April
How to Create Healthy Boundaries in
Relationships
Good fences make good neighbors.
Robert Frost
A successful relationship is composed of two
individuals each with a clearly defined
sense of her or his own identity. Without our own
understanding of self, of who we are and what makes
us unique, it is difficult to engage in the process
of an ongoing relationship in a way that functions
smoothly and enhances each of the partners. We need
a sense of self in order to clearly communicate our
needs and desires to our partner. When we have a
strong conception of our own identity, we can
appreciate and love those qualities in our partner
that make him or her a unique person. When two
people come together, each with a clear definition
of her or his own individuality, the potential for
intimacy and commitment can be astounding. The
similarities between two people may bring them
together, but their differences contribute to the
growth, excitement and mystery of their
relationship.
One feature of a healthy sense of self is the
way we understand and work with boundaries.
Personal boundaries are the limits we set in
relationships that allow us to protect our selves.
Boundaries come from having a good sense of our own
self-worth. They make it possible for us to
separate our own thoughts and feelings from those
of others and to take responsibility for what we
think, feel and do. Boundaries allow us to rejoice
in our own uniqueness. Intact boundaries are
flexible they allow us to get close to
others when it is appropriate and to maintain our
distance when we might be harmed by getting too
close. Good boundaries protect us from abuse and
pave the way to achieving true intimacy. They help
us take care of ourselves.
Unhealthy boundaries often emerge from
dysfunctional family backgrounds. The needs of
parents or other adults in a family are sometimes
so overwhelming that the task of raising children
is demoted to a secondary role, and dysfunction is
the likely result. Consider the role of the father
who screams at his children or becomes physically
abusive with them as a way of dealing in a
self-centered way with his own anger. His needs
come first, and the needs of the children for
safety, security, respect and comfort come second.
What the children are likely to learn in this
situation is that boundaries dont matter. As
they grow up, they lack the support they need to
form a healthy sense of their own identities. In
fact, they may learn that if they want to get their
way with others, they need to intrude on the
boundaries of other people just as their
father did. They would likely grow up with fluid
boundaries, which may lead to dysfunctional
relationships later on in life. They would have a
hazy sense of their own personal boundaries.
Conversely, they may learn that rigid and
inflexible boundaries might be the way to handle
their relationships with other people. They wall
themselves off in their relationships as a way of
protecting themselves, and, as a consequence, may
find it difficult to form close interpersonal bonds
with others in adulthood.
Here are some ways in which unhealthy boundaries
may show themselves in our relationships, along
with some remedies
Lack of a Sense of Identity
When we lack a sense of our own identity and the
boundaries that protect us, we tend to draw our
identities from our partner. We cant imagine
who we would be without our relationship. We become
willing to do anything it takes to make the
relationship work, even if it means giving up our
emotional security, friends, integrity, sense of
self-respect, independence, or job. We may endure
physical, emotional or sexual abuse just to save
the relationship.
The more rational alternative is to find out who
we are and what makes us unique, and to rejoice in
this discovery. Realize that your value and worth
as a person are not necessarily dependent on having
a significant other in your life, that you can
function well as an independent person in your own
right. When you move into accepting yourself, your
relationships will actually have a chance to grow
and flourish. This journey of self-discovery can be
challenging but highly rewarding. Working
with a trained therapist or coach can provide the
structure and support we needed to take on this
task.
Settling for Second Best
We may cling to the irrational belief that
things are good enough in the relationship
that we feel a measure of security and that this is
as good as its likely to get. In the process,
however, we give up the chance to explore our sense
of fulfillment in life. We give up our own life
dreams in order to maintain the security of a
relationship. There is a feeling that if one of the
partners grows and finds personal life fulfillment,
the relationship would be damaged.
A healthy relationship is one in which our
boundaries are strong enough, yet flexible enough,
to allow us to flourish with our own uniqueness.
There is a sense of respect on the part of both
partners that allows each to live as full a life as
possible and to explore their own personal
potential. We dont have to give up ourselves
for a relationship. Healthy boundaries allow trust
and security to develop in a relationship.
Over-Responsibility and Guilt
One characteristic of growing up in a
dysfunctional household is that we may learn to
feel guilty if we fail to ensure the success and
happiness of other members of the household. Thus,
in adulthood, we may come to feel responsible for
our partners failures. The guilt we feel when
our partner fails may drive us to keep tearing down
our personal boundaries so that we are always
available to the other person. When we feel overly
responsible for another persons life
experiences, we deprive them of one of the most
important features of an independent, healthy and
mature life the ability to make our own life
choices and accept the consequences of our
decisions.
A healthier response is to show our partners
respect by allowing them to succeed or fail on
their own terms. You, of course, can be there to
comfort your partner when times become difficult,
and you can rejoice together when success is the
outcome. When boundaries are healthy, you are able
to say, I trust and respect you to make your
own life choices. As my equal partner, I will not
try to control you by taking away your choices in
life.
The Difference Between Love and Rescue
People who grow up in a dysfunctional family may
fail to learn the difference between love and
sympathy. Children growing up in these conditions
may learn to have sympathy for the emotional
crippling in their parents lives and feel
that the only time they get attention is when they
show compassion for the parent. They feel that when
they forgive, they are showing love. Actually, they
are rescuing the parent and enabling abusive
behavior to continue. They learn to give up their
own protective boundaries in order to take care of
the dysfunctional parent. In adulthood, they carry
these learned behaviors into their relationships.
If they can rescue their partner, they feel that
they are showing love. They get a warm, caring,
sharing feeling from helping their partner a
feeling they call love. But this may actually
encourage their partner to become needy and
helpless. An imbalance can then occur in the
relationship in which one partner becomes the
rescuer and the other plays the role of the
helpless victim. In this case, healthy boundaries,
which allow both partners to live complete lives,
are absent. Mature love requires the presence of
healthy and flexible boundaries.
Sympathy and compassion are worthy qualities,
but they are not to be confused with love,
especially when boundaries have become distorted.
Healthy boundaries lead to respect for the other
and equality in a relationship, an appreciation for
the aliveness and strength of the other person, and
a mutual flow of feelings between the two partners
all features of mature love. When one
partner is in control and the other is needy and
helpless, there is no room for the normal
give-and-take of a healthy relationship.
Fantasy vs. Reality
Children from dysfunctional households often
feel that things will get better someday, that a
normal life may lie in the future. Indeed, some
days things are fairly normal, but then the bad
times return again. Its the normal days that
encourage the fantasy that all problems in the
family might someday be solved. When they grow up,
these adults carry the same types of fantasy into
their relationships. They may portray to others the
myth that they have the perfect relationship
and they may believe, to themselves, that someday
all of their relationship problems will somehow be
solved. They ignore the abuse, manipulation,
imbalance and control in the relationship. By
ignoring the problems, they are unable to confront
them and the fantasy of a happier future
never comes to pass. Unhealthy boundaries, where we
collude with our partner in believing the myth that
everything is fine, make it difficult to come to
terms with the troubles of the relationship.
Healthy boundaries allow us to test reality
rather than rely on fantasy. When problems are
present, good boundaries allow us to define the
problems and to communicate with our partner in
finding solutions. They encourage a healthy
self-image, trust, consistency, stability and
productive communication.
Learning to have healthy boundaries is an
exciting adventure, an exercise in personal
liberation. It means coming to know ourselves and
increasing our awareness of what we stand for. It
also means self-acceptance and knowing that we are
OK as we are and worthy of the good things in life.
When two people with healthy boundaries enter into
a relationship, they encourage wholeness,
independence and a zest for life in their partner.
They know that trust is possible and that the
normal expected difficulties found in all
relationships can be worked on constructively. They
can find true intimacy as whole, complete and equal
people. The journey to a sense of healthy identity
is not always easy but it need not be all
that difficult. It often means letting go of some
of our old misconceptions about the nature of the
world. It means treating ourselves with respect and
appreciating ourselves for what we really are. When
we can do this for ourselves, we can take the same
approach toward our partner and then the
true happiness and love that our relationship
deserves can become a reality.
Healthy and Unhealthy Boundaries in
Relationships Some Examples
Healthy
- Feeling like your own person
- Feeling responsible for your own
happiness
- Togetherness and separateness are
balanced
- Friendships exist outside of the
relationship
- Focuses on the best qualities of both
people
- Achieving intimacy without chemicals
- Open, honest and assertive
communication
- Commitment to the partner
- Respecting the differences in the
partner
- Accepting changes in the relationship
- Asking honestly for what is wanted
- Accepting endings
Unhealthy
- Feeling incomplete without your partner
- Relying on your partner for your
happiness
- Too much or too little togetherness
- Inability to establish and maintain
friendships with others
- Focuses on the worst qualities of the
partners
- Using alcohol/drugs to reduce inhibitions
and achieve a false sense of intimacy
- Game-playing, unwillingness to listen,
manipulation
- Jealousy, relationship addiction or lack of
commitment
- Blaming the partner for his or her own
unique qualities
- Feeling that the relationship should always
be the same
- Feeling unable to express what is
wanted
- Unable to let go
Make It Real
Heres an exercise for you:
1. Make a list of all the people you care about,
both personally and professionally.
2. For each person, write down the things that
you no longer want to allow in your
relationship.
3. For each person, write down the things you
would like to allow more of in your
relationship.
4. Pass this article on to them and ask them to
do this exercise.
5. Have a conversation with those people about
what is on your lists and invite them to do the
same with you.
©2009, Paul
& Layne Cutright
* * *
Lovers know what they want, but not what they
need. - Publilius Syrus
Paul
and Layne Cutright are marriage and business
partners who have been teaching principles and
practices for successful relationships since 1976.
They are the founders of The Center for Enlightened
Partnership (www.enlightenedpartners.com),
an online learning and resource center providing
e-learning products, teleclasses and coaching. They
are authors of the Amazon Best Seller,
Youre
Never Upset for the Reason You
Think and
Straight
From the Heart. They
publish a free monthly e-zine filled with
inspiration and practical tools for all your valued
relationships (www.enlightenedpartners.com/newsletter.html).
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