Blog Post

Words to Use Carefully

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Hiya Gorgeous,

We all have a deep-rooted calling to feel happy. To love ourselves unconditionally and to embrace all the nooks and crannies that make us unique.

For me, that means knowing that I need peace of mind like I need oxygen. I need unstructured time like I need water. Contentment and less stress boost my immune system more than green juice.

And yet I often get lost in my to-do list, complain about too many commitments and align myself with people who give me more headaches than joy. I’ve caught myself saying things like, “once I’m over this hump I’ll have more breathing room.”

But here’s the thing about humps: There’s always another one on the next hillside. And humps hump. Yes, you read that correctly. They breed like rabbits!

I don’t know about you, but sometimes my mouth moves before my brain thinks. And as we all know, words are powerful. So as part of my peace-of-mind plan, I’ve decided to examine my language.

Especially the use of the following words:

  • Sorry.
  • No.
  • Thank you.

Harmless, helpful words, right? Yet their misuse can slowly drain our self-worth, damage our relationships and cause us to take on misplaced responsibility, while also watering down their meanings. Consciousness takes practice, so let’s dive in.

Sorry.

There are right times to be sincerely sorry, without question. A meaningful and complete apology is true heart medicine, a 1000-mg dose. And it’s our job to supply it when we mess up. Doing so helps us both.

But there are also unnecessary times to apologize, like when you catch yourself handing out knee-jerk sorrys for who you are, the dreams you have for your life, or for not being able to give more than you have without depleting your own precious energy reserves.

Remember, while it’s super important to be compassionate and keep your side of the street clean, what other people think of you is ultimately none of your business (at least that’s what my therapist tells me, lol!). You can’t please everyone. So for me, it’s important to own my mistakes, but not take on other people’s stuff that has nothing to do with me. And to speak my truth when needed, rather than just trying to apologize my discomfort away.

Here are some examples of times I’ve apologized for no reason…

  • When I was afraid to ask for what I needed.
  • When I had to make a boundary but I was really uncomfortable.
  • When I needed to stand up for myself or the people (and animals) I love.
  • When I was vulnerable and put my desires out there.
  • When I said no to the telemarketer who repeatedly called (during dinner—even when I asked to be taken off the list).

Sorry slip-up flashback:

When I launched KrisCarr.com, a disgruntled reader let me know that not only did she not like my new design, she also didn’t like my smile. Huh? In her mind, my site was too flashy, and I had no business advertising my own books (perhaps she works for free, but I can’t). As for my smile, it was way too big and therefore not authentic. Naturally I was hurt and pissed! Unnaturally I responded with something like “I’m so sorry you feel that way, I am proud of my new website and the work I do.” While I’ve always responded to negativity by either taking full responsibility when needed, ignoring it or blasting it with a fire hose of sunshine, did I have to say sorry? No. Was I sorry? Heck NO. No need to apologize. Oh, and did I stop smiling that day? Nope! Ain’t gonna happen. 🙂

Sorry isn’t a band-aid or a replacement for a backbone.

Sorry isn’t a way to keep the peace at the expense of your self-respect or well-being.There’s a difference between true remorse and a fear of being judged. Sweet friend, don’t say sorry if there’s nothing to be sorry for. Because I don’t know about you, but when I mindlessly vomit apologies, I’m often left feeling like a powerless doormat. Yuck. Get off the floor.

No.

I know that many of you can relate to this next one. It’s something I still struggle with, big time. I have a long history of not of saying no when I need to and instead turning my life into a constipated pretzel with an automatic yes response.

I’ve said yes when I should have said no because…

  • I hate to let people down.
  • I want everyone to be happy.
  • I underestimate how long projects will take, and I fail to prioritize my time.
  • I disregard my health and think I have more energy than I actually do.
  • I forget that my needs matter—that I matter as much as the other person.

Naughty no-no flashback:

Once upon a time, I agreed to a speaking engagement on a cruise ship. Sounds breezy, right? Not for me. I get extreme vertigo on big boats that can last for months afterwards. So why on earth did I say yes? Several reasons, but mostly because the folks asking me were painfully pushy. They were strong about what they wanted, but was I? I wiggled. I put the answer off as long as I could but eventually caved and said yes. Then I immediately started to panic. How would I get through 10 days of physical pain? Answer: I couldn’t! A month later I finally mustered a no and pulled out of the gig. Of course, by waiting I caused undue stress for all. If I had been upfront and able to put my needs first, I would have saved us both a lot of grief. Lesson learned.

Saying yes can feel good, and often comes from a positive place. It means we care about other people, want to do good things and spread happiness in the world. It means we’re optimistic and believe in our abilities. Sadly, though, few of us can make every dream match the reality of only 24 hours in a day. As my brilliant bestie Marie Forleo has said, “Get on the No Train,” choo choo! While this may seem like obvious advice, how often are we consistent No Train conductors?

You can’t always “yes” your way out of a problem.

Think about my example. Mindlessly agreeing may temporarily avoid discomfort, but it’s often short-sighted and even lazy. Instead of setting a boundary, we slip into “yes” amnesia, forgetting we’ve been here before. In this delusional state, there’s unlimited time, superhuman energy and a gaggle of soul-nannies who keep us fed, bathed and exercised. Sober up, dear one! (I’m speaking to myself too.) Splash yourself with cold water and (gently) slap your cheek. If you’re worried about scarcity, let that go. Offers and opportunities will continue.

Remember that every unwanted yes takes you one step further from freedom, well-being, and time with yourself and loved ones. And every no leaves room for something glorious.

Thank you.

Gratitude is one of the holiest ways to honor and connect with yourself and others. Saying thank you for a generous gift, kindness or favor is gracious. Repeatedly gushing thanks because you feel guilty or undeserving is not.

I’ve said thank you too much because…

  • I don’t feel deserving or worthy.
  • I feel guilty, uncomfortable or like something is wrong with me.
  • Love may never come again.
  • I don’t want to seem ungrateful, so I overcompensate.

Thankless thank you flashback:

During my actor/dancer period, I needed a loan to get through a rough patch. I borrowed the cash from a friend, and I insisted on a monthly payment plan. I was truly grateful. I always sent her my checks on time with a gushing note as an expression of thanks. Though I paid off my debt in the timeframe we established, I had a burning feeling that it was never enough. Years later we had a falling out for a different reason. And what do you think she hit me with? “You never appreciated the money I lent you.” I could have written a personalized thank you across the sky (with my blood), and it still wouldn’t have been enough. One thank you or a thousand made no difference. Clearly something much bigger was going on, and that something had nothing to do with me.

A heartfelt thank you is polite and loving. Becoming a thank you Pez dispenser is just plain toxic.

No one should hold you captive emotionally or treat you like a mooch. If you find yourself saying thank you too much, that might mean it’s time to re-examine the balance in your relationship. Perhaps they don’t deserve you. Look beyond your compulsion to say thank you and address the real issue or elegantly remove yourself from the drama. Bon voyage!

Wrapping it all up:

There’s a fine line between healthy and unhealthy use of language. It’s part of our spiritual journey to find our tipping points and gently adjust them.

When I get clear on the whys behind my sorrys, nos and thank yous, I get clear on who and what I need to embrace or release. I make room for more living and less second-guessing, more truth and less explaining, more relief and less regret.

Am I ready to live in that space more often?

YES, PLEASE, ABSOLUTELY!

Your turn: Is it just me or can you relate? Share your thoughts in the comments below, I’m really curious!

Peace & proper vocabulary,

Add a comment
  1. Donna says:

    People who call me and say “it’s just me” is so annoying. It’s that devaluing themselves. Your not a just you are someone ca valuable vital person. Don’t say just.

  2. Donna says:

    I never apologize. I value myself and my time and space. When someone asks me to do something my lips are already forming “NO” and I always say “thank you”for asking. Another thing I never say is “just”. Peo

  3. Roxanne says:

    Do I ever know what you’re talking about, I am the queen of “sorry”… my husband is always telling me this… My main issue is that I have a VERY HUGE guilt complex… So much so I internalize peoples pain and say sorry for that as well! It’s a work in progress… I have come a long way but it’s like I say to my husband all the time, I can change my reaction or response… but it’s what’s on the inside I have a hard time changing… how to you stop being you or feeling the way you have always felt about certain thing (the guilt)? Not easy!! I’m still on that road, I am confident that one day I’ll find a good balance though 🙂 P.S. I just wanted to put it out there that before I even read the comment about the woman who bashed your site, I thought to myself wow, this site is REALLY nice… that’s the honest truth so great job!! Love it! 🙂

  4. Mélanie says:

    Thanks for this Kris. It’s great advice! And for what it’s worth, I love the new website format. And your huge, authentic smile 🙂

  5. Coral Levang says:

    Excellent post. Though not a new message to me over the years, I definitely need to hear it from time-to-time.

    I know that since being diagnosed with cancer now twice (2007 early stage breast cancer; 2012 Stage IV Carcinoid/Neuroendocrine Cancer), I have taken a serious look at this issue and how we use language against ourselves and others. What I find myself doing, sometimes, is being seduced into the muck and mire by buying-in to the language of others.

    Discernment is so necessary. Knowing when to walk away from old thinking or unhealthy acquaintances, etc. is paramount to living a healthier life, for however much longer I have on this earth.

    Keep the straight-talk coming! I will sharing some of you on my own blog, if you are amenable to it. Please let me know. 🙂
    Coral

  6. I don’t think it’s that people are afraid of them, more it’s an intrusion.
    Me personally? I don’t like any form of cold caller whether its religious, a take away posting though a menu – anything. There are a few reasons – mostly I don’t like being disturbed in my own sanctuary but also I’ve got 2 dogs one who suffers from anxiety – the door knocks or bell rings and he goes up the walls.

  7. Courtney Wheeler says:

    Dear Kris,
    We’ve been sold so much crap in America, especially in the health world, that we’re hyper-defensive and feel that we have to point fingers at anyone who even mentions compensation as if they have joined the darkside. I’m a nutrition student at a University and I have my eyes wide open and am very critical and objective of sources. I own two of your hard copy books and an e-book and I didn’t buy them just because I love glossy recipe books and have deep pockets to purchase every old cookbook on the market. I bought them because out of all the nutrition outlets I research you have helped me the most physically and emotionally. I bought them to support you because I believe in what you’re doing. I bought them like I would buy an artists’ paintings to support their talent, skill, and what I get from the interaction with their work. Buying your books meant receiving a momento of this great experience and is a tangible reminder of why I check in every week. And they are spiritually worth more to me than the majority of the textbooks I have had to buy recently at six times the price of your books. Just had to put that out there.

  8. Wendy Irene says:

    I knew I needed to learn to say no more and let go of the worry of letting others down, but it never occurred to me I feel like a thank you dispensing machine, especially with social media and having a blog. A very sincere thank you for opening my eyes to that. I think in some ways I’ve been unconsciously depleting myself. Moving forward fully aware.

  9. Matt says:

    Kris,
    I love the direction that your new blog has taken, spending a lot of quality time with the spiritual issues as well as the dietary ones, knowing of course that you can’t do one without the other. I was listening to Eckhart Tolle recently and he was talking about how the “constipated pretzal” in us has a life of its own and will bring us back into suffering to feed its own existence. However, we can stop the pattern when we bring our presence to the issue, and you are helping us do that. A wonderful reminder to be present when we say Sorry, Yes, and Thank You. A deeply grounded, wise, and timely article. Stop. Breath. Thank you. 🙂

  10. Athens Farm Girl says:

    Great blog. I can so relate! Thank you for the reminder to just “stop” and to be authentic with my comment and believing in my own worth.

  11. Alicia Swanstrom says:

    Kris,

    My best friend Amanda is a boundary queen. She knows when she needs time to herself, and she’s not afraid to say no to opportunities that might interfere with that. She also never apologizes for taking alone time.

    At first, it was jarring. I wasn’t used to people who weren’t afraid to be assertive about what they needed. After I got that her declines had nothing to do with me, I came to have an immense amount of respect for Amanda. But that wasn’t until I got over the jealousy. She had something I didn’t, and I wanted it. Bad. That something was self-love.

    I was one of those people who said “no” too little, “sorry” too much and “thank you” to the point it was annoying. Then, I started taking care of myself. I sought out a good therapist, kept a good self-development book on my night stand at all times and surrounded myself with compassionate, positive people like Amanda. I slowly began to understand the importance of spending time doing things I loved, and one of those things was spending quality time with myself.

    With over a year of therapy under my belt, and the new-found awareness to say no, I was often overcome with guilt soon after I said the word. I apologized profusely, hoping the person I turned down wouldn’t be upset. That has also drifted as I realized my friends would still be my friends and, over time, I felt more deserving of the things I gained when I said no.

    But my saying sorry hasn’t gone away completely. If I pay attention, I see that I still apologize when I feel a certain way and a friend feels differently. I say sorry before I ask for things that I don’t feel worthy of (then spew a million thank you’s if I get them).

    Until I read your post, the amount of times I use “thank you” as a way to assuage my guilt, or cover up that unworthiness, had never crossed my mind. Neither had the idea that saying those words over and over again might make the receiver uncomfortable, annoyed or even pressured into assuring me that I deserve whatever they handed out.

    So, when I say thank you for your post, I mean it. I’ll walk into the world tomorrow with an awareness I didn’t have before. Maybe I’ll apologize even less and use “thank you” more sparingly, but I’m positive I will look deeper into the thoughts and beliefs that prompt the desire to incorporate these phrases into my daily conversations.

  12. Hannah says:

    My stepmother likes to shower me and my sisters with gifts but then expects us to say “thank you” in this elaborate, over-the-top way, yet she will still complain to our father that we are ungrateful. She has done this since I was 9 and I am now 34. It has made me unable to know how I can express gratitude to people and I cringe with fear and anxiety whenever someone helps me or gives me a gift, especially if I cannot immediately return the favour. I remember a friend of mine who helped me move houses and drove me around to get furniture as I have no driver’s license frowning in utter confusion when I thanked her profusely. “Um…why do you keep thanking me?” she asked. “I told you, it’s no big deal at all! I enjoy doing this for you.” It completely overwhelmed me when she said this!
    I have no idea how to get over this, but on the plus side, it has made me very relaxed about giving to people – to me, the giving itself is the pleasure, not anything the person receiving does or doesn’t do.

    • Mélanie says:

      Hannah, my mother-in-law is alot like your stepmom. She gives me and my children lots of stuff (which we neither need or want) and expects profuse thank you’s. Rather than throwing out a bunch of thank you’s and setting a bad example for my kids, I make a concious effort to say thank once in an firm audible way, while making eye contact, and then I make a concious effort to not say it again 🙂 I then make a concious effort to not feel guilty when she complains to my husband that I am unapreciative.

  13. Sylvia says:

    I love what you wrote. I often feel as though I’m the only one with this use of words and with these sentiments; but I am not! Yes! Thanks for expressing this so eloquently and helping me to feel more connected to one and all. 🙂

  14. ann says:

    Hello again!
    I think I need to copy this and post it in my home!
    You hit the nail squarely on the head, Kris.

  15. Sylvia says:

    Hey Hot Chica~
    We are definitely sharing the same message. In the immortal words of Katharine Hepburn, “Never apologize. Your friends do not need it and your enemies won’t believe you anyway.”
    EnJoyed talking story in Vegas Baby. Hope your luving on your kyanite.

  16. I loved this post. Thank you, Kris, for once again, reminding us to slow it down and take stock of what we do and say. These little words add up to a lot and it was nice to be reminded of the impact that their misuse can have. I vow to be more aware of how I use them starting now!

  17. Eileen speranza says:

    Do I put the recipe picture on your Facebook page .

  18. Pilar says:

    As usual from you, another refreshing, down to earth, mind-opening article. This one teaches an aspect about living more “mindfully”, more present, more aware, more purposeful..
    About your smile in your newsletter, it radiates authentic joy, bliss ! The truth is when I see it, I do let it influence my mood positively. So I do feel ‘sorry’ for that person who commented the opposite, as it is a sign that, as you said, there is something bigger (and unpleasant) going on in that person’s life, to have felt that way about you; and it has nothing to do with you. I don’t think your response was inappropriate in that case, as you did not indicate “sorry that I hurt you”; just “sorry that she feels that way”, which is compassion 🙂 And then you asserted that the fair and healthy “” I am proud of my new website and the work I do”.

  19. Jo Bradshaw says:

    I love this. When I’m getting sucked into people-pleasing and saying ‘yes’ and ‘sorry’ and ‘thanks’ when I don’t mean it, I take a step back and watch how my 4-year old interacts. It always amazes me how honest and decisive we are as children, before the layers of convention and moderating behaviour get applied.

    I compare the pressure to continually say ‘yes’ to feeling like Alice in Wonderland. All she wants to do is get to the beautiful garden, but door after door opens revealing mad hatters, grinning cats and crazy queens. It’s taken me my whole life to get clear that closing those doors down that corridor is the only way to get to the big ‘yes’ and the beautiful garden. (And a book. I wrote and illustrated a book about saying no, mostly because it felt like the hugest life-lesson for me and those I love).

    p.s. red contact lenses work pretty well on pushy evangelists and tupperware salesmen 😉

  20. vanessa sacks says:

    Kris, this feels like much-needed oxygen. i’ve always been a people-pleaser, and it’s only hurt me. Surviving ovarian cancer a few years ago, i realized more than ever the importance of self-care and sticking to my boundaries. but i still need some reminders, it’s really difficult sometimes, whether it stems from wanting to up the ante and be that “superwoman” who can handle anything, to just wanting to be liked/loved. your words this week = helpful beyond belief.
    Thank you for your amazing vision and bad-ass spirit! You are awesome.
    Vanessa

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