About this episode
Join Dr. Aziz LIVE for a 3-day virtual event: Not Nice LIVE > Go here for details and tickets.In this episode of Shrink for the Shy Guy, Dr. Aziz exposes one of the most insidious traps keeping people stuck in anxiety, guilt, and people-pleasing: The Nice Trap.
This subtle form of self-erasure convinces you that being agreeable, self-sacrificing, and undemanding will earn you love, respect, and belonging. But in reality, it does the opposite. You feel anxious, disconnected, and unseen—because you're not showing up as you.
Dr. Aziz breaks down how this trap gets wired early in life, the invisible rules that keep you playing small, and the internal “trip wires” that trigger guilt the moment you try to break free. More importantly, you’ll learn how to spot those rules… and begin rewriting them.
Packed with insights, mindset shifts, and real-world strategies, this episode invites you to reclaim your boundaries, speak your truth, and finally stop trading authenticity for approval.
🎧 Ready to escape the Nice Trap? Tune in now and take your first step toward freedom.
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There is a trap that countless people fall into without even realizing it—and I know it well, because I lived inside it for many years.
It’s sticky. It’s invisible. And even when you start trying to escape it, there are hidden trip wires that snap you right back inside.
I call it the Nice Trap.
Today, I want to show you exactly what this trap is, how to recognize when you’re stuck in it, and—most importantly—how to begin freeing yourself from it in a way that actually lasts.
How You Know You’re in the Nice Trap
You might be in the Nice Trap if any of this sounds familiar:
You have a hard time saying no. When someone asks you for something, you feel compelled to say yes—even when it costs you. You struggle to ask for what you want. Disapproval or conflict feels deeply unsettling.
You might soften your words, hide your true thoughts, or reshape yourself in the moment just to avoid tension. You let situations unfold that you don’t actually want because you don’t want to “make a scene.” You feel intensely uncomfortable being direct, expressing irritation, or showing anger—and if you do, you feel like you’ve done something terribly wrong.
At first glance, this all looks like being a “good person.”
And that’s what makes the trap so dangerous.
The Story That Keeps the Trap Alive
Underneath all of these behaviors is a quiet, powerful belief:
If I’m agreeable, self-sacrificing, and undemanding, I’ll earn safety, love, and acceptance.
If you give enough… If you don’t rock the b