Explore why women over-perform to please others and learn how to break the 'workhorse' cycle by reclaiming your agency and flipping the professional game.

Strength becomes a struggle when it’s not paired with boundaries; empathy without boundaries is just self-destruction. You’re absorbing everyone else’s emotions like a sponge, but you have no way to wring yourself out.
Why does a girl start to be like on steroids trying everything to please a man or a boss I didn’t I flipped the game he is the workhorse for me but other woman who don’t know the game end up depleating themselves for them? Why and they call them being on steroids


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Lena: You ever look at someone in the office who’s just... on fire? But not in a good way—more like they’re on steroids, trying to please everyone, staying late, and answering every email instantly?
Blythe: Oh, I know that energy. It looks like "dedication," but it’s often people-pleasing in disguise. It’s wild because research shows that women who consistently work more than nine hours a day without breaks have a 58% higher rate of anxiety and depression.
Lena: That’s a staggering number. It’s like they’re depleting themselves to be the "good girl" while others, who maybe "know the game" better, let them do all the heavy lifting.
Blythe: Exactly. It’s a survival mechanism, often rooted in a deep fear of being seen as "difficult" or not "good enough."
Lena: So let’s explore how this "steroid" level of pleasing actually impacts our bodies and what it really costs us to stay in that cycle.