The People Pleaser

The People Pleaser Poem by Britt Wolfe author

Read more poetry by Britt Wolfe

She arrived early to every room,

smile already arranged like fresh flowers
on a table no one had asked her to set.

Her laughter came first—
a bright, practiced note
to fill any silence before it could ask questions.

Inside, she kept a careful ledger:

who needed reassurance,
who felt overlooked,
whose approval was running low.

She bent like young willow,
never breaking,
only reshaping herself
into whatever form eased the lines on other faces.

“Yes” left her lips like breathing,

even when her bones whispered “no.”

She carried other people's burdens in her pockets
until her own dreams were pressed flat
as forgotten receipts at the bottom of a bag.

At night she lay awake tallying the day.

Did they like me?

Did I speak too much?

Was I enough?

Was I too much?

She performed the role so beautifully
that eventually the role became the only thing anyone saw.

Friends called her kind.

Colleagues called her reliable.

She smiled wider.

Hollower.

While something essential inside her
grew quieter and quieter,

starved for air,
starved for sunlight,
starved for ordinary want.

Then one ordinary Tuesday,

standing in the grocery aisle,
holding someone else's favourite cereal
she didn't even like,

she heard it.

Not thunder.

Not revelation.

Just a small, clear voice
buried beneath years of accommodation.

This is not living.

The words landed softly.

The way truth often does.

All those years poured out like water
on other people's gardens
while her own plot withered brown.

All those hours spent guessing moods.

Softening edges.

Editing herself into something easier to hold.

Apologising for taking up space
in a life that belonged to her.

What a waste, she thought.

Not with bitterness.

Not even with regret.

Only with the strange relief
of finally setting down a suitcase
carried far beyond its destination.

The world did not collapse.

No alarms sounded.

No one pointed toward the exit.

The cereal remained on the shelf.

The fluorescent lights continued their dull humming.

And yet everything had changed.

Because for the first time in years,
she was no longer wondering what everyone else needed.

For the first time,

she was listening for herself.

The voice was tired.

Rumpled.

Late to its own life.

But unmistakably alive.

And somewhere in that quiet turning,

somewhere between obligation and freedom,

between performance and truth,

between the person everyone loved
and the person she actually was,

she began, at last,

to come home.

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Poetry by Britt Wolfe:

Britt Wolfe

Britt Wolfe writes emotionally devastating fiction with the precision of a heart surgeon and the recklessness of someone who definitely shouldn’t be trusted with sharp objects. Her stories explore love, loss, and the complicated mess of being human. If you enjoy books that punch you in the feelings and then politely offer you a Band-Aid, you’re in the right place.

https://bio.site/brittwolfeauthor
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