others all register as danger signals. And your body responds accordingly raising cortisol, tightening your muscles, heightening your alertness. Every single time.

When this happens repeatedly across an entire lifetime, the body starts to pay a price.


What chronic people-pleasing does to your body


It keeps cortisol chronically elevated.

Cortisol is your primary stress hormone. In short bursts it’s helpful. But when it’s elevated day after day because you’re constantly anticipating other people’s reactions, managing their feelings, bracing for conflict it begins to suppress your immune system, disrupt your sleep, and contribute to that bone-deep exhaustion that no amount of rest seems to fix.

It disconnects you from your own hunger and needs


When you spend your life attending to what everyone else wants, you stop noticing what you want. Many chronic people-pleasers struggle to identify their own hunger, their own preferences, their own emotions. The body’s signals become quiet and eventually, you stop hearing them altogether.


It creates chronic muscle tension

Always being on always performing okayness, always managing the atmosphere in a room requires the body to be in a constant state of readiness. The jaw clenches. The shoulders rise. The stomach tightens. Over time, this tension becomes the baseline. You forget what it feels like to be truly at ease in your own body.


It depletes your energy at a cellular level


Emotional labour the constant work of managing relationships, smoothing things over, anticipating needs is genuinely physically tiring. It consumes glucose, elevates cortisol, and taxes the same physiological systems as physical exertion. The tiredness you feel is real. It is not weakness. It is the cost of years of invisible work.


What begins to help


The path out of chronic people-pleasing is not about suddenly becoming selfish or cold. It’s about learning to include yourself in the circle of people whose needs matter.

It begins with noticing. Noticing when you say yes and mean no. Noticing the tightening in your chest when someone asks something of you that you don’t want to give. Noticing the relief you feel even briefly when you allow yourself to choose yourself.

It continues with practice. Saying no to one small thing. Pausing before you automatically agree. Asking yourself before you respond to anyone else what do I actually need right now?


It deepens with support. Because unlearning a lifetime of conditioning is not something you should have to do alone.

You are allowed to have needs, Leena 🌿
You are allowed to be tired.


You are allowed to take up space.


💬 Does this resonate with you? I’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments below. And if this post spoke to you, please share it with a woman in your life who needs to hear it today.


With warmth,
Leena 🌿

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5 Small Things You Can Do This Morning to Feel Better Today

You don’t need a complete lifestyle overhaul to start feeling better. Sometimes the smallest shifts make the biggest difference especially when your nervous system is running on empty.

Here are five gentle things you can do this morning, right now, wherever you are.

Drink a glass of water before anything else. Before the coffee, before the phone, before the to-do list. Just water. Your body has been fasting all night and hydration is one of the simplest ways to support your energy and your mood from the very first moment of your day.

Take five slow breaths

Inhale for four counts and exhale for seven. Do this five times before you get out of bed. This simple breathing pattern activates your parasympathetic nervous system, your body’s rest and digest mode and sets a calmer tone for your entire morning.

Eat something within 90 minutes of waking; I know, I know you might not feel hungry. Skipping breakfast sends your blood sugar crashing, which triggers a cortisol spike, which feels a lot like anxiety. A handful of nuts, some Greek yoghurt, or a piece of fruit with nut butter is all you need to stabilise your energy and your mood.

Step outside for ten minutes  without your phone. Just you and some fresh air and a patch of sky. Nature genuinely lowers cortisol levels. It isn’t a luxury,  it’s medicine.

Write down one thing you’re not going to worry about today

Not a gratitude list or a to-do list. Just one thing you are consciously choosing to set down for today. One thing that can wait. Give yourself that gift.

These five things take less than thirty minutes combined. And yet they speak directly to your nervous system, your blood sugar, and your emotional wellbeing.  The three things that most determine how you feel on any given day. You don’t have to do all five. Start with one. See how it feels.

With warmth,

Leena 🌿

Which of these feels most doable for you this morning? 

Drop a comment below, I read and reply to every single one.

Welcome to Inside Out Wellbeing 

A New Chapter Rooted in Health, Nourishment & Inner Calm

If you’ve been part of my journey for a while, you’ll remember my blog Lena’s Kitchen Veggie Lena  a space filled with plant-based inspiration, wholesome recipes, and a love for nourishing food.

That chapter will always be special to me.

But as I’ve grown personally and professionally so has my vision. I’m so excited to officially welcome you to Inside Out Wellbeing.

Why the Rebrand?

Over the years, my work has expanded far beyond the kitchen.

As a qualified Nutrition Coach and Health & Wellness Coach, I’ve had the privilege of supporting people not just with what’s on their plate, but with how they feel in their bodies, how they manage stress, how they nourish their minds, and how they reconnect with themselves.

Food is powerful  but true wellbeing goes deeper.

I wanted a space that reflects the full picture:

🥦 Nourishing nutrition

🧠 Holistic health

🧘🏽‍♀️ Meditation & mindfulness

💚  lifestyle habits

Inside Out Wellbeing represents what I truly believe:

Real health starts from within.

When we support our inner world  our thoughts, stress levels, emotional health, gut health, nervous system  everything on the outside begins to shift.

What You Can Expect Here

This new space is about whole-person wellbeing.

You’ll still find nutrition guidance and realistic, nourishing food ideas. But you’ll also see more:

Practical wellness tools you can actually implement.

Mindset shifts for sustainable change.

Simple ways to reduce stress and feel calmer.

Meditation guidance

 (including my online course)

Honest conversations about balance 

This isn’t about extremes.

It isn’t about restriction.

It isn’t about chasing ideal health.

It’s about creating wellbeing that feels good, sustainable, and aligned with your real life.

Why “Inside Out”?

Because no amount of green smoothies can compensate for chronic stress.

No perfect meal plan replaces self-awareness.

No external routine creates lasting change without inner alignment.

When we:

regulate our nervous system

build supportive habits

nourish our bodies properly

create space to breathe

We transform from the inside out. That’s  the work I’m most passionate about now.

Thank You for Growing With Me

If you’ve been here since the Veggie Lena days — thank you.

If you’re new here — welcome.

Inside Out Wellbeing is more than a blog. It’s a space for grounded, realistic health. A space for women who want to feel energised, calm, strong, and connected  without overwhelm.

This rebrand isn’t about starting over. It’s about stepping fully into who I am now.

And I’m so glad you’re here for it.

With warmth,

Leena