Most people misunderstand boundaries.
They think boundaries are about telling other people what they can or cannot do. They think it sounds like control, confrontation, or conflict.
But a boundary is none of those things.
A boundary is a decision you make about what you will and will not participate in.
It is about your behavior, your response, and how you take care of yourself when something does not feel aligned.
That shift changes everything.
One of the biggest misconceptions is that boundaries are about changing other people.
“You can’t talk to me like that.”
“You need to stop doing that.”
Those are not boundaries. Those are attempts to control someone else’s behavior.
A true boundary sounds like:
“If you speak to me that way, I’m going to leave the conversation.”
“If this continues, I’m going to step away.”
Do you feel the difference?
One is trying to change them. The other is taking responsibility for yourself.
If you were raised to keep the peace, be agreeable, or make sure everyone else is okay, boundaries will feel uncomfortable.
Not because they are wrong.
Because they are unfamiliar.
Your nervous system learned that being liked, accepted, and easy was what kept you safe. So when you start setting boundaries, your body reacts.
Your heart races.
You feel anxious.
You want to explain more or take it back.
This does not mean you are doing it wrong.
It means you are doing something new.
Many people say their boundaries do not work.
But the truth is, a boundary only works if you follow through.
If you say, “I’m going to leave the conversation,” but you stay, it is no longer a boundary. It becomes a request.
And if someone is used to you having no boundaries, there will often be resistance when you start.
They may push back.
They may test you.
They may call you difficult or selfish.
This is part of the process.
It does not mean the boundary is wrong. It means the pattern is changing.
Boundaries are not just about other people. They are about your relationship with yourself.
Every time you say yes when you mean no, you disconnect from yourself.
Every time you override your needs, you lose a little self-trust.
And every time you follow through on a boundary, you rebuild that trust.
This is where the deeper work is.
Not just setting the boundary, but staying with yourself when it feels uncomfortable.
Letting someone be upset.
Not rushing to fix it.
Not overexplaining.
Just being with the discomfort and reminding your body: this is safe, it is just new.
Boundaries are not about pushing people away.
They are about making sure you never push yourself away again.
They are about choosing alignment over obligation, honesty over approval, and self-trust over control.
And the more you practice, the more natural it becomes.
Because you are no longer abandoning yourself to keep the peace.
You are learning how to stay.
In this final part of the 3-part series, Beth and Randy move beyond how they met and into what it actually looks like to...
If you’ve ever felt like there’s a voice inside you that’s constantly evaluating, correcting, or pressuring you, you’re not alone. The inner critic can...
Have you ever wondered why you react so strongly to certain situations? Maybe a small conflict feels catastrophic, or a minor setback sends you...