“The Book of Boundaries” by Melissa Urban

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  • Boundaries are for managing our responses
  • “This is the limit of behavior that is acceptable to me.”
  • Boundary setting is not mean
  • In order to set the boundary, you need to spell them out
  • “Clear is kind”
  • Make an “incoming boundary” sound to signal a change in the conversation to add some distance between the offense and setting the boundary
    • “Uh”, “huh”, “opps”
  • Do not be afraid to ask to circle back to correct inappropriate behavior
  • Healthy boundaries come from the self; they do not seek to control others
  • “Unearned guilt” is feeling guilty for not behaving like someone else wants
  • Avoid oversharing or excusing why you are creating the boundary
    • (It is also easier to negotiate the conditions or satisfy them, which is often not what you want.)
  • Avoid setting consequences when you first set the boundaries
  • Be okay to adjust boundaries over time as things change
  • Periodically ask yourself if a boundary is still needed
  • Be sociable on your time to be proactive
  • Communicate your feeling clearly and accurately, expect your partner to do the same
  • Boundaries are not replacements for communication
  • Try having tasks being owned end-to-end (recognition, conception, and execution) so no one has to nag and to avoid splitting the cognitive load
  • Put chores on a schedule
  • Consent must be respected without excuses
  • Outline and emulate boundaries that of the behavior you want to see
  • People can feel bad about what they are doing
  • “I don’t talk about food over food.”
  • “I’m not drinking right now.”
  • “The Ring Theory”
    • Grief flows out
    • Comfort flows in
    • People at the center of an event have no obligation to comfort those outside their ring
  • Give people space to save face
  • Be graceful when people come back
  • Provide face time to talk
  • Accept the boundary and follow up later
  • Provide face time to talk further

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