
The Happya Life with Clare Deacon
What if thriving isn’t about having it all together but finally feeling at home in your own skin?
Welcome to The Happya Life with Clare Deacon, the podcast where we drop the self-help noise and get real about healing, self-worth, and building a life that actually feels good… from the inside out.
If you’ve ever felt stuck in survival mode, overwhelmed by self-doubt, constantly giving to others while silently burning out, you’re not alone. And you’re in the right place.
- What if happiness wasn’t something to chase, but something you could come back to?
- What if you stopped waiting for the “right time” and decided to start now?
- What if you finally had the tools to break the patterns holding you back?
I’m Clare Deacon, trauma-informed therapist, positive psychology coach, and Amazon #1 bestselling author of Blooming Happya. I combine science, soul, and strategy to help women move beyond survival and create lives filled with clarity, courage, and calm.
In this podcast, we blend coaching, neuroscience, and nervous system wisdom to shift the patterns no journal prompt ever could. Because mindset work is great but if your body still believes self-worth is unsafe, no amount of affirmations will stick.
You’ll get:
✔️ Straight-talking insights and practical tools
✔️ Real-life strategies for boundaries, healing, and self-connection
✔️ Permission to stop performing and start becoming
Ready to stop shrinking and start thriving?
Press play, this is where your transformation begins.
The Happya Life with Clare Deacon
Setting Boundaries That Actually Work (Without Feeling Like a Bad Person)
🪷If something in this spoke to you, I’d love to hear, message me.
Ever feel guilty for saying no? Like setting a boundary makes you a bad person? You’re not alone and you’re definitely not broken.
In this powerful, heart-led episode of The Happya Life Podcast, Clare Deacon dives deep into the real reason boundaries feel so hard, especially if you’ve experienced trauma, chronic people-pleasing, or were taught that love had to be earned.
You’ll discover:
- 🌪 Why your nervous system resists saying no (hint: it’s not about willpower)
- 🧠 The brain science behind why boundaries trigger guilt
- 💛 How to rewire your response and create safe, sustainable boundaries
- 💬 Scripts you can actually use without sounding defensive or rude
- 🔁 What to do when people push back against the “new” you
With a warm cuppa and a whole lot of compassion, Clare reminds you that setting boundaries isn’t selfish, it’s sacred. This isn’t just self-care; it’s nervous system repair.
✨ Whether you’re just starting out or you’ve been on this healing journey a while, this episode will help you stop abandoning yourself and start choosing peace over performance.
🎙️ New here? Subscribe and leave a review, it helps others find their way back to themselves, too.
🌸 Let’s Stay Connected: Your Healing Journey Deserves Support
➤ Read Clare’s Book: Blooming Happya
Discover the story, tools, and transformation that started it all.
👉 happyacoach.com/bookstore
➤ 📲 Follow Clare on Instagram (Daily Truths + Real Talk):
@happyacoach
➤ 🎙️ Book a Free Clarity Call:
Need guidance, grounding, or space to speak? Let's talk.
👉 happyacoach.com/chat
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Weekly soul-checks, real-life insights, and practical tools.
👉 happyacoach.com/newsletter
➤ 🌐 Explore More at:
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💌 Email Clare Directly: clare@happyacoach.com
🎵 Music by LemonMusicStudio
Welcome back to The Happya Life Podcast. I’m Clare Deacon, positive psychology coach, trauma-informed therapist, and your fellow human figuring it out in real time.
Today, we’re diving into a topic that has most of us shifting in our seats…
Boundaries.
Yep. That word.
Let’s be honest, even hearing it can make your chest tighten. Because while boundaries are one of the most empowering tools in healing and personal growth… they can also bring up a lot of guilt, fear, and resistance.
So if you’ve ever:
- Said yes when you wanted to say no…
- Felt exhausted from giving too much…
- Or worried that putting your needs first makes you a bad friend, partner, parent, or person…
…then pull up a blanket, because this one’s for you.
🌪 Why Boundaries Feel So Uncomfortable (Especially If You’ve Been Through Trauma)
Let’s start here:
If boundaries feel hard, that’s not a personal failing. That’s nervous system intelligence.
When you’ve grown up in chaos, been conditioned to fawn, or experienced trauma where your safety depended on keeping the peace, your body learned that saying no could be dangerous.
So instead of speaking up, you learned to scan for other people’s needs before your own.
You became hyper-attuned to keeping everyone else comfortable, even when it cost you everything.
In psychology, we call this fawning, one of the lesser-talked-about trauma responses.
Not fight, not flight, not freeze, but please.
It looks like over-apologising, over-extending, and constantly abandoning your own needs to be liked or accepted.
And here’s the kicker: it can be incredibly effective, until it isn’t.
Because while people might like you more for being so “nice,” your body will start whispering:
“I’m exhausted.”
“This isn’t sustainable.”
“Why do I feel resentful and invisible?”
And that’s when the call to reclaim your space begins.
🧠 The Neuroscience of Boundaries
Let’s bring in the brain, because this bit is fascinating.
Your prefrontal cortex, the part of your brain responsible for executive function, decision-making, and emotional regulation, needs a sense of psychological safety to work optimally.
When you constantly override your needs, that safety diminishes. The brain interprets people-pleasing as a survival mechanism, keeping you stuck in a low-level stress response.
Setting a boundary, even something small like saying, “I’m not free tonight” can trigger that stress response until your nervous system learns it’s safe.
But here’s the magic:
Every time you honour your boundary, you’re literally rewiring your brain.
You’re teaching your system:
“I can have needs and still be loved.”
“I can say no and still be safe.”
“I can protect my energy and still belong.”
💛 What a “Working” Boundary Actually Looks Like
Let’s debunk something right now:
A boundary isn’t a rule you bark at someone else.
It’s a compassionate container for your own behaviour.
It sounds like:
- “I don’t answer work messages after 6pm.”
- “I’d love to see you, but I need notice. Last-minute plans don’t work for me right now.”
- “I’m not available for that, but here’s what I can offer.”
Notice that boundaries don’t need to be defensive or dramatic. They just need to be clear, consistent, and honouring of your capacity.
💬 Scripts for Real Life (That Don’t Feel Gross)
Here are a few you can borrow, especially for those sticky moments:
🧾 “I know this matters to you but right now I need to take care of my energy.”
🧾 “I want to be fully present, and I can’t do that today. Can we reschedule?”
🧾 “This doesn’t work for me and I also want us to find something that does.”
Use them. Adapt them. Whisper them to yourself in the mirror until they feel less scary.
🛑 But What If They Push Back?
Oof. Let’s go there.
Sometimes, when we start setting boundaries, people react. Especially if they’re used to getting the version of you who never said no.
But here’s the truth:
A boundary isn’t mean. A boundary is clarity.
And people’s discomfort is not your cue to self-abandon.
It’s feedback. Information. A moment to decide whether this relationship honours who you’re becoming.
🌱 Reframing the Guilt
Guilt is normal. Especially if you were raised to believe love had to be earned through self-sacrifice.
But let me reframe this:
Feeling guilty doesn’t mean you’re doing something wrong.
It means you’re doing something new.
You’re reconditioning your system to believe:
“I matter, too.”
“My needs deserve space.”
“Boundaries are bridges, not walls.”
✨ Final Thought: You Are Not a Bad Person
You are not too much. You are not too needy.
You are not selfish for choosing rest, quiet, solitude, or space.
You are allowed to take up room in your own life.
And you don’t need to earn rest, prove your worth, or apologise for needing what you need.
So as you go about your week, I invite you to try just one boundary. Start small. Let your nervous system know it’s safe.
And then celebrate the hell out of yourself for doing it.
Because this is the work.
This is how we heal.
This is how we stop performing and start living.
I see you. I’m proud of you. And I promise, it gets easier.
Until next time, take gentle care of you.
💛 Clare x