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When to Say No by Cindy Stradling CSL, CPC

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When to Say No by Cindy Stradling CSL, CPC

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May 26, 2026

Have you ever piled on “quick favours” until you started feeling swamped? Knowing when to say no means setting clear boundaries, and protecting your balance without burning bridges. It’s all about strategic self-care and does not mean being rude to others. Boundaries simply help to preserve your energy; without them, resentment brews and productivity often plummets..

Spot the right moments: when a quick favour will derail your priorities, ask yourself whether this aligns with your goals and whether it will benefit the team. If the answer is no, you should politely decline. Example: “Appreciate the ask, but I’m maxed on X project—can we loop in Y?” Data from Boundary Boss shows boundary-setters are 30% less stressed than their colleagues.

Examples of situations where you might have to say no include:

  • Scope creep: “Please help me to tweak this report” can lead to many hours of lost time.
  • Guilt trips: “If you cared, you’d help.”
  • Overcommitment: Stacking meetings without breathing room.

How to deliver: Be direct, brief, and positive. “No, I can’t take that on right now – but thanks for thinking of me.” Offer alternatives: “Sarah might have more time”. This gets easier as time goes on.

Benefits. It leaves more time for high-impact work, and your teams will learn to respect it. Harvard Business Review notes that boundary pros advance faster, and avoid burnout more easily. As far as your personal life goes, it will help to reclaim many evenings, hobbies, and perhaps even your sanity.

Start small: Decline one low-stakes request weekly. Track the benefits. You should immediately notice improved focus and less fatigue.

Ultimately, boundaries aren’t wall, they’re simply filters for a more balanced life.

A few tips and tricks for when you are setting boundaries

When honing your boundary-setting skills, consider more nuanced approaches that maintain relationships while also protecting your time. For example, the “yes, and” technique can be a smooth entry point. Respond with something like, “Yes, I’d love to contribute to that initiative, and to do it justice, can we reschedule my involvement for next week after I wrap up my current priorities?” This acknowledges the request positively, yet buys you some extra time, and keeps the doors open for collaboration.

If you notice patterns, for example, a specific colleague or department consistently overloading you with requests, start documenting the instances. Log the requests, your responses, the time impacts, and effects on your core deliverables. Then, bring it to your manager with clear data: “I’ve tracked these extra tasks, and they’re delaying our Q2 targets by 15 hours weekly. How can we redistribute?” This positions you as proactive and data-driven, not offensive.

Psychologically, this practice dismantles the “arrival fallacy” that age old belief that more yeses lead to bigger successes or faster promotions. Research from vulnerability expert Brené Brown highlights how strong, clear boundaries actually deepen a sense of belonging and trust in professional circles, rather than isolating you. Far from being a lone wolf tactic, it fosters mutual respect.

 

 

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