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Do you have healthy BOUNDARIES? What is it really?
 

The difference between setting a boundary in a healthy way and manipulating is:  when we set a boundary we let go of the outcome."

 

My clients often explain to me how they set a boundary. They tell me something like, "I set a boundary. I told him he has to stop putting me down in public," or "I set a boundary. I told her she has to be on time from now on," or "I set a boundary. I told him he has to stop being critical of me."

This is not a boundary. A boundary is not about telling another person what to do. It is about telling another person what YOU will do in the face of the other's continued unkind or undesirable behavior. While it is hard for most people to accept, we cannot control another's behavior. What we can control is our own response in the face of others' behavior.

A boundary is about telling your truth and taking action on it. For example:

"I'm no longer willing to be with you in public when you put me down. The next time you do that, I will announce to everyone that I'm unwilling to be put down by you any more. Then I will leave and take the car or a cab home."

"I'm no longer willing to be late to events because of you being late. The next time you are late, I will leave without you. If you continue to be late, then I will just plan on taking separate cars."

"Your constant criticisms feel awful to me. From now on, when you are critical, I will tell you that it feels awful and leave the room."

Then, of course, you have to take the action you have said you would take. If you do not take the action, then what you have said is a manipulation rather than a truth. A boundary means nothing until you are willing to take the action.

The tricky part of this has to do with your intent. If you intent is to control the other person rather than take loving care of yourself, then your statement and action is just another form of control. If your desire is to take responsibility for yourself, then your tone of voice will be calm and matter-of-fact -- just letting the other person know what you will be doing or are doing. If your desire is to control the other person, then your tone of voice will be angry, blaming, and accusing, and your energy will be hard and closed.

We cannot hide our intent -- it will always come through in our energy and our tone of voice. However you might try to mask an intent to control, the other will always pick up on it and probably react to it with his or her own controlling behavior.

You are coming from a place of personal power when your intent is to take loving care of yourself rather than control the other. Since you cannot ultimately control another, trying to will leave you feeling frustrated and powerless.

The challenging part of this is taking the loving action on your own behalf. In order to take loving care of yourself, you need to be willing to let go of the outcome regarding how the other person will feel and behave. If you are focused on controlling how the other person will feel in the face of your actions, then you will not be able to take the loving action. If your focus is on the other person, such as, "He will feel hurt and angry if I leave the party," or "She will be furious with me if I leave without her," or "He will feel rejected and tell me I am running away from conflict if I leave the room when he is critical," then you will be unable to take the loving action.

Only if you are in compassion for yourself will you be able to act on your own behalf. Compassion for yourself means that you are 100% willing to take responsibility for your own feelings rather than trying to get someone else to do it for you, or rather than trying to control another's feelings. It means that you are willing for the other person to be upset with you rather than continue to be treated unkindly.

*************People tend to mirror how we treat ourselves. If you tolerate unkind treatment, you are letting others know that it is okay to treat you badly. By taking loving care of yourself in the face of others' unkind behavior, you will find that generally others will respect you and treat you well*****************

WHAT BOUNDARIES DO YOU NEED TO BE AWARE OF TODAY???

CAN YOU LOVE YOURSELF MORE TO SET THESE BOUNDARIES?

LOVING YOU ALL.....

~ANGEL HUGS~

  DEBRA  XO

 

 

Published Thursday, May 17, 2007 12:07 PM by WhiteLightAngel

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Comments

# re: Do you have healthy BOUNDARIES? What is it really? @ Thursday, May 17, 2007 10:00 AM

Great blog!
Setting boundaries is so crucial and you defined the process perfectly!  Keep up the great work!  We all benefit from it.

Blessings to you

Rosie

Rosalea

# re: Do you have healthy BOUNDARIES? What is it really? @ Thursday, May 17, 2007 10:10 AM

I LOVE THIS !  It is OH SO TRUE!  Thank you Debra for posting this. The timing of this is perfect and something that I am attempting to continue doing for myself. Most individuals will look at this and immediately think of their mate or love relationships. What I CAN tell you is that while I am getting better at doing this in a personal relationship with a man, it is exactly this that has made a world of difference with my 19 year old daughter& 22 year old son over the last 2 years. I have done EXACTLY this and it has created a level of respect/credibility and appreciation that is something completely new to us.  Ironically, even though I have seen and experienced this, it has taken me longer to integrate it into my own relationships with the opposite sex.
Why? I believe that it was easier with them because parenting is always learning/tweaking as they grow older, there is no real "parenting history/behavior" we are trying to remodel.  Yet with our opposite sex/mate relationships we have a "history" of  previous behavior/patterns that we are attempting to break/change.  Getting there and will continue to do so !  Thank you !!!

darlingdame

# re: Do you have healthy BOUNDARIES? What is it really? @ Friday, May 25, 2007 7:14 PM

This is wonderful! I understand what you are saying It all makes perfect sense. I did set a boundary and the way I felt was soooo great and very peaceful within.  When I look back at times what I thought I was doing it or just didn't know what I was doing- Well, I felt bad and unhappy or uncomfortable.  I am glad I read this so now I know what was behind the healthy boundary I set and now I can repeat the process. Thank you so much for sharing this.- Lori

lorimill5

# re: Do you have healthy BOUNDARIES? What is it really? @ Sunday, September 30, 2007 10:06 AM

I am up for change, Change is Good. It will be my first step into finding my true self again!!
As well I BELIEVE and FEEL it will help my self confidence TREMENDOUSLY! ( Not my spelling though..) LOL

All my Best,

Nicole

P.S, By the way, How are you doing???

Nicole

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