When Saying “Yes” Costs Your Well-Being: The Truth About Integrity and Self-Abandonment

Many women believe that keeping their word at all costs is the ultimate sign of integrity.
We say yes, even when our bodies, minds, or intuition are quietly saying no.

But here’s the hard truth:

If your “integrity” requires you to ignore yourself, it’s not integrity—it’s self-abandonment.

This post is about learning to honor your commitments and yourself, even when it means saying, “This isn’t for me.”

Why Saying Yes Isn’t Always Integrity

Somewhere along the way, we were taught:

  • Be reliable.
  • Don’t disappoint.
  • Follow through no matter what.

These lessons can trap us. We stay overcommitted, exhausted, and disconnected from our own needs.

Real integrity isn’t about rigidly honoring past versions of you—it’s about telling the truth in real time.

The Cost of Overcommitting

Overcommitting can lead to:

  • Emotional exhaustion
  • Chronic stress and burnout
  • Feeling disconnected from your own priorities
  • Resentment toward yourself and others

Ignoring these signs doesn’t make you strong—it makes you conditioned to prioritize everyone else over yourself.How to Say “This Isn’t for Me” Without Guilt

  1. Pause before saying yes.
    Ask yourself if this aligns with your current priorities.
  2. Acknowledge your previous commitment.
    Honesty doesn’t erase your word—it updates it.
  3. Use clear language.
    “I appreciate the opportunity, but this isn’t for me.”
  4. Honor your feelings.
    Your needs are valid. Your boundaries are part of integrity.

Saying no isn’t flakiness. It’s self-respect. And self-respect is the truest form of integrity.

A Challenge for You

Where in your life have you been calling self-abandonment “integrity”?

Take a moment today to reflect. Write it down.
Then, consider what it would feel like to say:

“I know I said yes, but this isn’t for me.”

Conclusion

Integrity doesn’t require self-sacrifice. It requires honesty.
It requires presence.
It requires courage to honor your evolving self.

Stop overcommitting. Start including yourself in your own decisions.
Your word is powerful—but only when it includes you.

woman s hand with stop message communicates awareness
Photo by Anh Nguyen on Pexels.com


Enjoying this content? My book 52 Weeks of Wisdom & Wellness goes deeper — find it here.

Margins

Margin is the space between our load and our limits. It is the amount allowed beyond that which is needed. It is something held in reserve for contingencies or unanticipated situations. Margin is the gap between rest and exhaustion, the space between breathing freely and suffocating.

I stumbled across this and it hit me right in the heart.

We’ve all heard the term “having a boundary.” In fact, these days it common lingo when it comes to self care. Several years ago a dear friend of mine talked to me about the word boundaries versus margins. A boundary is something that keeps someone or certain things away from you. Whereas, a margin is what you choose to allow in.

We need boundaries to obviously at times. Here is where:

  • To keep away things that are dangerous to us or could be harmful.
  • To keep toxic people away from us.
  • Around our personal and work time.

Those are important things for sure. But I’m really looking at the difference between what I protect and keep away, to what I invite and allow in.

What I choose to put inside my margins feels empowering unlike a boundary which feels harsh and cold.

As I begin this new year with seeking equanimity in my life, I’m really paying close attention to what I put inside the margins. As a person who gives so much all the time, I’m learning to give to myself a little, too. Over the last year, I really learned to listen to the things in my life that feed me or drain me. My intention is never to hurt someone while navigating these margins. It can be challenging as I tend to put others needs first. The chronic people pleaser syndrome. I’m committed to putting me a little higher on the pleasing list.

In order to be deliberate with my time and energy, I’ve first identified a few key things. I needed to be really clear as to what drains me and what feeds me.

The things that drain me:

  • People. I say that with a hint of joking and quite a bit of truth. Considering that I am with people all day every day and again when I get home I’m with more people, it is imperative that I learn to listen to how much people can drain me. If given a choice to be alone or with people, it’s 99% certain that I’m going to choose to be alone.
  • Mindlessly walking through a department store for the sake of shopping. If I don’t know exactly what I need, there’s no way I’m going to walk into a store just to look. In fact, most of my shopping is done online. I have no interest in being in stores just to kill time.
  • Spending time in crowded places, unless it’s a crowded coffee shop by myself. Again, partially joking here and a lot of truth. I love being in a crowded coffee shop if I’m by myself. Are we getting a theme here?
  • Loud and noisy places with lots of people. I’m not a huge fan of crowded spaces and I definitely don’t like to just be in a group of people for no purpose.
  • Loud music. Loud people. Loud environments.

The things that feed me:

  • Being alone.
  • Setting goals and creating action plans.
  • Making sourdough bread.
  • Spending time in my garden.
  • Long, solitary walks.
  • A jigsaw puzzle that allows my mind to wander.

Before saying yes to anything these days, I am learning to stop and ask myself the following—

  • Does the serve me today?
  • Will this feed me or drain me?
  • Am I saying yes to please someone else?
  • Does this feel good to me?

Margin is the space between load and limit. It is the amount allowed beyond that which is needed.

If it’s going to push me past my limit, then it’s a no. I’m trying really hard to recognize when my load is full and not add on anything that would break that limit. As I do things that feed me, my load reduces and I have space for more. Tuning inward to myself is key, then listening, and then choosing wisely.

Selfish? Maybe.

Radical self care? Absolutely.