
3 Coping Mechanisms That Keep You Stuck
Emotional Wellness, Coping Skills, Personal Growth
3 “Coping” Mechanisms That Quietly Keep You Stuck
Not all coping is healthy. Some strategies feel comforting in the moment but quietly drain your energy, your confidence, and your future. Drawing on the transformative, truth-telling work of Karen Michelle (karenmichellespeaks.com), this article unpacks three common “coping” habits that may be keeping you exactly where you don’t want to be.
Why “Coping” Isn’t Always Healing
Many of us were never taught how to process emotions, set boundaries, or ask for help. So we improvise. We overwork, over-give, over-explain, or shut down completely. On the surface, these patterns look like strength, responsibility, or “just getting on with it.” Underneath, they can be numbing, isolating, and exhausting.
Karen Michelle’s work centers on helping people and organizations name these hidden patterns so they can move from surviving to truly living. The first step is awareness: recognizing when a behavior that once kept you safe is now keeping you stuck.
FAQ: 3 Negative Coping Mechanisms That Keep You Stuck
1. “Isn’t Staying Busy a Good Thing? How Can Overworking Be a Negative Coping Mechanism?”
On the outside, overworking looks productive and admirable. You are the dependable one. The first to volunteer, the last to leave. But for many people, constant busyness is less about passion and more about avoidance. By filling every hour, you never have to sit with grief, anger, fear, or disappointment. Work becomes a socially approved way to outrun your own heart.
How to Identify Overworking as Coping
You feel guilty or anxious when you rest, even when you are exhausted.
You use phrases like “I don’t have time to feel that” or “I’ll deal with it later.”
Your identity is tied almost entirely to what you do and how much you accomplish.
Loved ones describe you as “always on” or say they rarely get your undistracted attention.
💡 Gentle Reframe: Productivity is powerful, but you are more than your output. Rest is not laziness; it is a form of respect for your body and your story.
2. “If I Keep the Peace, Aren’t I Being Kind? How Is People-Pleasing Harmful?”
Many of us learned early that love and safety were conditional. We became experts at reading the room, smoothing tension, and shrinking our needs so others could be comfortable. This can look like kindness, but often it is self-erasure. People-pleasing is a coping mechanism that says, “If everyone else is okay, maybe I’ll finally be okay too.”
How to Identify People-Pleasing as Coping
You say “yes” while your body and heart are screaming “no.”
You apologize for things that are not your fault just to end discomfort.
You feel resentful and drained after helping others but struggle to express that honestly.
The thought of someone being upset with you feels almost unbearable.
📌 Key Truth: Peace that requires you to disappear is not peace; it is performance. Healthy relationships can handle your “no,” your needs, and your full self.
3. “Is Numbing Out Really That Bad? How Does Emotional Numbing Keep Me Stuck?”
When pain feels overwhelming, numbing can seem like the only option. Emotional numbing can look like scrolling for hours, binge-watching shows, comfort eating, drinking, or even shutting down emotionally in conversations. It may bring temporary relief, but it also blocks joy, connection, and growth. You cannot selectively numb. When you push down the hard feelings, you push down the good ones too.
How to Identify Emotional Numbing as Coping
You often say “I’m fine” but struggle to name what you actually feel.
You lose hours to TV, social media, or other distractions whenever a painful thought surfaces.
You feel disconnected from your own life, like you’re watching it instead of living it.
Loved ones say they can’t “reach” you emotionally, even when you’re physically present.
⚠️ Important Reminder: Numbing is not a character flaw; it is a survival skill that once protected you. Healing begins when you honor that and gently learn new ways to feel safe with your own emotions.
From Surviving to Healing: Why This Work Belongs in Rooms, Not Just in Journals
Overworking, people-pleasing, and numbing are not random habits; they are responses to real stories, real trauma, and real expectations. That is why Karen Michelle’s workshops and presentations resonate so deeply. She creates brave, compassionate spaces where people can see their patterns clearly, without shame, and begin to choose something different.
Whether you are leading a workplace, a faith community, a school, or a nonprofit, these coping mechanisms are in the room. They shape how people communicate, collaborate, and care for themselves. Bringing Karen in is not just about “motivational speaking.” It is about equipping your people with language, tools, and permission to heal.
Invite Karen Michelle to Your Next Workshop or Presentation
If you recognized yourself, or your team, in any of these coping patterns, you are not alone, and you are not stuck forever. With the right guidance, survival strategies can be honored for what they were and gently replaced with healthier ways of being.
Visit karenmichellespeaks.com to book Karen for a workshop, keynote, or intimate group session. Give your community the gift of honest conversation, practical tools, and the kind of hope that does not deny pain but walks straight through it toward healing.
