Personal boundaries
Personal boundaries or the act of setting boundaries is a life skill that has been popularized by self help authors and support groups since the mid-1980s. Personal boundaries are established by changing one's own response to interpersonal situations, rather than expecting other people to change their behaviors to comply with your boundary. For example, if the boundary is to not interact with a particular person, then one sets a boundary by deciding not to see or engage with that person, and one enforces the boundary by politely declining invitations to events that include that person and by politely leaving the room if that person arrives unexpectedly. The boundary is thus respected without requiring the assistance or cooperation of any other people. Setting a boundary is different from making a request. Setting a boundary is also different from issuing an ultimatum.
The concept of boundaries has been widely adopted by the counseling profession. Universal applicability of the concept has been questioned.
Concept
A boundary is a rule that affects the behavior of the person who choose to make the rule. The point of a boundary is to control one's own reaction, rather than controlling other people's behavior.Author and therapist K. C. Davis says "boundaries are an internal understanding of where I end and where you begin. It’s where my feelings end and your feelings begin. It’s where my ability to affect my own decisions and actions end, and your decisions and actions begin."
Setting boundaries does not always require telling anyone what the boundary is or what the consequences are for transgressing it. For example, if a person decides to leave an unwanted discussion, that person may give an unrelated excuse, such as claiming that it is time to do something else, rather than saying that the subject must not be mentioned.
Usage and application
Setting and enforcing boundaries is usually emotionally uncomfortable and requires effort from the person setting the boundary.Co-Dependents Anonymous recommends setting limits on what members will do to and for people and on what members will allow people to do to and for them, as part of their efforts to establish autonomy from being controlled by other people's thoughts, feelings and problems.
The National Alliance on Mental Illness tells its members that establishing and maintaining values and boundaries will improve the sense of security, stability, predictability and order, in a family even when some members of the family resist. NAMI contends that boundaries encourage a more relaxed, nonjudgmental atmosphere and that the presence of boundaries need not conflict with the need for maintaining an understanding atmosphere.
| Situation | Response | Category |
| Someone drops by without an invitation or notice. | Telling the person that they have to stop coming over unannounced | |
| Someone drops by without an invitation or notice. | Not opening the door or letting the uninvited guest inside | |
| Someone regularly discusses a sensitive subject. | Asking the person to not bring up that subject | |
| Someone regularly discusses a sensitive subject. | Silently resolving not to let that person's view of the subject affect one's own values, beliefs, or thoughts | |
| Someone regularly discusses a sensitive subject. | Changing the subject to a mutually acceptable subject | |
| Someone regularly discusses a sensitive subject. | Not answering the phone if the person calls | |
| Someone is communicating in a disrespectful manner. | Saying "Don’t talk to me that way" | |
| Someone is communicating in a disrespectful manner. | Ignoring a disrespectful message | |
| Someone is communicating in a disrespectful manner. | Ending the conversation, with an invitation to continue it another time | |
| Someone frequently cancels plans at the last minute. | Avoiding making plans in advance with this person | |
| A stressful work situation bleeds into family and home life. | Naming what is happening and making an effort to refocus on the immediate task or situation | |
| A stressful work situation bleeds into family and home life. | Using a physical ritual to help mentally separate work time from home time |
Process
Boundary setting is the practice of openly communicating and asserting personal values as a way to preserve and protect against having them compromised or violated. The three critical aspects of managing personal boundaries are:Defining values: A healthy relationship is an “inter-dependent” relationship of two “independent” people. Healthy individuals should establish values that they honor and defend regardless of the nature of a relationship. Healthy individuals should also have values that they negotiate and adapt in an effort to bond with and collaborate with others.Asserting boundaries: In this model, individuals use verbal and nonverbal communications to assert intentions, preferences and define what is inbounds and out-of-bounds with respect to their core or independent values. When asserting values and boundaries, communications should be present, appropriate, clear, firm, protective, flexible, receptive, and collaborative.Honoring and defending: Making decisions consistent with the personal values when presented with life choices or confronted or challenged by controlling people or people not taking responsibility for their own life. In a dysfunctional relationship, respecting one's own boundaries by honoring and defending them often provokes unwanted and uncomfortable responses from the people who are crossing the boundary lines. They may respond with disapproval, shame, resentment, pressure not to change the relationship, or other behaviors designed to restore the familiar old behavior patterns.Having healthy values and boundaries is a lifestyle, not a quick fix to a relationship dispute.
Values are constructed from a mix of conclusions, beliefs, opinions, attitudes, past experiences and social learning. Jacques Lacan considers values to be layered in a hierarchy, reflecting “all the successive envelopes of the biological and social status of the person” from the most primitive to the most advanced.
Personal values and boundaries operate in two directions, affecting both the incoming and outgoing interactions between people. These are sometimes referred to as the 'protection' and 'containment' functions.
Scope
The three most commonly mentioned categories of values and boundaries are:Physical – Personal space and touch considerations; physical intimacyMental – Thoughts and opinionsEmotional – Feelings; emotional intimacySome authors have expanded this list with additional or specialized categories such as spirituality, truth, and time/punctuality.
Assertiveness levels
Nina Brown proposed four boundary types:Soft – A person with soft boundaries merges with other people's boundaries. Someone with a soft boundary is easily a victim of psychological manipulation.Spongy – A person with spongy boundaries is like a combination of having soft and rigid boundaries. They permit less emotional contagion than soft boundaries but more than those with rigid. People with spongy boundaries are unsure of what to let in and what to keep out.Rigid – A person with rigid boundaries is closed or walled off so nobody can get close either physically or emotionally. This is often the case if someone has been the victim of physical, emotional, psychological, or sexual abuse. Rigid boundaries can be selective which depend on time, place or circumstances and are usually based on a bad previous experience in a similar situation.Flexible – Similar to spongy rigid boundaries but the person exercises more control. The person decides what to let in and what to keep out, is resistant to emotional contagion and psychological manipulation, and is difficult to exploit.Unilateral vs collaborative
There are also two main ways that boundaries are set:Unilateral boundaries – One person decides to impose a standard on the relationship, regardless of whether others support it. For example, one person may decide to never mention an unwanted subject and to make a habit of leaving the room, ending phone calls, or deleting messages without replying if the subject is mentioned by others.Collaborative boundaries – Everyone in the relationship group agrees, either tacitly or explicitly, that a particular standard should be upheld. For example, the group may decide not to discuss an unwanted subject, and then all members individually avoid mentioning it and work together to change the subject if someone mentions it.Situations that can challenge personal boundaries
Communal influences
Freud described the loss of conscious boundaries that may occur when an individual is in a unified, fast-moving crowd.Almost a century later, Steven Pinker took up the theme of the loss of personal boundaries in a communal experience, noting that such occurrences could be triggered by intense shared ordeals like hunger, fear or pain, and that such methods were traditionally used to create liminal conditions in initiation rites. Jung had described this as the absorption of identity into the collective unconscious.
Rave culture has also been said to involve a dissolution of personal boundaries, and a merger into a binding sense of communality.