Shrink For The Shy Guy

Nice People Don't Care Too Much

Jan 6, 2026
A provocative look at why 'being nice' often hides fear, guilt, and codependent habits. Short takes on how over-responsibility and people-pleasing trap your identity. Practical scenes of anxious automatic behaviors like immediate replies and saying yes against your will. A clear call to replace old operating systems with bolder, boundary-centered ways of relating.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Niceness Is A Survival Strategy

  • Niceness often masquerades as a survival strategy rather than genuine care.
  • Aziz explains niceness is driven by fear of rejection, abandonment, or being perceived as bad, so people perform agreeable behaviors to feel safe.
ANECDOTE

Kids Say 'You Don't Care' To Trigger Niceness

  • Aziz shares his son's phrase 'You don't care' as a familiar tactic used to elicit guilt.
  • He uses this childhood example to show how accusations of not caring trigger automatic niceness responses.
INSIGHT

Codependence Drives Overresponsibility

  • Codependence and over-responsibility underpin niceness by making your mood contingent on others.
  • Aziz defines codependence as I’m okay if you’re okay and describes the frantic urge to fix others’ emotions as a survival response.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app