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Fawning Trauma Response: How It Hurts Your Career
July 10, 2025 -
3 minutes, 45 seconds
Most people have heard of the fight, flight, or freeze trauma responses—but there’s a fourth, lesser-known one that might be quietly wrecking your career, boundaries, and sense of self: the fawning trauma response. Often masked as “being nice,” fawning is the urge to appease, over-give, or people-please to maintain safety. It may look like cooperation, but it’s often self-abandonment in disguise—and it’s more common than you think.
What Is the Fawning Trauma Response?
Coined by therapist Pete Walker, the fawning trauma response describes a pattern where someone becomes overly agreeable or helpful in order to avoid conflict or rejection. Instead of fighting or fleeing, fawners “merge” with the needs, desires, or expectations of others—often at the cost of their own boundaries. Clinical psychologist Dr. Ingrid Clayton explains that fawning is not just personality-driven—it’s a survival response shaped by past trauma, especially when other options (like escape or confrontation) weren’t safe.Signs Fawning Is Hurting You More Than Helping
Fawning isn’t just a “nice” trait—it can damage your self-worth, stunt career growth, and trap you in toxic relationships. You may be fawning if you regularly apologize to people who hurt you, downplay your needs, or obsess over saying the “right thing.” Therapist Karen DuBose calls it self-abandonment for approval—a chronic need to appease that’s rooted in fear. In professional settings, this can lead to burnout, being overlooked for promotions, or being labeled a “yes person” instead of a leader.
Why Fawning Is So Hard to Spot—Even in Ourselves
Unlike the more visible fight or flight responses, fawning is subtle and socially rewarded. It shows up as overworking, people-pleasing, or careaholism—especially in helping professions. According to experts, fawning can also morph into “flocking”—a group-level form of appeasement where individuals suppress their voice to conform. While it may offer short-term emotional safety, fawning slowly erodes authenticity and leads to resentment, anxiety, and chronic stress.
Breaking Free: How to Heal from the Fawning Trauma Response
The antidote to fawning isn’t selfishness—it’s radical self-care. That means learning to say no, setting emotional boundaries, tolerating disapproval, and reconnecting with your own voice. Ask yourself: Am I helping out of compassion—or fear? Start practicing conflict tolerance and stop shrinking yourself to fit others’ comfort. As DuBose warns, “Eventually, the crocodile bites.” But when you stop feeding it and start honoring your own values, you step into true strength—not just survival.
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