Identify your boundaries and how to implement them
Love can’t exist
without boundaries, even with your children. It’s easy to understand external
boundaries as your bottom line. Think of rules and principles you live by when
you say what you will or won’t do or allow. If you have difficulty saying no,
override your needs to please others, or are bothered by someone who is
demanding, controlling, criticizing, pushy, abusive, invasive, pleading, or
even smothering you with kindness, it’s your responsibility to speak up.
Boundaries also are also internal, as discussed below.
Types of boundaries
There are several
areas where boundaries apply:
1.
Material
boundaries determine whether you give or loan things, such as your money, car,
clothes, books, food, or toothbrush.
2.
Physical
boundaries pertain to your personal
space, privacy, and body. Do you give a handshake or a hug
— and to whom and when? How do you feel about loud music, nudity, and
locked doors?
3.
Mental
boundaries apply to your thoughts, values, and opinions. Are you easily
suggestible? Do you know what you believe, and can you hold onto your opinions?
Can you open-mindedly listen to someone else’s, without becoming rigid? If you
become highly emotional, argumentative, or defensive, you may have weak
emotional boundaries.
4.
Emotional
boundaries distinguish separating your emotions and responsibility for them
from someone else’s. It’s like an imaginary line or force field that separates
you and others. Healthy boundaries prevent you from giving advice, blaming, or
accepting blame. They protect you from feeling guilty for someone else’s
negative feelings or problems and taking others’ comments personally. High
reactivity suggests weak emotional boundaries. Healthy emotional boundaries
require clear internal boundaries — knowing your feelings and your
responsibilities to yourself and others.
5.
Sexual
boundaries protect your comfort level with sexual touch and activity
— what, where, when, and with whom.
6.
Spiritual boundaries
relate to your beliefs and experiences in connection with God and a higher
power.
Why it’s hard
It’s hard for
codependents to set boundaries because: 1) They put others’ needs and feelings
first; 2) They don’t know themselves; 3) They don’t feel they have rights; 4)
They believe setting boundaries jeopardizes the relationship, and 5) They never
learned to have healthy boundaries.
Boundaries are
learned. You didn’t learn you had rights or boundaries if yours weren’t valued
growing up. Any kind of abuse violates personal boundaries, including teasing.
For example, my brother ignored my pleas for him to stop tickling me until I
could barely breathe. This made me feel powerless and that I didn’t have a
right to say “stop” when I was uncomfortable. In recovery, I gained the
capacity to tell a masseuse to stop and use less pressure. In some cases,
boundary violations affect a child’s ability to mature into an independent,
responsible adult.
You have rights
You may not
believe you have any rights if yours weren’t respected growing up. For example,
you have a right to privacy, to say “no,” to be addressed with courtesy and
respect, to change your mind or cancel commitments, to ask people you hire to
work the way you want, to ask for help, to be left alone, to conserve your
energy, and to not answer a question, the phone, or an email.
- Think about
all the situations where these rights apply.
- How often do
you say “yes” when you’d like to say “no?”
- Write want
you want to happen.
- List your
personal bill of rights. What prevents you from asserting them?
Write statements
expressing your bottom line. Be kind. For example, “Please don’t criticize (or
call) me (or borrow my ...),” and “Thank you for thinking of me, but I regret I
won’t be joining (or able to help) you ... "
Internal
boundaries
Internal
boundaries involve regulating your relationship with yourself. Think of them as
self-discipline and healthy management of
time, thoughts, emotions, behavior and impulses. If you’re procrastinating,
doing things you neither have to nor want to do, or overdoing and not getting
enough rest, recreation, or balanced meals, you may be neglecting internal
physical boundaries. Learning to manage negative thoughts and feelings empowers
you, as does the ability to follow through on goals and
commitments to yourself.
Healthy emotional
and mental internal boundaries help you not assume responsibility for, or
obsess about, other people’s feelings and problems — something
codependents commonly do, followed by violating others’ emotional boundaries
with unwanted advice.
Strong internal
boundaries curb suggestibility. You think about yourself, rather than
automatically agreeing with others’ criticism or advice. You’re then empowered
to set external emotional boundaries if you choose.
Similarly, since
you’re accountable for your feelings and actions, you don’t blame others. When
you’re blamed, if you don’t feel responsible, instead of defending yourself or
apologizing, you can say, “I don’t take responsibility for that.”
Guilt and
resentment
Anger is
often a signal that action is required. If you feel resentful or victimized and
are blaming someone or something, it might mean that you haven’t been setting
boundaries. If you feel anxious or
guilty about setting boundaries, remember, your relationship suffers when
you’re unhappy. Once you get practice setting boundaries, you feel empowered
and less anxiety, resentment, and guilt. Generally, you receive more respect
from others and your relationships improve.
Setting effective
boundaries
People often say
they set a boundary, but it didn’t help. There’s an art to setting boundaries.
If it’s done in anger or by nagging – “I’ve told you 100 times...” You won’t be
heard. Boundaries are not meant to punish, but are for your well-being and
protection. They’re more effective when you’re assertive,
calm, firm, and courteous. If that doesn’t work, you may need to communicate
consequences to encourage compliance. It’s essential, however, that you never
threaten a consequence you’re not fully prepared to carry out.
It takes time,
support, and relearning to be able to set effective boundaries. Self-awareness
and learning to be assertive are the first steps. Setting boundaries isn’t
selfish. It’s self-love — you say “yes” to you each time you say
“no.” It builds self-esteem.
But it usually takes encouragement to make yourself a priority and to persist,
especially when you receive pushback.
Source: https://bit.ly/2Kq46ma

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