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    6 Steps to deal with people who break boundaries

    Most people have a sense of what is and isn't appropriate when it comes to respecting boundaries. However, we are bound to find individuals who don't. As much as we strive for healthy relationships, we inevitably encounter individuals who are bullies, toxic or just plain manipulative. Many of these people have little-to-no self-awareness and feel that they are fully entitled or appropriate in their behavior. And what's worse is that they frequently get away with it because others don't stand up to them. This convinces them that their behavior is acceptable. Here's a news flash: It ISN'T.

    The best thing you can do is firmly establish boundaries. You'll feel better about yourself and your relationship. Further, you won't have to succumb to their inappropriate behavior over and over again:

    1. Know Who You Are Dealing with: The first step in this process is to identify those individuals who don't respect your boundaries. Doing so will keep you on the look-out for times that boundaries need to be reinforced or put into place.
    2. Tune-in: Start paying attention to how these people typically break boundaries. Some questions to ask: Are they pushy? Do they ask questions you feel uncomfortable answering? Do they discuss things with you that are inappropriate? Do they disregard your wishes or needs? Do they always prioritize their needs before yours?
    3. Trust Your Gut: If you aren't sure as to whether or not a boundary is being broken, stop thinking and start feeling. Does something feel awkward, uncomfortable or wrong? Can you feel an adrenaline rush, but aren't sure why? Do you feel nauseous during the discussion? At times, our guts have better listening skills than our ears. If you can feel a visceral reaction to the conversation at hand, you can be pretty sure that something isn't right.
    4. Think First, Speak Second: Once you realize boundaries are being broken, think about how you want to react. Reacting without thinking through your position and what you want as an outcome can lead to an unresolved situation, potential "room for discussion" or more broken boundaries down the line.
    5. State Your Position: Tell the person who is breaking a boundary that they are indeed breaking a boundary. Sugar-coating it...hemming and hawing...playing nice...politely saying no...often doesn't work with people who perpetually break boundaries. Unfortunately, many of these boundary breakers don't have a clue as to the fact that they are crossing a line. The more obvious you can be, the better.
    6. Don't Back Down: If the person continues to push you on a topic, tell them the topic "isn't up for discussion." The more you stand your ground, the less likely the person will continue to try to push you on things in the future. No means no. Inappropriate is inappropriate. And, boundaries are boundaries.
    The more you set boundaries, the easier it will get. Do you have boundary breakers in your life? How do you handle the situation?

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    Brett is author of "GET REAL" and STOP Dieting! Copyright © 2009 All rights reserved.



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    27 comments

    • Brett Blumenthal - Sheer ...  •  2 years 6 months ago
      Thanks for sharing Wendy!
    • Jen  •  2 years 6 months ago
      My mother in law invites herself on vacations that my husband and I try to plan for ourselves ALONE. Talk about breaking boundaries.... how many ladies want to go on a dream vacation seeing their M-I-L's face everyday. Uh I'll tell you how many.... NONE. Its so ignorant.
    • Alexander  •  2 years 5 months ago
      this article has been an eye opener to me .... i find myself being victimized most of the time, being told i'm wrong about my decisions and actions making me feel guilty .... when you stick to your values, belilefs and know who you are there is no way you will be told what to do, or why you should not be doing what you are supposed to do .... the fact that you've lived for at least eighteen (18) years means that you've had some experiences which are at least enough to help you make sound judgements to guide your life ..... manipulators make you feel your judgements are not sound enough ....
    • MrsKlingonPasadena  •  2 years 6 months ago
      I don't have these problems with my hubby, but my mother in law is a problem. This is one women that doesn't know her place at all and doesn't respect anyone's boundaries. When first dealing with her, I would let things build up until I exploded. I was always taught to respect my elders so this definitely did more harm than good. But now, I recognize right away when I am being manipulated and I nip it in the bud right away. Respectfully of course. We still are not close, but I realize that you can't be close with everyone and some people are going to find any reason not to like you.
    • 173  •  2 years 6 months ago
      There seems to be a pattern with some people in overstepping boundaries--how ironic I just experienced another episode in the building where I live. A tenant 'motioned' me over to hear what he wanted to tell me. Why didn't he talk louder; I was only a few feet away! Anyway, he told me he wanted me to do a drawing of a man a few doors down who had been giving him trouble, as a 'recording' of what he looked like. I said "I can't", and suggested other people (one an artist), and other options, like a cell phone camera pic. He kept trying to make me do this, despite the facts that 1. I don't draw people 2. the man was dangerous, and I didn't want to get involved. The concept that I didn't want to 'just do' what he didn't want to do himself totally baffled him. He got really hostile, so I turned away and went upstairs. People are really out of touch with what "right" they have to make others do things for them!
    • Shaman  •  2 years 6 months ago
      Brett is right about these "boundary breakers" being unconscious and not aware of their behavior and how they affect others. There are a lot of sociopaths walking amongst us and sometimes they are hard to spot.....and even harder to figure out if you do find yourself dealing with one ! A person who has a conscience ( can feel it when they hurt someone ) thinks all people have one. The truth is some people don't. They couldn't feel remorse if you beat them over the head with it ! I agree with Brett...listen to your gut. If someone doesn't feel right to you,don't let them walk all over you....cuz they will if you let them.Also....a sociopath is the extreme as far a boundery breakers go. Some people are just dysfunctional and conditioned wrong in their up bringing. Their bounderies were broken so much that they think this is how all people behave. Remember this...we choose who want to let into our lives. Don't get stuck in victim mode. If your an adult you don't need to find these people to keep playing victim. Don't let anyone harm you. Become conscious of the big picture and see yourself in it !!!!
    • FeistyChick4U  •  2 years 6 months ago
      Having recently been condemned for "living in my past" I let this man know that unless we remember our past and recall it we might make the smae mistakes. This is part of step 1 in indetifying who we are dealing with. We don't want to date or be around the same types of people to have drama all over again. As a victim of domestic violence and abuse (verbally, physically, emotional) is is imperative you KEEP your boundaries, speak up and get out of a bad relationship if you feel invalidated. This includes a person who just can't apologize for the sake of your feelings. Don't keep vitimizing yourself by allowing boundaries to be broken, even if you think there is "love." Is reminding yourself of your past so awful if it is a good memory? Boundaries are necessary in all relationships with friends, family and loved ones.
    • Cat  •  2 years 6 months ago
      ew i know two people who push and cross boundaries everyday !!!

      i finally stopped responding to innapproriate emails, texts, call, etc. and only responding to normal friendship conversations. they seem to have gotten the hints!
    • Liz  •  2 years 6 months ago
      Thank you, thank you thank you for this article. I had to confront inappropriate behavior at work yesterday and I've been obsessing about it all night because I don't like confrontation. I know it was beneficial for the individual as well as all involved and that it was my job to set the boundary, I'm just prone to feeling anxious about confronting manipulators. Your article cleared my head :)
    • Lia  •  2 years 6 months ago
      Well alot of what was said rang true. However, this doesn't help with a work situation where this person is looked up to by others and recently won an award! The issue of boundaries is overlooked in this individual's behavior. The person is in a helping profession and has no business making friends out of patients and their families. This is without mentioning that this coworker tries to micromanage others on the team.
    • ShiningLight  •  2 years 6 months ago
      This is a great article. I have always had trouble with boundaries. I am a pleaser and I tend to forgive and forget until things get really out of whack. The boundary breakers keep doing more and more damage. I have to really work at stopping it before it gets that bad.
    • KateN  •  2 years 6 months ago
      I was with my boyfriend for a year. We were in love. One day he broke up the relationship because he didn't want to be in a relationship anymore period. I told my female friend about this and she started to flirt with him and eventually "hit on him"! I've been friends with her for 4 years and she has never betrayed me like this until now.I confronted her about her trying to get with my ex-boyfriend but she kept denying it. She act like she didn't do anything wrong when her and I both know that she did do something wrong. Her and I talk to each sometimes but not often anymore because of her "hitting on him".
    • 173  •  2 years 6 months ago
      I had a birth accident that left me with my face partially paralyzed. Because I was raised to think of myself as a worthy person by my parents (and not being rushed into surgery because I didn't have a say at the time, and because others would learn nothing about tolerance if I did), I enjoyed successful relationships in friendship and love with others who were like-minded. Except for some! I have classically good features to begin with and got some surgery later on, but you wouldn't believe how presumptuous some people can be--one guy told me I was imagining I had friends "because they just feel sorry for you" while not having the best social life himself. Another acted like he was doing me a "favor" in asking me out, but hid that until a woman he worked for basically told me I was lying about being happy with my appearance and when I told him how misunderstood I felt, threatened to throw me out of his house. Another guy approached me with "how you must feel you have so much pain about your beauty you have to let it out..." Give me a break!
      I don't act like a victim, so the only conclusion I have been able to make is spite, because if
      I've got my act together with this condition, and they don't with themselves (and their inability to respect differences--I'm a human being, too), then they don't have an excuse for their lack of effort and need to blame me for that. I have given people the benefit of the doubt, because I believe in constructive, decent relationships but if some people don't want that with me, it's time to set the record straight. And if I am not their "cup of tea", then they should just leave me alone, rather than get involved with me to change me. There are ways to disagree about things that are respectful, but some people could care less.
    • 173  •  2 years 6 months ago
      (just had an "aha" moment--it would have been much easier for me to refuse and take off if I was still standing from a distance; my personal (psychic) space was easier to invade--and intimidate with false "intimacy" or "physical dominance"--& gave him an unfair advantage...next time, I'll stay at a distance instead!)
      P.S. Hope this also helps anybody--don't waste your energy reasoning with an unreasonable person, because it's not about them wanting to be reasonable, just getting what they want the 'dirty' way!
    • Sarah18  •  2 years 6 months ago
      wow great blog im sending it to every1 were did u learn so much
    • M G H  •  2 years 6 months ago
      I worked at a gelato shop where I had some fellow employees asked me some really personal questions but I refused to answer. One young girl asked me not once but twice if I attended a church (she wanted to know my religious beliefs). Another woman tried asking me if my husband ever came to visit me at work (wtf?) and that she wanted to know highly personal things about my relationship. I usually respond with a "Why do you ask?" and if a response is received I give my "I do not discuss that at work." That gets them silent.
    • Mauna  •  2 years 6 months ago
      These words and understandings of respecting people's personal boundaries I have already discussed with a professional... and she too does not see the whole picture of where I am coming from and the last session we had, she ended up shooting me down as do the 'bullies' do all around the world believing and expecting all to uphold them and follow them because they are the only way on how to be like. The bullies who are nothing more than another description of CONTROL FREAKS...why? I know why...but let the rest figure out why.
    • slam  •  2 years 6 months ago
      I am acquainted with a very gregarious gentleman. He works at a shop I frequent. On many occasions we have had delightful conversations that included him sharing a great deal about his life, his family, and travels. Really very personal stuff. I concluded from this openness, quite innocently that perhaps he was "interested". And, overstepping boundaries, I acted on this conclusion with somewhat disastrous results. Sometimes people don't mean to be malicious in going beyond acceptable boundaries--they just misread social cues (not because they aren't self-aware but because the signals can be mixed).
    • alexi  •  2 years 6 months ago
      Hello Brett,this article is very good and steps are worth cosidering to use to manage in any given situation, and to people who seems not to know their boundaries and to people who knew their boundaries but try to ignore it as they see the other person like a prey for their self satisfaction and other person's self disruction.
      Thank you for the article and i would be using it in dealing with my day to day interaction to the people in and out of my work place .
    • Pearl  •  2 years 6 months ago
      OH MAN THE WORST BOUNDARY BREAKER I GOT IS SOMEONE TRYING TO TELL YOU HOW TO HANDLE YOUR BABY, AND JUS INVADING YOUR SPACE! I MEAN WHOA WHAT A PAIN IN THE BUTT! ITS SO ANNOYING WHEN A PERSON JUST TRIES TO TAKE OVER AND REFER THEMSELVES AS A MOTHER WHEN THEY ARENT EVEN THE BABIES MOMMY! LIKE WHAT THE HELL IS THAT ALL ABOUT?? I KNOW I AM OFF KEY AND TOTALLY TALKING ABOUT PARENTING BUT HEY GRANDPARENTS CAN TOTALLY BREAK SOME BOUNDARIES AND JUST TAKE IT TO THE EXTREME! EXAMPLE: MY BOYFRIENDS MOTHER TOALLY HAS REFERED HERSELF AS MOM TO MY BABY AND THEN SHE THINKS ABOUT IT AND SAYS OH I MEAN GRANDMA! NOW I CAN UNDERSTAND MAYBE JUST MAYBE YOU SLIP UP ONE TIME BECAUSE YOU HAVE BEEN A MOTHER AND SHES YOUR FIRST GRANDCHILD BUT DAMN 5 TIMES! NOW SOMETHING IS WRONG AND ITS A BIG ISSUE NOW. BECAUSE WHEN I LET HER BABYSIT HOW DO I NOT KNOW SHE SAYS THAT CRAP BEHIND MY BACK? VERY STRANGE TO ME. AND IT MAKES ME MAD AND SAD!!! DONT TRY TO TAKE THAT AWAY FROM ME. ITS LIKE BEING A MOM IS SUPPOSE TO BE FUN AND ITS TURNING OUT NOT TO BE...OH WHAT TO DO???

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