How to Feel in Your Body When You’re Overgiving and How to Know When It’s a True Yes
There’s a moment. Someone asks you for something.
- Your boss.
- Your mother.
- A friend.
- A partner.
And you hear yourself say: “Yeah, sure.”
But your body whispers: “…but no.”
Overgiving doesn’t start in behavior. It starts in the body. And most women were never taught how to listen to it. So if you want better answers, here’s how to ask better questions and what to avoid.
The Body Knows Before the Mind Decides
Your nervous system registers safety and discomfort before your thoughts catch up.
Before you explain.
Before you justify.
Before you say yes.
Your body already answered. The problem? We override it.
Because being agreeable feels safer than being honest.
What a Body “No” Actually Feels Like
A body “no” is rarely loud. It doesn’t scream. It tightens. Here are subtle signs your body is saying no while your mouth is saying yes:
• A slight contraction in your chest
• A heavy feeling in your stomach
• Your breath becomes shallow
• Your shoulders tense
• You feel suddenly tired
• A quiet inner resistance
It’s not dramatic. It’s a withdrawal of energy. And if you ignore it repeatedly, your body starts speaking louder:
Exhaustion.
Resentment.
Irritation.
Burnout.
Overgiving is often just chronic body override.
What a True Body “Yes” Feels Like
A true yes feels different. It feels open even if it’s challenging. Even if it stretches you.
A body yes often feels like:
• Expansion in the chest
• Calm clarity
• A grounded excitement
• Stable breath
• A sense of “I want to” not “I should”
The key difference? A true yes gives you energy. A conditioned yes drains it.
The “Yeah… But No” Pattern
This is the most common pattern:
Someone asks you something. You feel hesitation. But immediately your mind jumps in:
“It’s not a big deal.”
“I can handle it.”
“I don’t want to disappoint them.”
“It’s easier if I just do it.”
And so you override your body, not because you’re weak. Because you were trained to value harmony over authenticity. To value being needed over being regulated.
Why Overgiving Disconnects You From Your Body
When you repeatedly ignore your body’s signals:
• You stop trusting your intuition
• You second-guess your feelings
• You feel anxious after expressing yourself
• You don’t know what you actually want
Over time, you lose the ability to feel your own yes and no clearly. And that’s when overgiving becomes automatic.
Why Overgiving Disconnects You From Your Body
Before responding to any request this week, try this:
Pause – Take one full breath – Ask yourself: “If nobody would be disappointed, would I still say yes?”
Then scan your body not your thoughts. Your body.
Notice:
Is there expansion or contraction?
Lightness or heaviness?
Calm or pressure?
The body never lies. It only whispers.
You Can Be Kind Without Betraying Yourself
Listening to your body does not make you selfish. It makes you regulated.
A grounded no creates more trust than a resentful yes. A true yes builds intimacy. A forced yes builds tension.
Your nervous system doesn’t want you to give more. It wants you to stay safe inside yourself.
Choosing Yourself Is a Physical Practice
Choosing yourself isn’t just mindset. It’s embodiment.
- It’s feeling the contraction and respecting it.
- It’s noticing exhaustion and stopping.
- It’s recognizing when you’re about to say:“Yeah…”
- And instead saying: “No. Not this time.”
If you’re ready to understand where overgiving still lives in your patterns and how to shift it gently, you can start with my free guide:
5 Signs You´re Overgiving and How to Reclaim Your Power
Because your body has been speaking to you all along. You’re just learning to listen.
Always choose yourself.
Petra Alua 💞
Feminine Power Guidance
