Are You an Over-Giver? How to Reclaim Your Energy and Your Sovereignty
When Giving Becomes a Reflex
When her last child left for college, Christine thought she’d finally have time for herself. After 25 years of raising kids, full-time work, and volunteering, she pictured making time for long walks, art classes, maybe even that trip to Italy she’d dreamed of.
But within weeks, her calendar filled again—helping with fundraising events, taking on extra projects at work, and always available when someone needed a favor. Whenever someone needed help, Christine was the first to say “yes.” She liked being helpful and generous with her time. It was part of her identity.
It was also a learned survival mechanism. She learned early in life that “being helpful” was a way to gain accolades and feel needed. What she wasn’t conscious of, however, was that all the external validation was a substitute for self-validation. When she was feeling helpful, it took her attention away from herself, and the persistent feelings of not being enough.
The over-giving also had its physical consequences. To compensate for all the energy spent serving others, she was deeply dependent on “treats,” “rewards,” and feeling like she “deserved” them. The habit of “treating” herself was serving as self-care and masking the discomfort of being out of balance with her energy.
The result? Health issues: 20 pounds overweight, pre-diabetic, brain fog, and a growing fear of not ageing well. People come to me to get off sugar and refined carbohydrates, but what they get is self-empowerment and a reclaiming of their personal sovereignty.
If you see yourself in Christine’s story, you might be an over-giver—someone who’s built an identity around helping others, even when it comes at the expense of your own energy, health, or happiness.
Signs You May Be an Over-Giver
You feel guilty saying “no,” even when you’re exhausted.
You take responsibility for other people’s emotions or problems, and enjoy being known as reliable or a “fixer.”
You anticipate others’ needs before they ask—and feel uneasy when you’re not “useful.”
You downplay your own needs or desires (“It’s fine, I don’t need that”).
You sometimes feel resentful but keep giving anyway.
You equate worthiness with productivity or service.
Over-giving often stems from beautiful qualities—empathy, responsibility, generosity—but when it becomes a reflex rather than a choice, it leads to depletion, resentment, and disconnection from your own self.
The Roots of Over-Giving: When Approval Becomes a Currency
Over-giving and people-pleasing are two sides of the same coin. They often originate in early life, when we learn—explicitly or implicitly—that love and approval are earned through helpfulness, compliance, or emotional caretaking.
Maybe you were the “responsible one,” praised for keeping the peace or taking care of others’ feelings. Over time, those early lessons harden into a belief: I am valued for what I do for others, not for who I am.
As adults, this pattern can manifest as:
Saying yes when you mean no
Avoiding conflict to keep others comfortable
Taking on extra work to prove reliability
Feeling uneasy when you rest or prioritize yourself
Measuring your worth by your usefulness
People-pleasing is not weakness—it’s an adaptive strategy. It helped you stay safe, loved, or accepted. But now, that same strategy may be keeping you small, tired, and disconnected from your deeper desires.
Reclaiming your sovereignty means recognizing that your value isn’t conditional. You are allowed to take up space, to rest, to receive, and to say “no” without guilt.
The Hidden Costs of Over-Giving
Chronic over-giving can manifest in both emotional and physical ways:
Burnout or fatigue that never seems to lift
Mood swings or a sense of dullness—like you’ve lost your spark
Resentment or martyrdom (“After everything I do, no one appreciates it”)
Loss of direction or identity, especially after a major life transition like retirement or an empty nest
Health challenges linked to chronic stress or suppressed emotion
When giving becomes a survival strategy instead of an act of love, it disconnects you from your sovereignty—the quiet inner knowing that says, I matter too.
Reclaiming Your Personal Sovereignty
Here’s where the healing begins: not by swinging to the other extreme and cutting everyone off, but by rebalancing how and why you give.
Pause Before You Say Yes.
Ask yourself: Is this mine to do? or Am I saying yes out of love—or out of fear of letting someone down?Notice the Energy Exchange.
Healthy giving feels expansive; over-giving feels draining. Start tracking how your body feels after interactions. Your nervous system is a powerful truth-teller.Reconnect With Desire.
Make a list of things you want—not what others need from you, but what lights you up. Small pleasures count.Practice Receiving.
Let someone else help for once. Allow yourself to rest without earning it.Redefine Your Worth.
Your value is not measured by how much you do for others. It’s measured by how aligned you are with your truth.
From Over-Giver to Sovereign Giver
When you reclaim your sovereignty, giving becomes a choice again—not a compulsion. You can still be generous and kind, but from a place of overflow instead of depletion.
You start to realize:
Saying no to what drains you is saying yes to what heals you.
And from that place, you don’t give less—you give better.
Next Step: Reclaim Your Energy
If this resonates, it may be time to explore what’s underneath your patterns of over-giving—and learn how to restore your energy and clarity.
✨ Book a complimentary Discovery Call with me. Together, we’ll look at what’s keeping you overextended and create a path back to balance, sovereignty, and joy.