Break the [wounds + unawareness] cycle and guard your descendents

Options for Resolving Boundary Conflicts and Violations
p. 1 of 2

by Peter K. Gerlach, MSW

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The Web address of this two-page article is http://sfhelp.org/basics/boundaries.htm

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        This is one of over 150 articles focused on healing psychological wounds, building high-nurtur-ance family relationships, breaking the [wounds + unawareness] cycle, and preventing divorce. This intro-duction describes the Web site's purpose and the best ways to use its resources. Each article is part of a mosaic of ideas, so the more you read, the more sense they'll all make. These articles augment, vs. re-place, other qualified professional help.

        Before continuing, reflect: why are you reading this - what do you need?

+ + +

         All people, couples, and families need effective boundaries to preserve their security and  identity. They can conflict, and people violate each others' boundaries. This article offers...

        The article assumes you're familiar with...

        Recently a thirty-something man emailed me about dissatisfactions with his marriage. His mes-sage concluded “Don’t respond, because my wife reads my email though I asked her not to.” His wife’s insecurity and distrust was violating an important boundary of his.

        She interpreted her husband’s request for privacy as “keeping secrets,” which made her anxious. He did need to keep some secrets, because he experienced her typical responses as unsafe - i.e. over-emo-tional, critical, unempathic, and combative. So far, this college-educated couple was not able to use ef-fective communication skills to unravel their web of internal and mutual conflicts. 

        This and other dynamics were inexorably increasing distrust, hurt, resentment, and anxiety in their year-old marriage. These were growing because both mates were ruled by false selves which needed to deny that psychological wounds and unawareness were eroding their relationship. When I suggested this to the couple and proposed what to do about it, the wife quit marital therapy.

        In working with hundreds of courting and committed couples, I’ve seen countless variations of signif-icant boundary conflicts and violations. There are powerful options to avoid and resolve them! Before exploring them, take a...

Status Check

        Acknowledge what's real in your family now: T = true, F = false, and “?” = “I’m not sure,” or “It depends on (what?)”

Our family adults (a) can clearly define what personal, marital, and family boundaries are  now and (b) why they're important, and (c) our definitions agree well enough. (T  F ?)

We're all clear enough on what boundary conflicts and violations are (a) inside a person, and (b) between people. (T  F ?)

We can clearly describe why boundary conflicts and violations can be significant marital and parental stressors. (T  F ?)

Our family adults have evolved an effective strategy for resolving significant boundary conflicts and violations (a) inside us and (b) between us now. (T  F ?)

We all usually feel comfortable enough discussing significant boundary problems among any of us. (T  F ?)

I know why I’m reading this article (T  F ?)

Someone in our family has a serious boundary problem now. (T  F ?)

Each of our family adults can (a) clearly describe effective assertion now, and feel com-fortable enough (b) asserting and (c) enforcing boundaries with other adults and kids.
(T  F ?)

We are intentionally teaching the young people in our family how to (a) set effective boundaries, and (b) avoid and (c) resolve boundary conflicts and violations. (T  F ?)

My true Self is guiding my personality now. (T  F ?)

    Pause and reflect: if you just learned anything important, what is it? To help you resolve boundary problems, consider this...

  Perspective

        See how you feel about these premises...

  What Are Relationship "Boundaries"?

        If someone asked you to eat a live centipede, would you? Either "yes" or "no" demonstrates a per-sonal boundary or limit. In our context, boundaries are invisible dividing lines between what people and groups will and won't accept, tolerate, believe, or do.

        Boundaries define what's currently acceptable physically, psychologically, and spiritually, and what isn't. “Acceptable” means “I can tolerate (something) without taking some action.” For instance, "I like red meat, but I refuse to eat horsemeat or raw hamburger."

        Your family members have many boundaries, including infants ("Emma won't nurse now.") We grow them automatically as we accumulate experience with pleasure and discomfort. Boundaries are universal, so we're often unconscious of how and when they regulate our lives until they're conflicted, violated, or absent "too much.” Some boundaries change with age, experience, and our dynamic environments. Others remain constant across our years.

        Adults and kids hint, imply, declare, or shout their boundaries verbally ("OK," "No," "Not now,"...) and nonverbally, via eye, face, voice, and body dynamics. If your true Self is solidly in charge of your other personality subselves, your verbal and nonverbal boundary announcements match.

        If a false self (a distrustful group of personality parts) controls your thoughts and behaviors, you may feel uncertain, mixed, guilty, or torn about your boundaries. You may then give or receive confusing double messages about them: "You say you're not bored, but I feel like you're disinterested...?!"

        Sometimes it’s useful to differentiate between limits and boundaries. A limit is something you can’t do, like levitate or chat with Buddha. A boundary is something you won’t tolerate without taking some action. It may also help you problem-solve if you separate boundary conflicts from values disputes. The latter occur when people disagree over what is right vs. wrong, good vs. bad, safe vs. dangerous, and better vs. worse. Values and boundary conflicts are resolved differently.

        Firmly-flexible boundaries are essential for persons, couples, and stable family systems. They help to define identities ("We don't eat meat on Fridays."), and regulate the psychological distance between people and groups. When boundaries are compatible, stable, and enforced respectfully, they provide fa-mily kids and adults with enough identity, safety (comfort), privacy, and order.

        Boundaries can be tangible (skin, doors, walls, fences, clothing...) and invisible (thoughts, values, preferences, emotions). Both can promote order, harmony, and security, or frustration, anxiety and stress.

        Remember the last time someone important violated (disrespected or ignored) your personal boundaries? Relationships flux dynamically as each person asserts and enforces their boundaries to balance closeness (MeYou), and separateness (Me) + (You).

        A key boundary to manage is the invisible envelope around couples. Mates may conflict or agree on what their couple-boundaries are ("Kids, when our bedroom door is closed, we need private time - unless someone needs an ambulance!")  Couples may also agree or conflict over how and when to declare and enforce their boundaries, and with whom ("Jan, I need you to tell your sister to stop calling us at 6 AM!") Privacy is what happens inside your personal, couple, parental, and family boundaries.

        An inevitable courtship task is each partner learning to adjust their personal boundaries to mesh well enough with their mate’s. Courtship and cohabiting usually trigger two or more families merging. This forces the declaration and adjustment of many personal and group boundaries over many months. To succeed at this, typical family adults need...

  • to be steadily governed by their true Selves;

  • awareness of boundary concepts and of their primary needs; and...

  • clear, stable, personal identities (a sense of self");

  • shared language to discuss boundary needs, conflicts, violations, and consequences;

  • effective communication skills - specially awareness, assertion, and empathic listening; and...

  • tolerances for (a) changing their family systems and lifestyles, and (b) grieving any significant losses (broken bonds) these changes cause.

 Do you know anyone who has had trouble merging biofamilies and forming stable new personal, marital, parental, and household boundaries?

Why are Boundaries Important?

        Because they regulate your security, comfort, serenity, self-respect, and relationships, your boundaries...

determine what experiences you select or avoid, which limits your direct knowledge ("Yes" on fudge and waltzing, "no" on raising rattlesnakes and sky diving); and they...

define your identity as a unique person ("Judi will talk about her spiritual beliefs, but not her brother's death or her sexual experiences"); and boundaries...

regulate...

  • your emotional and physical security ("No, the roads look too icy. Let's stay home today."), and your health ("I smoke a pack a day, but I won't eat animal fat or use cocaine."); And...

  • the emotional distance or closeness between you and every other person ("Jerry, I need some alone-time right now. Do you mind?")

Boundary Conflicts and Violations

        Because we're unique individuals, some personal and family boundaries will conflict internally (among personality subselves), and among people: e.g. "You're OK with eating dinner after 8 PM, and I'm not." A different stress occurs when one person accidentally or intentionally ignores (“violates”) a sig-nificant boundary in another person, like "I asked you not to buy so many lottery tickets, but you did anyway."

        Boundary conflicts are simpler to negotiate and resolve than violations, because violations usually require rebuilding respect and trust, and healing hurts and guilts. Personal, marital, and/or household boundary violations by kids and adults cause major home and family stress.

        Boundary conflicts and violations can range from minor (no action required) to significant (some action or consequence is required). Each of these has two levels: surface boundary problems, and the primary problems (unmet needs) that cause them.

Healthy and Toxic Boundaries

        When boundaries and their consequences promote everyone's personal wholistic health, safety, or-der, and self and mutual respect, they can be labeled healthy. Boundaries and consequences which di-minish or block these and stress relationships and families can be called toxic. The latter usually means a false self controls one or more people.

        Implication -  (a) the personal and social effects of boundaries and their consequences, and (b) the way they are set (e.g. respectfully and empathically or not) can be just as important as the boundaries themselves.

Enmeshment – Too Few Boundaries

        Many American adults have survived a significantly low-nurturance childhood. A common legacy from that is psychological wounds, including excessive shame, guilts, and fears. Before hitting bottom and choosing to reduce their wounds, typical survivors tend to unconsciously choose each other as mates and associates repeatedly, despite painful results. 

        Sometimes the wounds manifest as rigid, aggressive boundaries and a high need to control relation-ships. Some shame-based survivors feel they don't deserve the right to have, assert, or enforce personal boundaries, and/or they don’t know how to assert them effectively.

        When two such people choose each other, they may have few to no boundaries with each other (“Juan and Charlene are joined at the hip.”) They (their ruling subselves) become fused or enmeshed, and they have wispy personal identities.

        Symptoms of fusion are reflexively discouraging each other from having individual friends, hobbies, careers, thoughts, feelings, dreams, worship practices, and solitudes. Each partner feels high guilt and anxiety saying “no” or “not now” to their mate – or talking about this. Codependent relationships have un-balanced or too few healthy interpersonal boundaries.

        An enmeshed relationship may satisfy some wounded couples who are unaware of themselves and their primary needs. A high cost they pay is stunted personal growth and muted or no personal life goals. As such couples age, factors can combine to cause one of them to need more personal boundaries. That inevitably raises their partner’s anxiety, and causes boundary conflicts and violations.

        A variation of this occurs when a parent is enmeshed with a child. Wounded, overwhelmed custodial parents with few resources can unconsciously require their child to become a “surrogate mate” – a confi-dant, partner, and companion. In the worst case, this includes toxic physical intimacy (abuse).

        From unawareness, shame, and fear, the parent (i.e. their false self) discourages their child from de-veloping an identity and other relationships, moving out, and choosing their own partner ("growing up" / "maturing"). Some clinicians call such burdened kids "parentified."

         Now let’s build on this perspective on "boundary problems" by exploring...

  • typical boundary conflicts and violations

  • the common unmet primary needs that promote them, and..

  • options for resolving them effectively.

Typical Boundary Conflicts

        The basic interpersonal boundary conflict is: "I will accept, tolerate, or allow (something) without reacting, and you won't." Like values conflicts, basic resolution options are "You and I (a) acknowledge our mutual conflict and negotiate a compromise we each can live with," or (b) "we don't."

        Boundary conflicts among your active personality subselves are the same: one subself (like your Curious Kid) says "I want to experience 'x' (like spiders crawling on my hand)." Another subself, like your ever-alert Catastrophizer, says "Well I don't! Spiders will poison us and we’ll slowly die in unspeakable agony, you idiot!"

        Your other subselves may add their own mosaic of boundaries about relating to spiders (or what-ever), depending on many things. Your behavior and emotions are the outcome of all your subselves’ needs, boundaries, and negotiations together. ("OK, OK, we'll collect, study, and discuss spiders, but we’ll never touch them.")

        Many topics trigger surface boundary conflicts in typical families: money ("No, I won't agree to buying a $145 parrot."); "manners;" hygiene and health; food and eating; co-parenting; spirituality and worship; holidays and vacations; sensuality and sex; time balances (work, play, or rest); privacy and solitude; socializing; TV and leisure choices; home decorating; transportation; promptness; dress and appearance;, etc., etc.

        Think about five or more things you feel intensely about. Have you experienced boundary (yes/no) conflicts with each other family members on any of those vital areas?

Typical Boundary Violations

        Boundary violations occur between personality subselves and between people. Let's look briefly at each of these...

        Boundary violations among your personality subselves are so universal they go largely unnoticed. For instance your Health Director and Adult subselves say “We really need to call the dentist about these cavities today!” This activates your Scared Child who remembers early dental pain and trauma, and dis-trusts this (new) dentist.

        That activates your Catastrophizer and Worrier subselves, who try to protect the Scared Child by causing you anxiety from images of the dentist discovering “something really awful that will cost thou-sands of dollars.”

        Their persuasive ally the Procrastinator joins in by urging you to "call later in the week," and your Magician subself provides convincing reality distortions like “a few days isn’t going to make any differ-ence, and maybe the pain will subside by itself.” Result: you don’t call the dentist, and the boundaries of your Health Director and Adult subselves are violated (disrespected and overruled.)

        Your Inner Critic may then chastise you for “not taking good care of yourself (What would Mom say?”, which may activate your Guilty Kid. Overall, your inner family of subselves is polarized and out of harmony, which causes you vague inner stress and maybe a headache or stomach ache.

        When the cavities get worse and cause serious pain and expense, all subselves feel anxious and insecure because no one among them was able to forestall that - i.e. they didn't trust the resident true Self to guide them.

        If you were in true recovery from false-self wounds, your Nurturer  subself would have effectively com-forted the Scared Child, so the other Guardian subselves wouldn’t have ganged up to take over your Self, Health Director, and Adult ("common sense"). That would free them to call the dentist, and get appropri-ate self care.

        Every time you feel "I know I shouldn't, but…" you violate some internal boundaries. That activates subselves who bring you guilt, shame, self-doubt, anxiety, and perhaps disgust. Those in turn promote false-self dominance, and the temporary or chronic loss of your true Self's wisdom and guidance.

        Personal wound-reduction via some form of inner-family therapy can reduce that over time, by har-monizing your inner crew and improving their problem-solving skills. If you’ve never communed with any of your subselves, this will probably sound like low-budget science fiction. If you're skeptical about person-ality subselves, read this letter to you, and try this safe, interesting exercise. Then study these slides or this article.

Continue learning about boundary violations, the real problems causing them, and practical resolution options. Do you need a break first?

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Updated  January 04, 2009