It doesn’t happen loudly. No announcement. No agreement. No moment where you consciously hand over control. It happens quietly, over time. A comment here. A reaction there. A look, a tone, a shift in energy. This is the effect of Indirect Power and the people we let control us without even granting permission. And before you realize it, someone else is influencing how you think, how you act, and how you show up in your own life. Indirect Power: The People We Let Control Us Without Permission often shapes our choices in unexpected ways.
That’s the part people don’t talk about. Not direct authority. Not a boss, not a rule, not a system. Indirect power. The kind that only exists because we allow it to. Interestingly, letting people control us without permission is at the heart of Indirect Power and rarely discussed openly, even though it impacts many of us.
You start filtering your decisions through someone else’s lens. Wondering how they’ll react. Adjusting your voice. Holding back ideas. Questioning instincts that used to come naturally. It feels subtle, almost responsible at first. Like you’re being aware, thoughtful, maybe even respectful. But over time, it shifts. You’re no longer considering input. You’re seeking permission that was never required—essentially experiencing the effects of indirect power from the people we let influence us.
And the cost adds up. This is especially true when indirect power, exercised by those we let control us, accumulates without explicit permission.
Confidence doesn’t disappear all at once. It erodes. Decision by decision. Moment by moment. You hesitate where you used to move. You doubt where you used to trust yourself. And the strangest part is, the person holding that influence may not even realize it. Because they didn’t take the power. You gave it, letting indirect power—people controlling you without your explicit permission—shape your actions.
Sometimes it comes from respect. Sometimes from history. Sometimes from wanting to avoid conflict. And sometimes, if we’re being honest, it comes from not fully trusting ourselves yet. So we borrow certainty from someone else, even when it quietly limits us and allows indirect power from others to take hold.
But there’s a moment, if you’re paying attention, where it clicks. Then you may see the truth of indirect power: people you let control you, often unconsciously and without their direct permission.
You realize nothing is actually stopping you. No rule. No barrier. No real consequence beyond discomfort. Just a pattern you’ve been repeating. A weight you’ve been carrying that doesn’t belong to you, all because indirect power was subtly allowed to operate.
And that’s where things start to change. In fact, recognizing how easily we let people exert indirect power and control us without permission can be a turning point for taking back your choices.
Taking that power back isn’t loud either. It’s not a dramatic speech or a clean break. It’s a shift. You stop overthinking their reaction. You make the decision anyway. You speak the thought you almost kept to yourself. You move forward without checking in with the invisible audience that used to sit in the back of your mind. However, breaking free from the influence of indirect power—those people we have allowed to control us without our consent—is often a gradual process.
It feels unfamiliar at first. Maybe even wrong. But it’s not; this moment of separation from indirect power, the unseen people we’ve given control without permission, is essential for growth.
It’s yours.
And once you feel that separation, once you realize how much of your life was being shaped by someone else’s presence without their permission or intent, it’s hard to go back. Not because you reject people, but because you finally understand the boundary between influence and control exercised through indirect power.
People will always have opinions. They’ll always react. They’ll always exist in proximity to your decisions. That doesn’t change. Yet, indirect power from people—when we let them control us without permission—can be diminished.
What changes is whether they get to define them through indirect power and without explicit permission.
Freedom isn’t always about leaving a place, a role, or a person. Sometimes it’s about staying exactly where you are and reclaiming the space inside your own head. Clearing out the noise. Letting your own voice come through again. Ultimately, it means no longer accepting indirect power from people you let control you without ever granting permission.
No permission required.
