Asking for Help (And Accepting It)
In this episode of The Support and Kindness Podcast, hosts Greg, Rich, Jay, and Liam explore something simple but weirdly hard: asking for help and actually accepting it.
They share honest stories, from addiction recovery to mobility challenges, and draw on research that explains why so many of us freeze up right when support would help the most.
Why Reaching Out Is a Strength
At its core, the episode is hopeful: asking isn’t a weakness. It’s connection. It’s trust. And it can be the start of real change.
Reaching out doesn’t mean you’ve failed; it means you’re choosing connection over isolation. Asking for help signals self-awareness, you recognize your limits and are willing to let others into your life. Psychologists call this “prosocial behavior”: reaching out builds social bonds and activates the support networks that make resilience possible.
- This episode shares personal reflections and is not a substitute for professional advice.
In this episode, you’ll explore:
- Why we avoid asking (judgment, burden, control, pride)
- The research behind why we underestimate people’s willingness to help
- How gender, age, and workplace culture can shape help-seeking
- Practical ways to make “the ask” easier—and safer
- How giving back makes it easier to receive help, too
Why asking for help feels so hard (even when we truly need it)
Greg opens with a question most of us recognize: When was the last time you needed help… and didn’t ask? That moment is often filled with looping thoughts like “They’re too busy,” “I’ll look stupid,” or “I should be able to handle this.”
The group names three big barriers that show up again and again:
- Fear of judgment
- Fear of being a burden
- Fear of losing control
Jay shares a powerful example through his mother, someone deeply capable and known for “getting stuff done,” yet who finds asking for help (especially at work) almost physically painful. That kind of independence can look like strength from the outside, but on the inside it can feel like pressure, stress, and even shame when things aren’t fully under control.
“As soon as she loses the slightest bit of control, she seems to spiral and become depressed…”
— Jay (sharing about his mom)
If you relate to that, you’re not broken. You’re human. Many of us learned, directly or indirectly, that needing help means we’re failing. This episode pushes back on that story.
“We’re usually wrong”: we underestimate how willing people are to help
Greg brings in one of the most important research ideas in the whole conversation: help-seekers often underestimate how likely others are to say yes.
“We’re usually wrong… people greatly underestimate how willing other people are to help.”
— Greg
This is backed by social psychology research showing that people commonly underestimate compliance, meaning we expect rejection more than what actually happens. In one well-known set of studies, researchers found that people underestimated how often others would agree to help, sometimes by a lot. (PubMed)
Why the mismatch?
- We focus on how awkward it feels to ask.
- The other person often focuses on how normal it feels to help.
- Helpers may also feel good about being trusted, needed, and useful.
That last piece matters. Rich and Greg both point to the “blessing” of being able to help and how refusing support can accidentally rob someone else of a meaningful moment.
And there’s science behind that good feeling, too. The “helper’s high” is a real term used to describe the emotional uplift many people report after helping others. Research and medical writers have connected helping behavior with reward pathways and “feel-good” chemicals like dopamine. (Harvard Medicine Magazine)
Callout to sit with:
Helping isn’t only something you receive.
Sometimes it’s something you give others the chance to experience.
Gender, age, and workplace dynamics: why context changes everything
The episode also explores how help-seeking can shift depending on who we are and where we are.
Emotional support: spouses, friends, and professional help
Greg references Pew Research findings about where people turn for emotional support. Pew’s 2025 report found that women and men are similarly likely to turn to a spouse/partner, but women are more likely than men to turn to friends for emotional support. (Pew Research Center)
Pew also found that adults under 50 were more likely than adults 50+ to say they sought help from a mental health professional for emotional support. (Pew Research Center)
Aging and independence
Rich speaks openly about the tension many men feel as they approach midlife: “losing independence” can feel terrifying. This aligns with health guidance and reporting that older adults sometimes avoid asking for help because it can feel like admitting decline, or fearing it’s a first step toward losing autonomy. (nm.org)
Workplace fears (especially for women)
Jay’s story about his mom highlights something many people experience: work can feel like a place where you must prove competence constantly.
While workplace research is complex and doesn’t always map neatly onto one statistic, there’s strong evidence that gender expectations and stereotypes can shape how safe it feels to ask for help, and whether help is interpreted as support or as a signal of incompetence. (British Psychological Society)
Gentle reality check:
If you hesitate to ask at work, it may not be “in your head.”
Culture, power, and bias can make help-seeking feel risky.
Accepting help is self-advocacy (and sometimes it prevents harm)
Liam shares one of the clearest examples of why accepting help matters—especially for people navigating disability, chronic illness, or changing mobility.
He talks about being offered something as small as a wheelchair ride…and saying no out of habit, not wanting to be a burden and then injuring himself trying to walk a distance that wasn’t safe for him.
“I would decline it… and then hurt myself trying to walk this crazy distance.”
— Liam
That’s not a minor point. Sometimes the “cost” of refusing help isn’t just stress—it’s pain, injury, setbacks, and lost energy you can’t easily replace.
Liam reframes accepting help as:
- advocating for your real needs
- protecting your long-term independence
- allowing support to be part of your safety plan
And he adds something beautiful: when you accept help with warmth and gratitude, you make it easier for people to keep offering it to you and to others.
Practical strategies: make the ask easier (and build a culture of mutual support)
This episode is loaded with practical, low-pressure ways to ask and accept support.
Rich’s “small, specific, time-based” framework
Rich suggests making the ask easier to say yes to by being clear and contained:
- Small (not overwhelming)
- Specific (clear task)
- Time-based (a defined window)
He also shares a famous comedy example often attributed to Chris Rock: people didn’t stop when he waved for help, but they stopped when they saw him pushing the car. The point isn’t “do everything yourself.” It’s: show the other person where you’re stuck and what you’ve tried.
Try this script (copy/paste):
“Could you help me with X for 15 minutes today? I tried Y, and I’m stuck on Z.”
Jay on recovery, rehab, and giving back
Jay connects help-seeking to addiction recovery and AA’s culture of mutual support, especially the idea of giving back once you’re steadier.
Alcoholics Anonymous’ Step 12 emphasizes carrying the message and practicing the principles in daily life, many people interpret that as service, support, and community responsibility. (Alcoholics Anonymous)
“I had to ask for help quite a bit in going to rehab… over 20 times.”
— Jay
The episode makes an important point here: being turned down doesn’t mean you failed. It might mean timing, bandwidth, or capacity. Ask again. Ask someone else. Keep going.
Greg on trust (and treating help as an honor)
Greg closes with a meaningful reminder: when someone asks you for help, they’re showing trust. That matters. If you’re the one being asked, take it seriously, but also be honest if you can’t.
A kindness-based reframe:
Asking is not “taking.”
Asking is inviting someone into trust.
Key Takeaways
- Asking for help can feel scary because it touches judgment, burden, and control—but those fears are common, not shameful.
- People often underestimate how willing others are to help, so your “they’ll say no” story may be inaccurate. (PubMed)
- Helping can feel genuinely good for the helper (“helper’s high”), so receiving support can be a win-win. (Harvard Medicine Magazine)
- Age and independence fears can make asking harder, especially if help feels like a threat to autonomy. (nm.org)
- Make requests small, specific, and time-bound to reduce pressure and increase yeses.
- Accepting help can be self-advocacy, and sometimes prevents harm (especially with chronic illness or mobility challenges).
- If someone says no, it may be capacity, not rejection of you. Try again, or try someone else.
- Communities get stronger when help flows both ways: ask when you need it, give when you can.
Closing thoughts (and a Question for Hivians)
This episode lands on a quiet truth: needing help doesn’t make you weak—it makes you real. Whether you’re dealing with recovery, health issues, stress at work, or life just piling up, asking is a skill you can practice in small steps.
If this topic hits home, share in the comments: What makes asking for help hardest for you, and what kind of help feels safest to receive? You never know who will feel less alone because you spoke up.
Resources & Links Mentioned (and Verified)
Links verified as working on Dec 25, 2025.
Episode & KindnessRX links
- Episode page (PodOpsHost) (Podopshost)
- KindnessRX.org (KindnessrRX)
- KindnessRX — Support Groups (Podopshost)
- KindnessRX Luma Calendar (sign-up) (Luma)
Research and reading on asking for help
- Pew Research Center (2025) — Where Americans find emotional support (Pew Research Center)
- Flynn & Lake (2008) — Underestimating compliance with direct requests for help (PubMed) (PubMed)
- Stanford GSB Insights — “If you want something, ask for it” (Stanford Graduate School of Business)
- Harvard Medicine Magazine — Health benefits of kindness (includes “helper’s high”) (Harvard Medicine Magazine)
- Northwestern Medicine — Why some older adults are reluctant to ask for help (nm.org)
Helpful culture and mindset resources
- Alcoholics Anonymous — The Twelve Steps (Alcoholics Anonymous)
- Greater Good Science Center — Why is it so hard to ask for help? (Greater Good)
- Brené Brown on TED (includes “The Power of Vulnerability”) (TED)
- Adam Grant — Give and Take (giving, receiving, reciprocity) (Adam Grant)
- British Psychological Society (Research Digest) — How stereotypes can affect women asking for help (British Psychological Society)
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Edited with the assistance of ChatGPT. Images created withNano Banana. I hold commercial licenses for each.