51 | How You're Training People to Treat You: Breaking the Cycle of Overperformance

Are you constantly frustrated with the people in your life not stepping up? Do you find yourself doing everything because "it's just easier" to do it yourself? In this powerful episode of Burnout to Thriving, host Cecilia Mannella explores how high-achieving women inadvertently train the people around them to underperform by consistently overperforming themselves.

You'll discover why letting the ball drop might be the most important leadership skill you're not using.

  • Why women's tendency to overperform and overcompensate is actively reinforcing underperformance in others
  • How the feedback loop of praise for "doing it all" traps women in cycles of exhaustion and resentment
  • Why your actions speak louder than your words when delegating responsibilities
  • The critical importance of allowing others to experience the discomfort of failure
  • Four practical steps to break the cycle and train people to step up and take responsibility


The core insight of this episode is surprisingly simple yet profoundly challenging to implement: how we treat someone is how they will behave. When we treat people (colleagues, partners, children) as if they're incapable of handling responsibilities, they internalize that message and act accordingly.

As Cecilia explains, "If I treat someone as if they can't, they will show up with the 'I can't' mentality, but if I treat someone as if they can, and I actually believe they have the skillset and I'm willing to let the ball drop... you will see a huge change in working relationships."

This pattern transcends all aspects of life—from leadership in business to relationships at home. The solution isn't doing more; it's strategically doing less and allowing natural consequences to create growth.

  • You're exhausted from constantly picking up the slack for others in your work or home life
  • You find yourself frustrated that others aren't meeting your standards or expectations
  • You're tired of nagging and micromanaging the people around you
  • You feel resentful about carrying the invisible emotional labor in your relationships
  • You want to build others' confidence and capabilities without burning yourself out
  • You're ready to set stronger boundaries with yourself and others


Cecilia offers a practical four-step process to break the cycle of overperformance:

  1. Start small: Choose a less critical task to practice letting go
  2. Communicate clearly: Be explicit about who is responsible (no hinting or ambiguity)
  3. Set clear expectations: Define consequences for tasks not being completed
  4. Follow through: Be prepared to sit with the discomfort of things not being done perfectly—or at all


Ready to stop exhausting yourself while actually empowering those around you? Listen now to discover how letting the ball drop might be the leadership breakthrough you've been looking for. If you found this episode valuable, please leave a review, hit the follow button, and share with other high-achieving women who might be trapped in the overperformance cycle.

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