Many women know what it feels like to be the dependable one. The helper. The listener. The person others turn to when life feels heavy. While generosity is beautiful, it can become exhausting when we forget that kindness also requires wisdom, rest, and healthy boundaries.
That is one of the deeper life lessons from my conversation with Leslie Nelson on The Healing in Sharing. Leslie’s story reminds us that generosity is not only about what we give but also about how, why, and whether we care for ourselves in the process.
When You Are the One Everyone Leans On
Being someone others trust is a gift. It means people feel safe enough to come to you, and your presence brings comfort, steadiness, and care.
But it can also become heavy.
Sometimes the person everyone leans on is also the one who forgets to ask, “What do I need?” She keeps showing up. She keeps answering the phone. She keeps saying yes. She keeps making room for everyone else’s pain while slowly ignoring her own limits.
Generosity becomes difficult when it no longer comes from a full heart but from guilt, pressure, obligation, or fear of disappointing someone.
That is why healthy giving begins with honesty.
We can love people deeply and still recognize when we are tired. We can care about someone’s needs and still admit we do not have the capacity to meet them. We can be kind without always being available to everyone.
Listen to the full conversation with Leslie Nelson on The Healing in Sharing podcast.
Resilience Is Built One Honest Decision at a Time
In this episode, Leslie opens up about living with lupus and the fear and confusion that can come when your body feels unpredictable.
While chronic illness is part of her story, the broader lesson is one many women can relate to: sometimes we carry burdens others cannot see.
There may be pain behind the smile.
There may be exhaustion behind the strength.
There may be fear behind the faith.
There may be questions behind the quiet perseverance.
Resilience does not always look like pushing through. Sometimes it means listening to your body, being honest about your limits, asking for help, or making one honest decision at a time.
We often think strength means doing more. But sometimes it means pausing long enough to notice what is no longer sustainable.
A Healthy No Can Still Be Loving
One of the strongest reminders from this conversation is that a healthy “no” can still come from a loving heart.
Many women struggle with this. We are often taught to be helpful, agreeable, generous, and available. Saying no can feel rude, selfish, or uncomfortable.
But a dishonest yes can breed resentment.
And a delayed “no” can create false hope.
Leslie shared that sometimes “maybe” is really a disguised no. We may already know we do not want to say yes, but instead of being honest, we delay giving an answer. We soften it. We avoid it. We hope the other person will understand without us having to say the hard thing.
But clarity is kindness.
When we are honest, we protect the relationship from confusion, protect ourselves from overextending, and give the other person the dignity of a truthful answer.
A no need not be harsh.
A boundary need not be cruel.
A pause does not mean we do not care.
Sometimes a peaceful no is the most honest way to love.
When Helping Becomes Enabling
Generosity can be beautiful, but it can also become complicated when helping turns into enabling.
This is a hard lesson because most people do not give with harmful intentions. Many give because they care. They want to ease someone’s pain, fix the situation, and make life better for someone they love.
But giving without wisdom can sometimes perpetuate a pattern.
If we keep meeting the same need without ever addressing the deeper issue, we may be helping someone survive the moment without helping them move forward. And sometimes we may be using our giving to avoid a harder conversation.
Healthy generosity asks deeper questions.
Is this helping or enabling?
Am I giving out of love or guilt?
Am I offering support or trying to control the outcome?
Am I helping someone grow, or am I carrying what they need to face?
These are not easy questions, but they are important.
True generosity is not just about giving more. Sometimes it is about giving more wisely.
A Final Reflection
Generosity is beautiful, but it should not require self-abandonment.
You can be kind and still set boundaries.
You can be generous and still need rest.
You can love people and still tell the truth.
You can help others and still protect your peace.
Sometimes generosity is an open hand.
Sometimes it is a listening ear.
Sometimes it is a kind word.
Sometimes it is a brave yes.
And sometimes it is a peaceful no.
The lesson is not to stop giving.
The lesson is to be given with wisdom, honesty, and love.
Listen to the full conversation with Leslie Nelson on The Healing in Sharing podcast. If this message speaks to your heart, share it with a woman who is learning to care deeply without losing herself.
Giving, Recklessly: Testimonials and Examples to Inspire Higher Levels of Generosity by Leslie K. Nelson is available on Amazon.
You don’t have to carry it alone. Start with a conversation.



