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Media Links Website: delvepsych.com Instagram: @delvepsychchicago YouTube: / @delvepsych20 Substack: https://delvepsych.substack.com/ Hosts Ali McGarel — Staff Therapist, Delve Psychotherapy of ChicagoAdam Fominaya — Executive & Clinical Director, Delve Psychotherapy of Chicago Overview of Big Ideas Wanting approval is ancient: social acceptance once meant survival—and it still shapes how we move through work, friendship, and belonging. The control fantasy: “If I do everything right, nobody will dislike me” sounds logical, but collapses under real human subjectivity and projection. Over-pleasing erodes identity: if you try to satisfy everyone, you become an amorphous “average of expectations,” not a person. “Pick your mirrors”: choose whose feedback gets to shape your self-concept—don’t hand the mirror to strangers and hecklers. Practical repair after a “bad impression”: allow the sting, then reconnect with your core people—often without needing to litigate the whole story. A spicy clinical aside: reframing can help, but existential wounds (belonging, worth, grace) can’t be solved with “half measures.” Breakdown of Segments Listener prompt + why this is universal: approval-seeking as social wiring; control as the hidden agenda. Why “doing everything right” fails: norms are contested; people interpret you through their own history. Impression management: presenting “better than I am” vs. “worse than I am,” and the unspoken motives underneath. The looking-glass problem: you can’t read minds, yet you internalize what you think others think. Stop caring what everyone thinks: rumination over strangers steals presence from the people who actually matter. Halloween example: friends-of-friends anxiety, plus a two-part response—feel the hurt, then return to your relational “home base.” CBT vs. the abyss: role-play shows reframing can soothe, but deeper questions still demand deeper work. Closing: reach out for topic requests; consults + blog plug. AI Recommended References Bollas, C. (1987). The shadow of the object: Psychoanalysis of the unthought known. Columbia University Press. Google Books Cooley, C. H. (1902). Human nature and the social order. Scribner’s. Brock University Hayes, S. C., Strosahl, K. D., & Wilson, K. G. (1999). Acceptance and commitment therapy: An experiential approach to behavior change. Guilford Press. ACBS Paulhus, D. L. (1984). Two-component models of socially desirable responding. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 46(3), 598–609. www2.psych.ubc.ca