blackemerald1
VIP Member
Well done @TruthSeeker - ah a lot of ppl would have given him a biff to go with that request. :cautious:
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Well done @TruthSeeker ???
Setting a boundary verbally just doesn't work.
Setting a boundary nonverbally, by my actions when they've crossed a line I'm not prepared to put up with, by removing myself from their company for example, does (broadly speaking).
And of course that's not what boundaries are about at all. They are about what I do when others behave as they do and their behaviour is unacceptable to me in some way. Eg walk away, don't see them again or what have you.
I've been thinking about this a lot. It seems when I set a new boundary with someone, I get different results. I had a "friend" who would talk about the mentally ill people she worked with in a voice dripping with hatred and disgust. Having been inpatient so many times, this would upset me to no end. I set my boundary by asking her not to talk about the people she worked for like that with me. It triggers me. She really blew up. She went nuts. She slowed it down though, but then attacked me over the boundary I set many times. I say attacked because she used stuff from my personal traumas to justify her talking to me about it. I was finally triggered so badly I tried to kill myself after a phone call, and was in the ICU for a week. She called me and told me she wasn't responsible for my crazy train derailing. Boundaries didn't work in that situation, so I cut her off.
BUT, I have found that many people don't like boundaries. I may set them, but then there is holding to them. Now, even though it might be annoying, I just repeat Stop. This is what you are doing. Stop. It's not friendly, but when I set a boundary, the most important thing is keeping it set.
There was a man standing in line behind me at the Motor Vehicles office, and he was standing so close his chin was almost resting on my shoulder. I told him I have PTSD, and would he mind stepping back, and he apologized and stepped back. He respected it after that.
Do you think you have the right to enforce your boundaries though, @berlinda? Does it always have to be walk away? If you ask someone to respect your boundary and they don't, what then? I will restate my boundary since I don't believe walking away is always the answer. I'm really curious about this, since others can see what I can't.
Unfortunately for me, it usually happens post event.:wtf: Normally I'm ambushed by behaviour?
With a great deal of difficulty @berlinda. :sorry:
I will walk away till I have completely worked out what happened and why. I'm uncertain lots of times if I am the 'offending' party...
Unfortunately walking away is not in all circumstances sensible or practical.
Sometimes simply walking away indicates that they have stepped on me and I'm not happy. It's not ideal but it does work. Takes the anger, flashpoint, saying things that either of us may later regret away.
^I have mixed success with this. Some people want to argue me into exhaustion and I cannot do that so I then walk away. Lots of times verbalizing my boundary with someone seems to set them off. Which is counterproductive for sure.
I'm quite good at using the word: 'stop', putting up my hand open palm facing them... and just saying stop, repeatedly. When I've got to that point I'm very close to breaking down. So it's a last resort to enforce a boundary I suppose. Not sure.
But most times.. after even the most aggressive onslaught, which has happened lately - it's saved me from throwing in the towel and leaving forever. That's good. I mean not good I had to get to my last option - especially when I cannot just walk away and they think I won't leave forever.
^So what do you say when you return? Do you return?