Stop Helping. Start Serving

We loooooove the word help.

It feels generous. It sounds supportive. It’s baked into so many of our daily interactions:

“Can I help you with that?”

“I just want to help people.”

But here’s the thing: help often carries an invisible weight.

Behind its kindness is a subtle pedestal, one person positioned above, the other positioned below. Even when unintentional, “help” can make someone feel like a problem to be fixed, rather than a whole human worthy of partnership.

As a resilience & neurodivergent coach, I’ve seen the ripple effects of this word in coaching, leadership, and everyday relationships. And honestly? It doesn’t always serve us.

Serving comes from a different place.

It doesn’t assume superiority.

It doesn’t imply fixing.

It meets someone eye-to-eye, shoulder-to-shoulder.

Service is grounded in empathy, humility, and intention.

It’s not about swooping in with solutions; it’s about honoring dignity and co-creating possibility.

When we shift from help to serve, the entire dynamic changes.

Example 1: Leadership at Work

Imagine a manager saying, “I want to help you succeed.”

Now, imagine them saying, “I want to serve this team so we can succeed.”

The first puts the spotlight on the manager as the one with power. The second centers the team, making the manager part of the ecosystem instead of the hero of the story.

That subtle shift invites trust, ownership, and collaboration. It empowers rather than obligates.

If you're more of an audio/video learner - check this podcast episode here.

Example 2: Friendship in Practice

Now picture a friend going through something heavy.

Saying, “I want to help you,” can unintentionally create pressure - like you should be fixing or solving or rescuing.

But saying, “I want to serve you in this moment, whether that means listening, bringing food, or simply sitting beside you,” does something entirely different.

It removes the rescuer dynamic and honors the friend’s experience.

It asks: How can I be present with you, without trying to take over?

That’s dignity. That’s service.

This isn’t just about how we show up for others. It’s about how we show up for ourselves.

Helping ourselves often sounds like:

“I should fix this.”

“I need to do better.”

“I just have to get it together.”

Serving ourselves sounds more like:

“What does my nervous system need right now?”

“How can I stand beside myself instead of above myself?”

One is pressure. The other is partnership.

When you frame self-coaching as service, you stop trying to repair yourself and start walking alongside yourself. And that’s where real resilience begins.

Words matter.

The next time you feel pulled to “help” someone, ask yourself: What would it look like to serve instead?

The difference isn’t just semantics, it’s a shift in energy, presence, and power.

Because when we serve instead of help, we’re not reaching down.

We’re walking alongside.

Ready to practice this shift?
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Start serving yourself first.

Hey, I'm Viki

Just a lass of many facets. TLDR: I’m a resilience coach empowering late diagnosed neurodivergent women from living in states of TENSION to living in a state of INTENTION. As a trauma informed practitioner, I support people through coaching, somatic guidance and communal events.

I may receive a commission for links shared in a blog, podcast, or newsletter. You don’t have to use these links, yet I’d be grateful if you chose to! Thanks again for your support, I hope you find any aOc content supportive, insightful, and/or helpful!

And this is why the e course, Adventuring with ADHD, works so well, because we delve into this type of shadow work; uncovering and dusting off aspects of ourselves that get to have some light on them.

If nothing else, resilience tools are strong ADHD foundations for your journey in partnering with your brain.

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