10 Signs Of Healthy Boundaries

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Signs Of Healthy Boundaries 1

What are healthy boundaries? And how do we draw the line politely? If youโ€™re able to verbalize your thoughts in a relationship, itโ€™s one of the signs of healthy boundaries.

Healthy boundaries are essential in recovery from codependency. They both build and reflect self-esteem. Learning to have healthy boundaries is an essential aspect ofย individuatingย and becoming an individual and autonomous person.

Boundaries are learned in childhood. Some dysfunctional families are enmeshed and your individuality and boundaries are ignored or openly disrespected in words or actions; for example, verbal and physical abuse, prying into your personal communications, denying your privacy, and disrespecting your feelings and opinions.

signs of healthy boundaries

Trauma and toxic shame damage our boundaries.ย Boundaries are also taught and modeled by parental guidance and behavior in how to treat other people.

First, you must be able to identify your feelings, believe you have rights and value, and then have the courage and the words to express yourย boundaries.

Related: How To Setย Boundariesย To Protect Your Mentalย Health

Signs ofย recoveryย and healthy boundaries are:

10 Signs Of Healthy Boundaries In A Relationship

10 Signs Of Healthy Boundaries

1. Youโ€™re able to say โ€œno.โ€

Codependents hold ontoย resentmentย when they donโ€™t set boundaries and usually feel guilty when they do. They donโ€™t feel entitled to set them and experience setting boundaries as harsh or selfish.

2. You donโ€™t let others abuse or exploit you.

With healthy boundaries, you wonโ€™t let others violate you. You wonโ€™t tolerateย abuseย or let people take advantage of you. You will speak up and let people know how you expect to be treated.

Related: 5 Tips Forย Setting Boundariesย As An Introvert

3. You can hold your ground when pressured.

When you set an important boundary, you wonโ€™t let other people talk you out of your position on something important. Your boundaries can still be flexible to compromise in relationships, such as going out when youโ€™d prefer to stay home, but not on important issues. For example, if you feel your health would suffer going out, then youโ€™d stick to your boundary.

4. Youโ€™re not offended by othersโ€™ boundaries.

When other people say no or set boundaries, you respect them. You donโ€™t immediately react with hurt or anger and assume itโ€™s because they donโ€™t care about you. (In some cases it might be, such as with aย narcissist, but still, rather than take it personally, itโ€™s more information about what to expect from that relationship.)

5. You donโ€™t feel responsible for other adults.

Although weโ€™re responsible for our children, with adults weโ€™re responsible to them, but not for them. In close relationships, codependents assume they cause other peopleโ€™s feelings. They often react withย irrational guilt, frequently apologize, and try to โ€œfixโ€ the other personโ€™s negative feelings.

signs of healthy boundaries

6. You donโ€™t take personally othersโ€™ criticism.

With healthy boundaries, you know yourself. Your boundary filters criticism. You might consider whether the criticism is valid or not. If itโ€™s abusive, then the statement is more a reflection of the abuser, not you.ย Toxic shameย can make your boundaries porous so that you have no filter and absorb words by other people as true.

7. You take responsibility for your triggers.

When you overreact or areย triggered,ย instead of blaming someone else, you manage your triggers in a healthy way. This might include an apology.

8. You respect othersโ€™ boundaries.

You realize that people are separate, different individuals with differing boundaries. You expect others to respect yours and you do the same. Youโ€™re able to compromise in relationships.

9. You value your rights and feelings.

This is a precursor to setting boundaries. You must believe you have rights and honor your feelings before you canย assertivelyย ask and expect other people to do the same.

signs of healthy boundaries

10. You donโ€™t need others to agree with you.

As a separate individual with healthy boundaries, you show other people the same respect. You have no need for other people to agree with you, and you donโ€™t bother to show them youโ€™re right and theyโ€™re wrong. You express your opinion, discuss various aspects of the subject, but youโ€™re able to respectfully disagree.

Related: 7 Tips Forย Setting Boundariesย With Toxic People โ€“ The Minds Journal

Improving your boundaries raises your self-esteem and vice-versa, also. Get my webinar:ย How to Be Assertiveย (or Ebook:ย http://bit.ly/2DBmjnt).

ยฉ 2022 Darlene Lancer

If youโ€™re still dealing with being codependency or a toxic relationship, try and learn to create healthy boundaries for yourself!


Written by: Darlene Lancer JD, MFT
Originally appeared on: WhatIsCodependency.com

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