đ The Truth About Being A Control Freak (It’s not what you think)
When my daughter recently called herself a control freak because she was doing everything she could to secure a graduate class before her college schedule hit the add/drop deadline, I felt myself pause. Hard.
I know that phrase all too wellâIâve used it on myself more times than I can count. But hearing her say it hit different. Why? Because I didnât see her as a âfreakâ at all, and certainly not a âcontrol freak.â
What I saw was Exceptional Persistence. Excellent Follow-through. Incredible Self-advocacy.
All qualities that, frankly, are going to take her far in life.
And yet, our culture slaps this negative labelâcontrol freakâon anyone who dares to be proactive about shaping outcomes.
So letâs get curious about control. What is it, really? Why do we chase it? And why do we make ourselves wrong for it?
Why âControl Freakâ Gets Such a Bad Rap đ¤¨
The phrase âcontrol freakâ carries a judgment baked right in. It implies desperation, rigidity, or micromanagement.
Society often prefers the âgo with the flowâ personalityâsomeone laid back, easygoing, and unbothered. It assumes we should fear those willing to take control, portraying them as bossy, impatient, or egotistical.
But hereâs the irony: if no one takes control, things donât get done! My daughterâs class wouldnât have been added. Projects stall. Families spin. Even lives can unravel without someone stepping up to direct.
And itâs not new. Think about the âterrible twosâ in childhoodâthe first time our sweet little selves demand independence and control. When we donât get it? Cue the toddler temper tantrum.
But control isnât actually bad. The negative connotation comes from the extremesâwhen control morphs into domination, stifles othersâ autonomy, or fuels anxiety by clinging to the uncontrollable.
Unfortunately, weâve generalized the phrase to mean any and every attempt at control and labeled it as not just bad behavior, but freak behavior.
So why do we do this?
Your Brain on Control đ§
Hereâs where neuroscience comes in. The human brain is wired to seek controlâit equates predictability with safety.
When we know whatâs happening and what to expect, our stress response calms down. That’s why losing control (or even the perception of losing it) sparks fear, frustration, or those adult-sized âtemper tantrumsâ weâd rather not admit to.
This is what I wrote about in The Fear Flipâsometimes what we call âfear of failureâ or âfear of successâ is actually just fear of uncertainty. Our brains crave stability, but life rarely hands us that.
So, in truth, the impulse to control isnât flawedâitâs literally our neural wiring doing its job.
Whatâs Controllable vs. Whatâs Not đŻ
The real question isnât whether control is good or badâitâs whether weâre aiming it at the right things.
Think of it like dividing life into two buckets:
â Controllable:
- The effort you put in
- Your follow-up and persistence (like my daughter sending that extra email)
- Your boundaries and communication style
- Your habits and daily choices
- The meaning you assign to what happens around you
â Not Controllable:
- Other peopleâs timelines or lack of urgency
- The weather, the market, the traffic jam, the glitch in the system
- Someone elseâs opinions, moods, or reactionsâeven if theyâre about you
- The past (yep, even when we desperately wish we could redo it)
When we confuse the two, frustration skyrockets. Itâs like trying to nail Jell-O to the wallâmessy, frustrating, and pointless.
But when we consciously place our energy in the controllable bucket, something shifts. We feel grounded, less anxious, more powerful.
Itâs not about controlling everythingâitâs about controlling enough to move forward with confidence.
This is curiosity in actionâchoosing to explore, adjust, and redirect where it matters, instead of spiraling in the places weâll never win.
Why Labels Donât Help đŚ
Hereâs the bigger danger: when we call ourselves âcontrol freaks,â or any of the other stereotypes weâll cover in this 4-part series, weâre shrinking ourselves into a box.
Labels can feel tidy, but they also limit us. They reinforce shame instead of celebrating strengths.
Itâs like I wrote in When One Moment Becomes the Whole Storyâthe stories we tell about ourselves often keep us smaller than we are.
So instead of slapping on a label, what if we reframed?
⨠Instead of âcontrol freak,â maybe itâs detail-driven, proactive, or determined.
⨠Instead of shame, what if we gave ourselves credit for showing up, staying engaged, and refusing to settle?
I wonder how it looks when we celebrate ourselves insteadâŚ
Wrapping It Up: From Freak to Fierce đŞ
Hereâs the thing: wanting control doesnât make you a freak. It makes you human. Our brains are wired to crave it, our lives require it, and our progress depends on it.
The trick isnât in dropping control or giving it upâitâs in directing it.
So instead of slapping yourself with a limiting label, what if you got curious about where your control energy is going? Are you steering it toward what you can actually influence, or are you burning it up on things that were never yours to carry in the first place?
The Challenge đĽ
This week, when you catch yourself feeling that urge to âcontrol,â pause for a second and run it through this filter:
1ď¸âŁ Name it â What exactly am I trying to control right now?
2ď¸âŁ Sort it â Does this belong in the controllable bucket (my effort, my follow-up, my choices) or the uncontrollable bucket (their timeline, their mood, the weather, the past)?
3ď¸âŁ Shift it â If itâs controllable, take one small action. If itâs not, give yourself permission to release it and redirect your energy.
Try it once. Then try it again. And notice: each time you choose wisely, youâre not being a control freakâyouâre being intentional, resilient, and brave.
Because at the end of the day, the only freaky thing would be handing over your power without even realizing it. đ
⨠Be sure to check back next week when we dive into another misguided label we give ourselvesâsubscribe so you donât miss a thing!





My confrol âfreakâ syndrome has always been strong especially raising 3 kids over 22 years and running my house. As my kids have gotten older and more independent, itâs been hard to let go and not control things, but Iâve been working on it!