Omnichannel - The "You're It" Syndrome: How Online Approval-Seeking Behavior Keeps Creeping Back Into Our Lives—And How to Break Free!
Episode Date: June 26, 2025Send us a textHave you ever caught yourself obsessing over one specific person's approval? Maybe checking if they viewed your story, hoping they'd like your post, or filtering your words aro...und them? You're not alone.Freedom begins when we recognize the insidious pattern I call "You Are It Tag" - a psychological game where we unconsciously designate one person as the ultimate judge of our worth. We filter ourselves, contort our identities, and make decisions based on what we imagine would win their approval. The most ridiculous part? They typically have no idea we're playing this game, nor do they care nearly as much as we think they do.This approval-seeking behavior creates a toxic cycle of self-doubt, as we constantly shift our behaviors to match what we believe will gain validation. Whether it's a romantic interest, boss, or industry leader, placing our entire self-concept on one person's approval is both limiting and unsustainable. The tag may jump from person to person throughout our lives, but the pattern remains the same - we surrender our authenticity for external validation.Breaking free requires three key steps: becoming aware of who currently holds your "tag," addressing approval-seeking patterns through techniques like tapping therapy, and catching yourself in the act of seeking validation. The goal isn't perfection but progress toward self-approval - that beautiful moment when you can genuinely say, "I think this is good" without needing anyone else's confirmation.Ready to stop playing the approval game? This episode offers practical guidance for reclaiming your freedom and rediscovering what you truly want to say, do, and be - without filtering yourself through someone else's imagined expectations. Your freedom awaits on the other side of self-approval.Get a FREE Copy of the High Converting Online Events Book: https://book.dominikalegrand.com/
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Today I want to talk about the phenomenon that I like to call you are it, tag you are
it and how approval seeking behavior keeps creeping back to our lives and how to break
free.
I'm not sure if I'm the only one who has experienced it in their professional or even
romantic relationships.
This constant approval seeking behavior from one person,
whether it's someone that you look up to
in professional setting, whether it's a boy that you liked
and you wished that he would give you
that attention that you need.
In both of those areas, I like to call this your it. Your it has been
something that I have always been struggling with because I've always put this tag on one person
that I was somecautiously somewhat consciously looking their approval of and I remember
thinking about this person's opinion highly over anyone else's.
And I many times didn't even know what that opinion was.
I just imagine what that would be.
Either it's something critical, either it's actual approval, either it's like
looking into signs that I am getting the approval from that one person.
And many times, like I said, we don't know if that one person is really approving of us.
But if we are doing the tag you're it and subconsciously start seeking that person's approval,
what ends up happening is that we start filtering ourselves.
We start morphing ourselves a little bit just so that we can get the
imaginary approval of that imaginary person who actually doesn't even care
about you that much and nor maybe know that you are playing the tag you're
it game. We are starting to filter ourselves. We are starting to okay maybe
this person wouldn't want to see this. Maybe especially in professional
environments when we are posting like business stuff, right?
Like, oh, maybe the person would think that I stupid that I shared this or maybe
that person would mock me if I posted this piece of content or video, or maybe
this person would think, you know, I guess I don't like this person anymore.
I don't like you.
And that's the thing.
The fear is that in need, their disapproval, it's rejection, it's you
messed up, you said something wrong, you did something wrong, you posted something wrong
and then suddenly it's the relationship, the approval is almost like you failed.
They disapprove, you failed.
And this imaginary game of you're it, whether you're playing it in your romantic or business
relationships, it's a very toxic cycle. In my life, I've noticed this as like a walking pattern,
as the tag you're it, almost like it's jumping from one person to another, but it's always on
one person. Don't we all have that one person that we always check
if they are checking our stories?
Don't we all have that one person that we wished
that liked our post or photo?
Even girls, let's be honest here, we all have that.
But that type of one tag, that kept jumping
from one person to another to another.
And it became the
cycle of now that's this person I'm looking approval of, that that person is
it. Like almost like somehow when they approve of you it's almost like you are
winning, that you won the game of approval and somehow then you can be
happy and joyful and free and you've done it, there is this feeling of oh I managed, here we go.
Right? It only lasts till like the next thing that you do, your next action that you take and it
suddenly is this game of oh wait what if I'm saying something that this person wouldn't approve of?
What if I'm losing that approval? It's almost like a switch like now I had it yesterday but it's over today. But if that's that's gonna be the case. And it's such a toxic
cycle of filtering, morphing, thinking that you know you're it. You know I need
to be better for you. I need to try better for you. And it's again the person
is like A. they don't know about it. B. they don't care about it. C. it's again the person is like a they don't know about it B they
don't care about it C it's in your head a 1000% of the times. Let's imagine this
let's imagine that your entire confidence your entire self-confidence
your entire self-concept is based on one person's approval. Like, let's just be fucking real and think that's the case.
Like, imagine, like, that's going to determine that one person, whether you are in business
or in romantic relationships.
Like, are you going to base what that person is thinking of you or whether they are approving
of you?
Are you going to base your entire self-confidence and self-concept of worthiness of being on one person?
Like, I want you to think about how ridiculous
that really sounds because it's silly.
It's silly.
Even if the person knows that they are it,
they are the tag, they have the tag for the moment
because again, it's walking, it's wandering,
it's going somewhere else, it's always on someone else. It's such an insidious thing that we do and
I don't want to go into why we do it because honestly why do we do it? Why do we do it? Why
are we putting the it you are it and seeking approval from people, from that one person?
Again it's always someone else but we kind of want it so that we feel happy
and then we don't have it, we're like,
oh my God, I need to get it, I need to filter myself,
I need to contort myself, I need to become this other thing,
I need to have this thing so that I can get the approval,
I need to achieve this goal,
I need to be making this much money,
I need to be this tall, this skinny, this big,
this, you know, whatever. That is the game
of like the ridiculousness of like because you make up the conditions in
your own mind and you put that tag onto that person, that one person. Both of them
are ridiculous. You're putting the tag on a person they don't they don't even know
they have it or you basing your entire self identity and how
you express yourself and how you show up on that one person. Tag you are it game
I think originates from getting your father's approval, parents approval. It's
an internalized critical parent that did not accept you for who you were
unconditionally.
That critical thing that you inbuilt now into yourself
and been thinking, okay, how can I do better?
And there's nothing wrong with wanting to do better.
Toxicity comes from you putting that on one person.
And the toxicity comes from you seeking that approval
over and over again.
And the toxicity comes from you seeking that approval over and over again and the toxicity comes from you contorting yourself to kind of get the
approval. That's where toxicity comes from because if you say you know what I
want to get better, I want to learn, I want to grow for myself because that's
the only one person I'm competing myself really. It is the only one person that
I'm competing against and no one else really.'s just me it's just me myself and I and me wanting to be better
today and tomorrow and grow and take the lessons and grow some more and it's not
for anyone else it's just for myself because I love to grow I like to you
know develop myself it's not for that one person. That's where the solution
is because you know what? If you manage to get to just getting your own approval for yourself and
move through life without putting it on someone else, it's almost like you internalize your inner
approval system. You're like, you know what? Fuck what everyone else is thinking. I'm just gonna do
what I want to do and I won't say what I want to say and look how I want to look and you know what? Fuck what everyone else is thinking. I'm just gonna do what I want to do and I will say what I want to say and look how I
want to look and you know what?
If you like it, you like it, you don't.
You don't.
That's okay.
That is what we need to come back to because as long as we seek those approvals, we are
not free.
So freedom comes from self-approval.
It's like, you know what?
I think it's fine.
It's cute.
That thing that you just wrote, that was so cute.
I go back, I look into the things and how far you came
and what you've done and how you're carrying yourself.
You are just so cute.
That is the self-approval.
That is like, you're fine, you're good.
Let's keep going, let's keep going.
Let's just, it was just fun. Let's keep going. Let's keep going.
Let's just, it was just fun. Maybe it was stupid to post it. Whatever. You were a teenager.
Move on. You know, like you had hormones, like whatever. It's cute. Let's move on.
So the first step would be is to forgive yourself for doing this and become aware of your one
person. The it. Who is it? Who is it for you? Where is it? Who is it? Tell me the name. Become aware of them that you are doing it for the one person, that your
actions are driven for that one person's approval that may not even know
that you want their approval.
That's the first step of recovery.
Second is go on tapping, go on the tap with Brad and look for like
approval-staking behavior and like
finding freedom and go through that tapping exercise that will really help
you to really understand that you're never free as long as you're seeking
the one person's approval. So go through that and find a freedom. I'm like you
know what? I just want to be free. I just want to be free. I just want to live my
life in a way that is as good to me.
Yeah because my standards are pretty high. I don't know about you. My standards are pretty high for
myself already so I don't need anyone else's standards imaginary to be like pushing me forward.
It's internalized in a good way. So that would be my second suggestion. And then third is to catch yourself
because it's a slippery slope, you know?
Catch yourself putting the tag,
either it's on a romantic partner, a romantic person,
like someone you have romantic interest and or in business.
Catch yourself, like who's attentions am I looking for?
Who's approval I'm looking for?
Catch yourself.
And when you're posting and thinking you know what this person would really love
what I'm doing here like this one person in my head like I would really want
them to like think this is good. I want that heart emoji. I want that comment
like whatever. I want them to see the story that I'm putting out like whatever.
Catch yourself and when you notice that you are doing,
like am I doing this for myself?
Am I doing this for someone else?
Someone else's approval, very important.
Catch yourself and stir the ship back.
Like you know what, not today.
I'm not going to filter myself, not today.
Let's just keep going, self-approved, you know?
And that's the goal, like freeing yourself, catching
yourself doing it and of course correcting again. Back to you know what?
It's my life. I'm not going to place value on getting the approval of someone
else that I don't even know. I mean some of us like find those persons like those
big names in our industries and seek their approval. You know, that's such an insidious game. So catch yourself doing it and start to shape back. And you
know what? Is this real freedom if I'm seeking their approval? Am I really free?
What would I be saying? What would I be doing if if I don't care about this
approval or getting this person approval? If this person was dead, what would I be
doing? What would I be saying? Let's imagine they die. They died. No one is there to be,
you know, again, we might just put it on someone else, but let's imagine there is
a zombie apocalypse and there's no one left, just you, and you do things for
yourself not to get someone's approval. I hope this was helpful. I know this is a different type of episode,
but I felt like I needed to say it.
If you have a friend, if you have a tendency to do this to yourself,
I invite you to be mindful.
If you have a friend who you know that they keep doing this,
and frankly they look ridiculous because they are doing this over and over,
and this episode to them, them honestly they'd be like hey you know what
remember when you're posting you know for that one person and oh yeah it's not it's not cute
girl it's it's a bad look. Sad this episode to them. I hope this was helpful thanks so
much for watching listening and I'll see you guys very soon.