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The Truth About Change In The New Year

🌟 In this empowering kickoff to 2026, Dr. Aziz challenges a deeply held belief: that being nice means you care more. In fact, the opposite might be true. In this episode, you’ll discover how what looks like “caring” is often fear, over-responsibility, and codependence in disguise.

If you’ve been stuck in people-pleasing, constantly saying yes when you want to say no, feeling guilt when others are upset, or believing your worth is tied to keeping everyone happy—this episode is your wake-up call. Dr. Aziz breaks down the emotional trap of chronic niceness and reveals how true caring comes not from fear, but from authenticity and healthy boundaries.

🎧 Ready to stop living for others’ approval and start living as you? Tune in now and learn how to liberate yourself from the Nice Cage—once and for all.

 

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A couple of weeks into a new year, a quiet question tends to surface—sometimes with excitement, sometimes with dread:

Is this year actually going to be different?

Not in the hype-driven, “crush your goals” sense. Not in the motivational-poster version of change. But in the places that matter most. In how you feel inside. In how free you feel socially. In whether you finally stop holding back, second-guessing yourself, or feeling like you’re never quite enough—no matter how much you achieve on the outside.

That’s the territory we’re stepping into here.

Not weight loss. Not business optimization. Not productivity hacks. Those matter, sure—but they’re not my wheelhouse. What I help people change is something deeper: social confidence, emotional freedom, the ability to be fully yourself without fear, apology, or chronic self-monitoring.

And the truth is, most people don’t fail to change because they lack desire.

They fail because they’re choosing comfort over truth.

 

Why Comfort Is the Silent Enemy of Real Change

When people say they want to change—be more confident, build deeper relationships, speak up, date, lead, or finally feel like they belong—the question isn’t what they want.

The real question is: Are they actually going to do the things required to get it?

Most people aren’t lying to others about their intentions. They’re lying to themselves.

They say they’re “working on it.”
They read books.
They listen to podcasts.
They talk things through with therapists, coaches, or even AI.

And all of that can be valuable.

But here’s the hard truth I’ve seen over and over again:

You can work on something for years without ever transforming it.

Because working on it can still be comfortable.

Talking about change is comfortable.
Understanding your patterns is comfortable.
Analyzing your past is comfortable.

Transformation is not.

 

The Difference Between a Challenge and a Core Challenge

Some difficulties in life are seasons. Others are core challenges.

A core challenge isn’t something everyone goes through in the same way. It’s a recurring pattern that stays with you for years—sometimes decades—unless something fundamentally shifts.

For some people, that’s addiction.
For others, chronic pain.
For many professionals I work with, it’s social confidence, belonging, and self-worth.

If you’ve been trying to feel more confident or connected for years—and despite effort, insight, and intention, you still feel stuck—that’s a sign you’re dealing with something core.

And core challenges don’t resolve through “tending.”

They resolve through new experiences.

 

Why Insight Alone Isn’t Enough

Understanding why you’re anxious doesn’t cure anxiety.

Knowing where people-pleasing came from doesn’t automatically free you from it.

Because the real issue underneath social anxiety and excessive niceness isn’t tactics—it’s relationship.

Your relationship with yourself.
Your relationship with other people.
Your belief about whether you’re lovable, acceptable, and safe to be seen.

That belief doesn’t change through thinking.

It changes through risk.

You have to risk being more real.
You have to risk saying no.
You have to risk being visible, honest, imperfect, and human.

And when you do—with the right structure and support—something extraordinary happens:

You discover that you survive.
You discover that people don’t leave.
You discover that you can handle discomfort.

And slowly, your nervous system learns a new truth.

Looking at the map doesn’t get you across the bridge. You have to walk it.


Why Most People Stay Stuck (Even When They’re Trying)

What I see again and again is this pattern:

People avoid discomfort.
Then they decide to “work on themselves.”
But they choose a comfortable way to do it.

And when comfort is the priority, deep change never happens.

So they try again next year.
And the year after that.
And five years later, they’re still saying, “I’m working on it.”

Eventually doubt creeps in.

Maybe this can’t change.
Maybe this is just who I am.
Maybe I waited too long.

And that doubt becomes yet another reason to retreat back into familiarity.


The Truth Most People Don’t Want to Hear

Here it is—clearly, honestly, and without sugarcoating:

Most people will never resolve their core challenges.

Not because they’re broken.
Not because it’s impossible.
But because it requires a level of commitment, discomfort, and courage they never fully claim.

And if you feel something stirring as you read this—resistance, resonance, or even fear—that’s not a problem.

That’s a signal.

It’s the same signal I’ve heard in my own life.
The call to liberation.

 

What Makes 2026 Different (If You Let It)

Radical transformation is possible.

Not perfection.
Not a life without anxiety or doubt.
But a life where confidence becomes your default—not something you chase.

Where you stop negotiating with yourself every time you want to speak, connect, or assert your needs.

Where belonging isn’t something you earn from others—but something you carry inside.

I know this is possible because I’ve seen it—hundreds of times—over nearly two decades of doing this work.

And the people who get there aren’t the most talented or disciplined.

They’re the ones who finally choose truth over comfort.

 

A Question to Sit With

As you move forward this year, don’t ask:

“What do I want?”

Ask instead:

“What am I truly willing to commit to—even when it’s uncomfortable?”

Because that answer will tell you everything you need to know about whether this year becomes another chapter of effort… or the beginning of real freedom.

Until we speak again,
have the courage to be who you are—
and know, on a deep level, that you belong.