You wouldn’t hand your wallet to anyone who asked. You wouldn’t let a stranger help themselves to your bank account simply because they needed something and you happened to be there. And yet, most of us do exactly this with something far more valuable than money.
Our energy. Our time. Our attention. Our peace.
We give it freely and often before we’ve even registered the request. A colleague asks for a favour we don’t have capacity for. Yes, of course. A friend needs something on the one evening we’d earmarked for ourselves. Absolutely, no problem. A commitment we never really wanted creeps closer and we honour it anyway, quietly resentful, quietly depleted.
This isn’t generosity. It’s a habit. And like most habits, it can be changed.
Why saying yes has become the default
For many of us, the instinct to say yes runs so deep it barely registers as a choice. We’ve been quietly taught that our needs come last. That rest is indulgent. That being helpful, available, and accommodating is simply what’s expected.
The result is a kind of slow leak. Not a dramatic burnout, not a single breaking point, just a gradual draining of the energy that was supposed to be yours. The things you actually want to do keep getting pushed to the end of the list. The list never ends. And somewhere in the middle of all that doing for others, you lose track of yourself entirely.
The real cost of saying yes when you mean no
Every yes that isn’t genuine is a withdrawal from your own reserves. It’s the lunch break spent on someone else’s problem. The evening swallowed by an obligation you’d completely forgotten how to decline. The Sunday morning that somehow became about everyone except you.
Over time those withdrawals add up. You become tired in a way that sleep doesn’t fix. Irritable in ways you can’t quite explain. Vaguely resentful of people you actually love. These aren’t personality flaws; they’re symptoms of an account that’s been overdrawn for too long.
The simple shift that changes everything
You don’t have to start saying no to everything. You just have to stop saying yes to everything!
The most useful tool is a pause. Where you once said “of course, no problem” before the question had even finished; try saying “let me check and come back to you.” That small gap between the request and your response is where your actual answer lives. Use it.
From there, it becomes about having a handful of honest, comfortable ways to decline. Not excuses; you don’t owe anyone an elaborate explanation. Something simple and warm is enough.
“I don’t have the capacity for that right now.”
“That doesn’t work for me this time.”
“I’m going to have to sit this one out.”
Practise them until they feel natural. Because the first few times you use them will feel uncomfortable; not because they’re wrong, but because saying yes has felt so automatic for so long that anything else feels strange.
It won’t always. It gets easier every single time.
What happens when you start protecting your energy
Something quietly remarkable. The things you do say yes to start to feel different; lighter, more willing, more genuinely generous. Your relationships improve because you’re present in them rather than depleted by everything surrounding them. The time you carve out for yourself stops feeling stolen and starts feeling deserved.
And the people worth having in your life? They’ll respect you more for it; not less.
Your energy is finite. Precious. Entirely yours to decide how it’s spent.
Spend it like it matters. Because it does. 🌙
Reconnect. Realign. Rediscover your WYLDE.





