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Most people don’t struggle to speak up because they lack communication skills.
They struggle because crossing that line feels dangerous.
In this episode, Dr. Aziz Gazipura explores why you may still feel stuck in passivity or half-assertiveness, even if you’ve spent years working on yourself. You understand the ideas. You know you “should” speak up. And yet, when the moment arrives, something pulls you back.
Rather than offering scripts or techniques, Dr. Aziz focuses on the real breakdown point: the guilt and fear that surface just before honesty. He examines how indirectness becomes a form of self-protection, why “gentle” assertiveness often fails to create real change, and how unspoken rules about being good, kind, or acceptable quietly limit your life.
This episode isn’t about becoming aggressive or finding better words. It’s about recognizing the internal code that says, “If I’m really honest, I’ll lose everything,” and understanding why that belief continues to run your behavior unless it’s directly confronted.
If you already know a lot about assertiveness but haven’t been able to live it consistently, this conversation names the threshold you may have been standing at for years—and what it actually takes to cross it.
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Many people reach a point where they realize something important: being “nice” isn’t working anymore.
For years—sometimes decades—they believed that staying flexible, not rocking the boat, and avoiding discomfort was the right way to live. They told themselves they were being considerate, kind, easygoing. They avoided pressuring people, avoided conflict, avoided making anyone uncomfortable.
And then slowly, quietly, the cost became undeniable.
Resentment started to build. Anxiety didn’t go away. Relationships felt draining or unsatisfying. Opportunities were missed. A subtle but persistent sense of frustration crept in—often accompanied by the feeling, “I’m not really being me.”
So they arrive at an insight that feels like progress:
I need to speak up for myself.
And that insight is progress.
But it’s not the breakthrough.
Because knowing that you should speak up does not automatically mean that you can—or that when you do, it will actually work.
Many people assume assertiveness is a simple behavioral skill. Learn the right words. Use the right tone. Say the thing.
But assertiveness isn’t primarily about what you say.
It’s about the inner stance you’re coming from when you say it.
This is where things break down.
Often, people move from passivity into what looks like assertiveness on the surface—but internally, they’re still trying not to upset anyone. They soften their message. They hint. They explain excessively. They bring things up indirectly, hoping the other person will “get it” without them having to actually claim what they want.
So they say something like:
“I just wanted to mention that you said you were going to do X, and then it didn’t happen… but it’s okay, I handled it.”
Technically, they spoke up.
Emotionally, they didn’t.
Nothing meaningful changes—and then comes the conclusion:
“See? Speaking up doesn’t work.”
So they retreat back into silence, often with more resentment than before.
This is one of the most common cycles I see:
First, passivity.
Then, a tentative attempt to speak up.
Then, disappointment when nothing changes.
Then, withdrawal.
Over time, resentment accumulates—not just toward the other person, but toward yourself. Because deep down, you know you didn’t fully say what was true.
What’s most painful isn’t that the other person didn’t change.
It’s that real contact never happened.
You weren’t fully there.
People usually have a long list of reasons why they can’t be more direct:
“It’s my boss.”
“It’s my parent.”
“It’s my partner.”
“That would be mean.”
“That would be selfish.”
“You can’t say that in this situation.”
These reasons feel convincing because they’re emotionally charged. But they all point away from the real issue.
The real issue isn’t the circumstance.
The real issue is that you’re operating within a very narrow internal permission structure—one designed to protect you from something that feels catastrophic.
Imagine being fully honest in a situation where you usually hold back.
Not cruel.
Not attacking.
Just clear.
Naming the pattern.
Naming the impact.
Naming what does and doesn’t work for you.
Most people feel immediate discomfort just imagining this.
Tightness in the chest.
A sinking feeling.
An urge to pull back.
That discomfort usually isn’t about politeness.
It’s about fear and guilt.
And underneath those emotions is a deeper belief:
If I’m truly myself, I will lose everything.
Lose love.
Lose approval.
Lose safety.
Lose belonging.
So your nervous system learned a rule long ago:
Don’t be too real.
That rule doesn’t disappear just because you intellectually understand assertiveness.
Everyone who struggles to speak up is running unconscious lines of code.
They sound like:
“If I ask for something, I’m selfish.”
“If I make someone uncomfortable, I’m bad.”
“If I say no, I’ll hurt them.”
“If I’m direct, I’ll be rejected.”
What’s striking is that most people don’t consciously agree with these beliefs.
When you say them out loud, they sound extreme—even absurd.
And yet, they quietly govern behavior.
You don’t need more confidence tips until you start identifying these rules.
Because as long as they remain unexamined, they run the show.
Avoidance feels safe in the short term.
In the long term, it guarantees that the fear never resolves.
Just like a phobia, the fear only weakens when you approach what you’ve been avoiding—in a structured, supported way.
As long as you keep telling yourself, “I’ll say it later,” or “It’s not worth it,” or “They won’t change anyway,” the old code stays intact.
And life quietly shrinks.
Change doesn’t come from more information.
It comes from:
Becoming conscious of the rules you’re living by
Questioning whether they’re actually true
Taking real interpersonal risks—consistently
This isn’t about being aggressive.
It’s about being real.
And yes—at first, the right thing often feels wrong.
Assertiveness can feel selfish.
Honesty can feel dangerous.
Boundaries can feel cruel.
Those feelings are not signs you’re doing something wrong.
They’re signs you’re upgrading old code.
Instead of trying to “be more assertive,” start here:
Notice one situation where you hold back.
Notice what you feel when you imagine being direct.
Ask yourself: What rule am I following right now?
Just seeing it begins to loosen its grip.
From there, real change becomes possible.
Knowing how to speak up isn’t enough because the problem was never a lack of knowledge.
The problem is fear of losing connection by being yourself.
And the truth—one that must be experienced, not just understood—is this:
You don’t lose everything by being real.
You lose everything by never being you.
Until we speak again,
have the courage to be who you are—
and know, on a deep level, that you’re awesome.