Beliefs Are Not Truth

It doesn’t start as over-explaining.

It starts as trying to be understood.

Trying to bring the other person back into connection.

Trying to make things okay again.

The Moment

You say something.

Maybe it’s direct. Perhaps it’s honest.

But their response isn’t what you expected.

There’s a pause, a shift in tone, a look, that feels like withdrawal.

Something subtle changes.

And in that moment, something shifts in you.

Not in an exaggerated way.

Just enough

That you feel the need to clarify.

So you add a bit more context.

Then a bit more explanation.

Then you start refining what you said.

Adjusting, softening, justifying, or expanding it.

At that point, it no longer feels like you’re expressing something.

It feels like you’re trying to make something fit.

What Most People Miss

Most people think over-explaining is a communication issue.

It’s not.

It’s a state shift.

A shift in focus.

A loss of certainty.

Your attention moves from:

“What do I mean?”

to

“How is this being received?”

That shift creates a new meaning:

“This isn’t connecting.”

And very quickly, that becomes:

“Something is off.”

And then:

“I need to fix this.”

It’s at that moment that the pattern begins.

How It Expresses

From there, the behaviour unfolds predictably.

You start talking more.

Expressing your intentions.

Adding explanations.

Trying to pre-empt misunderstanding.

Seeking to cover every angle.

And you may say things like:

“That’s not what I meant…”

“Let me explain…”

“I just want to make sure you understand…”

“I didn’t mean it like that…”

But underneath it all, something else is happening.

You’re no longer anchored in what you know to be true.

You’re orienting around their reaction.

And the more you do that,

the further you move away from yourself.

Why Awareness Isn’t Enough

You can know you over-explain.

You can see it happening.

You can even catch it mid-conversation.

And still not stop.

Because in that moment,

you don’t have access to the version of you that knows to stop.

This part of you is already solving for something else:

Restoring connection.

Reducing tension.

Getting back to safety.

And over-explaining feels like the way to do that.

The Real Problem

The issue isn’t that you talk too much.

Or that you explain too much.

Or that you care too much about being understood.

The real issue is that you lose internal authority under pressure.

You’re not trusting that… 

  • what you said can stand on its own.
  • you can tolerate being misunderstood.
  • the connection doesn’t need to be forced back into place.

So you compensate.

With more words.

More explanations.

More effort.

Why It Repeats

This pattern doesn’t come from nowhere.

It’s an old, outmoded strategy.

Earlier on in life, connection became linked to getting it right.

To being clear enough, careful enough, to not being misunderstood, or being seen!

So when there’s even a hint of deviation,

That part of you is preprogrammed to correct it.

And it isn’t because you don’t understand what’s happening.

But because your internal experience becomes uncomfortable enough

that you try to resolve it immediately.

And over-explaining is the way to do it.

What Needs to Change

It doesn’t shift by learning to “communicate better.”

Or by trying to say less.

Or by reminding yourself to be more concise.

It shifts when you can stay centered in yourself.

even when the other person doesn’t immediately meet you.

When you can say something

and allow silence to linger

without rushing to repair 

what hasn’t actually broken.

And most importantly,

when you can tolerate the brief moments

where connection feels uncertain

without abandoning yourself to restore it.

Because that’s the decisive moment.

Not what you say.

But whether you stay with yourself after you’ve said it.

If you want to see exactly how this shows up in your own relationships, I created a short diagnostic worksheet that walks you through these moments in a very specific way. You can get it here.