Maxim for life: You get treated in life the way you teach people to treat you. — Wayne Dyer
Maxim for life: You get treated in life the way you teach people to treat you.
Author: Wayne Dyer
Insight: Most of us spend a lot of energy resenting how people treat us, as if their behavior is something that just happens to us—random and unfair. But this quote suggests something uncomfortable and liberating at once: we're actually training people, constantly, through what we accept and what we let slide. The person who always says yes to extra work teaches their boss they're available. The friend who never pushes back on disrespect teaches others that boundary-crossing is fine. We're not passive victims of other people's rudeness or carelessness; we're actively signaling what's negotiable. The tricky part is that this isn't about being mean or demanding. It's more subtle than that. Teaching people how to treat you happens through small, consistent choices. It's showing up on time, following through on what you say, naming it when something bothers you rather than silently resenting it, and walking away from situations that diminish you. People aren't mind readers, but they're excellent pattern-readers. They watch what you tolerate, what makes you pull away, what earns your respect. The real insight here might be this: you probably have more power in your relationships than you think. Not through manipulation, but through clarity about your own worth. The way forward isn't changing other people—it's changing the signal you're sending about what you're willing to accept.