Are you always the “nice one”, the person who bends over backwards to keep the peace, even when it costs you your own well-being?
At Convo Africa, we believe healing is possible, but first we must name what we are dealing with. One such hidden struggle is fawning, a trauma response that quietly chips away at self-worth while masquerading as kindness.
Psychotherapist Pete Walker describes fawning as a maladaptive response we develop to create safety in relationships. It’s about pleasing others, mirroring their needs, and avoiding conflict — often at the expense of our own voice. And while being kind is good, being trapped in fawn mode can harm mental, emotional, and even physical health.
Here are 7 signs fawning may be running your life:
1. Solitary Retreat
Do you find yourself withdrawing from others, preferring to be alone rather than risk conflict? Fawning often leads to emotional exhaustion, making isolation feel like a shield. But over time, this disconnect can erode community ties and mental wellness.
2. Harmonious Appeasement
If you’re constantly striving to please, terrified of upsetting people, and holding yourself to impossible standards, this might be a trauma-driven coping mechanism. You don’t have to live in fear of rejection. Healthy relationships allow space for both agreement and disagreement.
3. The Apology Reflex
“I’m sorry.” Sound familiar? Many who fawn apologize automatically, even when they’ve done nothing wrong. It feels like a survival strategy, but it can keep you trapped in patterns where your own needs never come first.
4. Carrying Others’ Burdens
Do you find it easier to help others than to receive help yourself? Fawning makes us hyper-focused on solving everyone’s problems but uncomfortable with support directed our way. True healing happens in safe spaces where giving and receiving are balanced.
5. Altruistic Neglect
It’s noble to put others first — but not when it means neglecting yourself. Many in fawn mode take pride in selflessness, forgetting that self-care is not selfish. In fact, nurturing your own mental health is essential for community well-being.
6. Perfectionist Idealism
Behind the “always nice” persona often lies perfectionism. Fawners push themselves relentlessly, fearing failure or rejection if they’re not perfect. But the truth is — perfection is not the requirement for love, acceptance, or success.
7. Suppressed Emotional Eruptions
Because fawners hide their struggles, emotions can build up until they erupt — sometimes in unexpected ways. This might look like sudden outbursts, or sharing vulnerable feelings in “safer” spaces like social media rather than with loved ones.
Moving from Survival to Healing
Fawning doesn’t have to define you. With self-awareness, professional support, and safe community, you can unlearn survival patterns and embrace healthier ways of relating.
Being kind doesn’t mean sacrificing yourself. It means creating a balance where kindness, self-respect, and compassion coexist. That’s when true resilience emerges, and when individuals thrive, communities thrive too.
If you recognize yourself in these signs, take a step today. Speak to a trusted friend, engage in open conversations, or reach out for professional help. Our licensed therapists are willing to help. Book one here.
Because your well-being matters.


