I've recently realized that I tend to remain in unhealthy relationships much longer than needed. I suppose having clear boundaries would help with that.
As I see it now, the word "boundary" applies to two somewhat separate concepts:
1) a boundary determining whether to stay in a relationship: having clear (conscious and also unconscious) rules about whom not to date and when to immediately and irrevocably break up, i.e., being aware of red flags and acting immediately upon spotting them, especially early in the relationship
- e.g. I have a strict conscious boundary that if anyone commits any kind of physical violence against me for a second time (e.g. gives me a slap during an argument; it doesn't have to be anything huge), I will immediately break up with them; I actually have never needed to follow that rule, probably because my subconscious boundary is that I don't even start dating people who would ever attack me physically
2) a boundary during the course of a relationship: communicating how I wish to be treated and what consequences will it have if I am not treated like that, where the intention is to preferably persuade the partner to treat me respectfully, and if that cannot be achieved, then to minimize the negative impact upon me
- e.g.:
- I've stated that I will cancel any dates for which he comes more than certain amount of time late, unless he calls in advance and tells me, because I did not want to be repeatedly put in the situation of waiting for him and not knowing for how long I'll have to wait
- we've had frequent arguments about money (there was an agreement about splitting costs but Fasaani wasn't keeping his end of it), until after many months I simply communicated that unless he pays his part of our common bills by the end of each month, I will have to break up with him in order to maintain self-respect; this immediately improved the situation in the sense that Fasaani finally understood how disrespectful it is not to uphold his financial commitments, started putting more effort into making money and was somewhat more reliably covering the agreed part of expenses
As you can see, all three of these examples have one thing in common - they go along the lines of "rather than accepting the behaviour that hurts me and feels disrespectful, I am willing to give up on a part (or all) of our relationship"; as such, the boundary is really leaving the partner in the space "outside". To me, setting such a boundary requires giving up on the hope that we can amicably come up with a better solution to an issue that's hurting me. It requires armouring myself with certain level of coldness and even aggression in order to protect myself from greater hurt caused by unmet expectations. Basically, it is a proof that I have to use force in order to signal that my needs are being neglected, and in order to protect myself in the relationship.
As such, I wonder how to recognize that purely the fact that we've come to a point that I need to set a (type 2) boundary should be a red flag, and probably should mean that instead of setting the boundary I should simply walk away.
I am also wondering whether you have your own examples of setting boundaries that work for you and that do not feel forceful or like a work-around for accepting a relationship with someone who's not treating you kindly and respectfully.
As I see it now, the word "boundary" applies to two somewhat separate concepts:
1) a boundary determining whether to stay in a relationship: having clear (conscious and also unconscious) rules about whom not to date and when to immediately and irrevocably break up, i.e., being aware of red flags and acting immediately upon spotting them, especially early in the relationship
- e.g. I have a strict conscious boundary that if anyone commits any kind of physical violence against me for a second time (e.g. gives me a slap during an argument; it doesn't have to be anything huge), I will immediately break up with them; I actually have never needed to follow that rule, probably because my subconscious boundary is that I don't even start dating people who would ever attack me physically
2) a boundary during the course of a relationship: communicating how I wish to be treated and what consequences will it have if I am not treated like that, where the intention is to preferably persuade the partner to treat me respectfully, and if that cannot be achieved, then to minimize the negative impact upon me
- e.g.:
- examples from my relationship with Fasaani - these were both at least in part driven by his ADHD:If boundaries, and thus “consistent boundaries,” are what we place on ourselves, if those are crossed, we do X. One of the ones we see a lot of here during the NRE phase is device use during spouse date night/time. My personal boundary is to terminate the date. Get up and remove myself from the activity. NO where could that be considered punishment. It’s a consequence. "If you’re not that interested in me right now, that's okay. I’m not that interested getting some fraction of your attention or interest."
- I've stated that I will cancel any dates for which he comes more than certain amount of time late, unless he calls in advance and tells me, because I did not want to be repeatedly put in the situation of waiting for him and not knowing for how long I'll have to wait
- we've had frequent arguments about money (there was an agreement about splitting costs but Fasaani wasn't keeping his end of it), until after many months I simply communicated that unless he pays his part of our common bills by the end of each month, I will have to break up with him in order to maintain self-respect; this immediately improved the situation in the sense that Fasaani finally understood how disrespectful it is not to uphold his financial commitments, started putting more effort into making money and was somewhat more reliably covering the agreed part of expenses
As you can see, all three of these examples have one thing in common - they go along the lines of "rather than accepting the behaviour that hurts me and feels disrespectful, I am willing to give up on a part (or all) of our relationship"; as such, the boundary is really leaving the partner in the space "outside". To me, setting such a boundary requires giving up on the hope that we can amicably come up with a better solution to an issue that's hurting me. It requires armouring myself with certain level of coldness and even aggression in order to protect myself from greater hurt caused by unmet expectations. Basically, it is a proof that I have to use force in order to signal that my needs are being neglected, and in order to protect myself in the relationship.
As such, I wonder how to recognize that purely the fact that we've come to a point that I need to set a (type 2) boundary should be a red flag, and probably should mean that instead of setting the boundary I should simply walk away.
I am also wondering whether you have your own examples of setting boundaries that work for you and that do not feel forceful or like a work-around for accepting a relationship with someone who's not treating you kindly and respectfully.
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