Keen On America

Why Being a 'Good Woman' Is Making Women (and Men) Miserable

Jun 18, 2025
Elise Loehnen, a writer and editor, dives into the complexities of being a 'good woman,' exposing it as a 'misery trap.' She argues that societal expectations force women to suppress basic instincts, leading to exhaustion. Loehnen highlights how the seven deadly sins reflect harmful conditioning and discusses the toxic commercialization of the wellness industry. She also explores the Enneagram's potential to help women embrace their full selves and calls for breaking free from victim-villain-hero dynamics in personal relationships.
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INSIGHT

The Cost of Being a "Good Woman"

  • Society conditions women to suppress basic human instincts to appear "good."
  • This performance is exhausting and driven by fear of social rejection.
INSIGHT

Fear Drives Women’s Goodness Performance

  • Suppressing natural instincts costs women tremendous energy and fear usually drives this behavior.
  • Fear of exclusion and loss of approval makes women perform goodness to stay accepted.
INSIGHT

American Culture Amplifies Good Woman Myth

  • American culture values visible perfection, amplified by social media.
  • Women publicly showcase "perfect" lives while also showing humility as a protective performance.
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