
When we don’t know how to ask for what we need, we manipulate, avoid, or overextend. In this powerful and painfully relatable episode, Finn and Dr. Sarah unpack how fear of rejection fuels codependent behaviors—and how to finally break the cycle. From “polite lying” to people-pleasing to emotional seduction, they explore what drives us to control outcomes instead of asking directly for what we want. The truth? Authentic connection only happens when we stop trying to manage other people’s feelings and start telling the truth about our own.
Takeaways
Fear of rejection is the root of many manipulative and codependent behaviors.
You can’t build trust when your words and energy don’t match—people feel the fear underneath.
Saying “no” to a request isn’t rejection of you; it’s just a no to that thing.
Authentic requests lead to authentic relationships. Manipulation always breeds distance.
Recovery means tolerating discomfort, setting clear boundaries, and staying in your own hula hoop.
Key Timestamps
[00:01:00] Childhood patterns that teach us to manipulate instead of ask
[00:03:00] Fear of rejection and why we avoid hearing “no”
[00:06:00] How manipulation erodes trust and safety in relationships
[00:08:00] The energy of fear—why people feel dishonesty before they hear it
[00:12:00] Taking risks: why direct requests are a practice in courage and recovery
Notable Resources
Dr. Sarah Michaud’s book Co Crazy
Follow Finn and Sarah on YouTube: @LeavingCrazyTown
Additional tools and resources: www.drsarahmichaud.com
If you loved this episode, subscribe and leave a review—it helps others find the show. And share it with that friend who always says “I’m fine” but clearly isn’t.
Codependency Recovery: Leaving CrazyTown is a raw, real-talk podcast hosted by Finn and Dr. Sarah Michaud, two recovering addicts turned relatable guides on the wild ride of codependency healing. This isn’t your average recovery show—it’s part laughter, part therapy, and all truth. Subscribe wherever you listen and join us as we break out of CrazyTown—one honest conversation at a time.