
“I stopped over-explaining when I realized my peace didn’t require permission.”
— Nichole Banks

The Moment I Stopped Over-Explaining… Everything Changed
There’s a very specific kind of exhaustion no one warns you about.
It’s not from work.
It’s not from parenting.
It’s not even from the divorce itself.
It’s from explaining yourself… over and over and over again.
Why you feel the way you feel.
Why you said what you said.
Why you need what you need.
And if you’re anything like I was?
You didn’t just explain—you performed.
You softened your tone.
You added disclaimers.
You made sure they didn’t feel bad about the thing that was already hurting you.
“Maybe I’m overreacting, but…”
“I just want to make sure you understand where I’m coming from…”
“I don’t want you to think I’m being difficult…”
Oh honey. I was basically giving TED Talks just to ask for basic respect.
I remember one conversation so clearly.
I had spent 20 minutes explaining why something upset me.
Twenty. Whole. Minutes.
Breaking it down.
Rewording it.
Trying to make it land.
And when I finally stopped talking?
They looked at me and said:
“I just think you’re being a little sensitive.”
…
I wish I could tell you I responded with grace.
I did not.
But something inside me clicked.
Not in a dramatic, movie-scene kind of way.
More like a quiet, fed-up whisper:
“Why am I working this hard to be understood by someone who isn’t even trying?”
That was the beginning.
Over-explaining isn’t communication.
It’s self-abandonment in a really well-worded outfit.
We think we’re being “clear.”
But what we’re actually doing is:
Trying to control how we’re perceived
Trying to avoid conflict
Trying to earn understanding instead of expecting it
And let me say something that might sting a little (but in a good, wake-you-up way):
The right people don’t require a dissertation to respect you.
Read that again.
We don’t just wake up one day and decide to over-explain for fun.
There’s usually a history there.
Maybe you were with someone who:
Twisted your words
Minimized your feelings
Made you feel like you had to “prove your case”
So you adapted.
You got better at explaining.
Better at softening.
Better at anticipating their reactions.
And somewhere along the way, you learned:
“If I say it perfectly… maybe I’ll finally be heard.”
But here’s the hard truth:
You can say it perfectly—and still not be heard by someone who benefits from misunderstanding you.
The moment I stopped over-explaining didn’t look dramatic from the outside.
No big speech.
No mic drop.
It looked like this:
“I’m not okay with that.”
Pause.
That’s it.
No paragraph after it.
No emotional buffering.
No explaining why it should make sense.
Just… truth.
And you know what happened?
Some people didn’t like it.
(Shocking, I know.)
Because when you stop over-explaining, you also stop over-accommodating.
And that changes the dynamic.
Let me paint you a picture:
Because silence feels loud when you’re used to filling it.
Not because you’re wrong—but because they’re used to you being easier to navigate.
This is the magic part.
You realize:
“I don’t need to convince anyone to honor what I feel.”
Because I know you’re thinking:
“Okay, but what do I actually say without sounding harsh or cold?”
Girl, I got you.
Here are a few upgrades:
Instead of:
“I just feel like maybe this isn’t working for me, and I don’t want you to think—”
Try:
“This doesn’t work for me.”
Instead of:
“I’m sorry, I don’t want to cause any issues but I need—”
Try:
“I need a little more space right now.”
Instead of:
“I just want to explain why that bothered me…”
Try:
“That didn’t sit right with me.”
Then stop talking.
(Yes, really. Stop talking.)
After divorce, your nervous system is already a little… let’s call it on high alert.
You’re rebuilding:
Your confidence
Your identity
Your sense of safety
And over-explaining?
It keeps you stuck in the old pattern of needing approval to feel okay.
But this next chapter?
It’s not about being understood by everyone.
It’s about being aligned with yourself.
You’re allowed to:
Say less
Mean it more
Let people misunderstand you if they choose to
Because clarity doesn’t always sound nice.
Sometimes it sounds… quiet.
Sometimes it sounds like a simple sentence followed by a deep breath and a sip of coffee while you don’t elaborate.
Growth is subtle like that.
It’s not when people suddenly agree with you.
It’s not when conversations get easier.
It’s when you realize:
“I don’t need to explain myself to feel valid anymore.”
That’s the shift.
That’s the comeback.
If you’ve ever walked away from a conversation thinking:
“Why did I say all of that…”
or
“I wish I had handled that differently…”
I created something for you.
Real words you can use in real moments—
with your ex, your family, in dating, and in everyday conversations.
No overthinking.
No emotional spiraling.
No post-conversation regret.
Just calm. clear. grounded communication.
Because this isn’t about becoming someone else.
It’s about finally showing up as the version of you who doesn’t abandon herself mid-conversation.
This is exactly the kind of conversation we have every week on The Nichole Banks Podcast.
The real stuff.
The things no one says out loud.
The patterns that quietly keep you stuck—and how to actually break them.
And if you’re not already on my newsletter list?
Girl… you’re missing the good stuff.
It’s where I go deeper.
More personal.
More honest.
More “you’re not crazy, you’re just finally waking up.”
👉 Come join us. You’ll feel seen there.
“I stopped over-explaining when I realized my peace didn’t require permission.”
Now tell me…
are you ready to say less—and mean it more?
Because that’s where your power is now.
Some days you feel strong.
Some days you’re crying in the car for no reason.
Both are normal.
If you’re in that in-between space and just need something to ground you…
I created this for you:
✨ The 30-Day Comeback Plan (Miracle Month)
Simple daily prompts, small wins, and gentle structure to help you feel like yourself again.
No overwhelm. No pressure. Just progress.
👉 Download it here and start today
You’re not the same woman you were before your divorce…
and thank God.
Because that version of you tolerated things
this version of you wouldn’t even entertain.
You’ve grown.
You’ve seen more.
You’ve learned what you need.
So no—don’t try to “get back” to who you were.
Become someone even better.
And this time?
She doesn’t forget herself in the process.
If this spoke to you, don’t stop here.
✨ Listen to the Podcast – real conversations, real healing Here.
✨ Take the Quiz – find out exactly where you are Here.
✨ Start Your Comeback – grab the book
👉 Choose what feels right for you and take one step forward
With love and strength,
Nichole Banks
Divorce Coach | Host of The Nichole Banks Podcast
💛 P.S. If this hit home… send it to a friend who needs it. You never know who’s quietly going through it too.
Follow Me:
Instagram: @msnicholebanks
Website: nicholebanks.com
Start your healing comeback today.
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