Politeness looks effortless on the surface, but living it out feels more like an endurance sport. Most days, the real fatigue doesnât come from deadlines or traffic, it comes from the quiet, invisible gymnastics we do just to keep social life smooth.
Take the supermarket. You spot someone you kind of know. Not close enough for a hug, not distant enough to ignore. So aisle one is a dodge, aisle three is a quick glance at the floor, and by aisle five youâre cornered into the inevitable âOh hi!â arrives, a little too cheerful, a little too late. All of that effort, and you havenât even reached the checkout.
Then thereâs the email dance. A single âThanks!â somehow demands four drafts. Too short feels cold, too long feels desperate. Add an exclamation mark? Delete it? Stare at it again. That one word ends up carrying more emotional weight than the quarterly report attached to it.

And letâs not forget the cough you hold in during a meeting. You sip water, blink, swallow, and pray it passes, all while pretending youâre laser-focused on bar graphs. No one notices, but it leaves you weirdly exhausted, like you just ran a mile in silence.
Psychologists call this self-regulation, Â the hidden effort we spend on managing impressions, smoothing awkward edges, and keeping things âpoliteâ (Baumeister & Vohs, 2007). Itâs not glamorous, but it keeps everyday life from dissolving into chaos. The catch is: itâs draining. Not because any single moment is huge, but because they stack. A smile here, a pause there, a carefully timed âthank youâ , by the end of the day, your brain feels like itâs done an invisible workout.
Still, those quiet Olympics are proof of care. Theyâre tiny acts of social glue, the reason life doesnât dissolve into shouting matches and awkward silences. Itâs not about being fake, itâs about trying. And maybe the kindest thing you can do is admit that it is tiring, and let yourself laugh at the absurdity of it all.
Because the point isnât to win every small social game, itâs to keep going without hating yourself for trying. Forgive, release, and step into the week.
Happy Monday.Â
đ Reference:
Baumeister, R. F., & Vohs, K. D. (2007). Self-Regulation, Ego Depletion, and Motivation. Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 1(1), 115â128.
Further Reading
Some forms of politeness are survival skills, and others are just survival tax. If this piece hit close, you might like these too:
Microaggressions: The Joke That Still Hurts
â The quiet weight of jokes that arenât funny and the cost of smiling through them.
â The politeness that hides prejudice, and how weâre often the ones left holding it.
Someone Shouldâve Said: Not at Coldplay
â Because sometimes âbeing professionalâ is just another word for quiet endurance.
FUN Monday #05 : Overthinking Loop and How to Break It Before It Breaks You
â The spiral we all know too well â and the small ways to press pause.
Emotional Survival and Other Things We Donât Admit Wanting
â When survival doesnât look like screaming, but like smiling, nodding, and making it through the day.