We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - BOUNDARIES: Are too few (or too many) why we stay stuck?
Episode Date: May 18, 2021In this Episode, discover: My quirkiest boundary and how I finally fired Texts as the Boss of Me. Our response to a Pod Squad listener’s question about creating and holding boundaries with her i...n-laws. How my aversion to moderation has led me from too few boundaries to way too many. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Because I'm mine, I walk the line.
Well hi everybody, you came back. Thank you for coming back to We Can Do Hard Things.
I'm really, really looking forward to today,
because today's episode is about boundaries.
And I have to tell you that the three great loves of my life
are my family, coffee, and boundaries.
Okay, as a deeply sensitive, socially anxious, introvert,
boundaries have been a matter of emotional and spiritual life and death for me, right? I am a person who loves humanity deeply,
but humans are tricky for me, right? And so learning how to human for the last 45 years has
included much difficult learning about building boundaries and then having so many boundaries
that I have to figure out how to unbuild boundaries.
So let's jump in today and we will figure out if you have too few or too many boundaries.
Let's go.
So see you here.
I'm here.
Hi G.
Hi sister.
What do you have for us today?
What's your hard thing?
Okay, so I want to talk today about boundaries.
Right, so boundaries are something that I have been trying to figure out
for my entire life and have understood differently
every decade.
So first, I think we should start off with
each of our respective definition of boundaries
because we can be talking about different things, okay?
So when I say boundaries, what I am talking about is that this idea that as human beings,
it is our birthright not to just default to everyone and everything having constant and unlimited and unmitigated access to us, right? That part of being human
is allowing, well, deciding who and what you will allow into your life, right? And then holding
that line. That's what boundaries means to me. It's the line that you hold that says that stuff,
or those people, or those ideas,
or that behavior is not allowed in,
and it is my right to hold that line.
So what's your definition of boundaries?
So for me, setting boundaries
is the process of deciding what you're responsible for.
So it's this idea of like,
it's not just your yes or your no,
but it's deciding that you're not responsible for
everyone being okay with your yes or your no.
That you're, you know, I feel like sometimes people,
I used to think about boundaries.
Like there's this boundary bucket.
And as it's a question of quantity, right, how much can I put in my bucket?
And then when do I need to say no when my bucket is full?
And thinking about it as long as our boundaries are aligned with our capacity, we're fine.
But then I started totally rethinking that
because because if we do it that way, then how do we know that our bucket is full
of the correct things? And then how do we know that something is not in our bucket
that belongs to us? So for me, it's just been I'm newly thinking about it as this idea of
what I'm responsible for in terms of what is mine to do, what is my business, and everything else
that I am not responsible for, like your feelings about that, taking care of that thing, that's not
that's not mine to do, that's not mine to do.
That's not my responsibility and that's my boundary.
Mm, interesting.
And it's interesting that you use the word responsible for
because it kind of, I always think of the word
responsible meaning like I have to respond to that.
Yes, and I feel like sometimes we think of like,
it's all or nothing.
If I take this one thing on,
it's inside my boundary, right?
I'm taking on this task or this burden.
I have to take everything else that goes with it.
And for me, that's not correct.
It's you may say that is mine to do.
I'm responsible for doing X.
But then you can at the same time say,
but I'm not responsible for making you okay with me doing X. But then you can at the same time say, but I'm not responsible for making you okay
with me doing X. I'm not responsible for your perception of me because I'm doing X. I'm
only responsible for doing X or not doing X. Interesting. It's like what we talk about
when we're navigating what we share with the world, right?
Through my books or my whatever,
and it's, we say all the time, okay,
we're responsible for telling the truth,
but we are not responsible for the way the world responds
or receives that, right?
We're responsible to the telling and the sharing,
but we're not responsible for the reaction. And that helps us set that boundary for art and for sharing. It's so interesting. Okay.
So untamed is much about boundaries, right? And there's one story about creating boundaries that I shared in that book about when Abby and I fell in love and the family's reaction.
And so I thought we could tell that story because I think it's helped people helped me learn about what kind of healthy boundaries are.
Right. And then later we'll get into some of my
less healthy boundaries. But so this is the island story, right. And I want to tell this,
I want to hear your perspective, because I've told the story so many times. But the world has your version. Or experience of that.
So back job is that I fell in love with a woman.
And it was a dramatic time because when this happened, I was in a broken marriage.
And also was a very public person.
I was married to a man. And I also was a very public person. I was married to a man. And I was already
a very public person. I had a book coming out. That was about the redemption of that marriage that I
was in. And fell deeply in love with Abby. And so there were, there was a lot of real life figuring out boundaries in that time.
Right?
To who do we tell?
When do we tell it?
How do we tell it?
Whose feelings are we responsible for?
And when I talk about that story, a lot of people want to hear how I navigated the boundaries
of the world.
Right?
Like how did we deal with the way the Christians felt about me
being in love with a woman or how did we navigate the way social media reacted? And all of that was
scary and we'll talk about that another time. But the hardest part for me was dealing with family.
family, right? I mean, boundaries never come. It's never harder to hold a boundary or to create a boundary or to navigate a boundary when it's the people that you love the most.
Well, what's that line from what's that line from maintained where you say it's not the criticism
from the people that hate us that keep us from doing what we need to do, it's the love and concern of the people who love us.
Who love us, right?
Yeah, that's what shakes us, right?
So, the deal was that I told my parents about being in love with Abby. And as you'll learn in this podcast, the four of us, my mom, my dad, sister
and I are, I mean, we are very close. I think there's a little bit of what might be seen
as a bit of codependency about how much we all care about each other's feelings, right?
So, so example, I put this in untamed, one night I was talking to my mom
and I'd probably talked to her six times that day and she said, what are you doing in
the morning? And I said, I'm going to go get a haircut. And she said, what are you going
to do to your hair? And I said, well, actually I'm thinking about cutting bangs. So we hung
up the next morning, my phone rings at 6 a.m. I answered, I'm like, oh my god, what's wrong?
It's my mom.
My mom says, hi, honey.
I'm sorry to call so early, but I just really didn't sleep last night.
I just need to talk to you about something that's worrying me.
I said, what mom?
She said, it's the bangs. I'm really, you don't do well with
bangs. You get bangs. And then it's years of bobby pins and tears. And I just feel like your
life is hard enough without bangs. And you remember that, right? That's not fair. Our family was not in a place to be
able to emotionally assimilate to the bangs experiment. Right? The bangs were bridged too far.
So I'm just explaining that if this is a woman who stayed up all night because her daughter
was about to get bangs, you can imagine how she reacted when her daughter told her that
she was going to leave her husband and marry a female Olympian, right? She was freaking
terrified, okay? And she tried to be loving with that terror, but every time I talk to her, I felt myself just spinning.
I could hear the concern.
But honey, what is the world going to say?
What about the kids?
Like the kids' friends, the kids' teachers.
Everything I felt like I was explaining myself that I was trying to convince her that it was okay. I felt like a 10-year-old again, trying to assert my independence.
It's so fascinating because it's like the people who love us, they just want us to be
okay, right?
And they're so afraid that the world is going to be fearful.
And so they end up bringing the fear to us that they worry the world will bring
to us. It's not even the world that brings it. It's them. Right. Right. If they bring
it to you first, then you can avoid it. Having the reaction from the world who doesn't
even love you, you can they can bring it to your doorstep. you can say, oh, I don't want that. And then you can stop.
You can preempt whatever is going to come.
Right, which is just not,
I mean, it's also this whole thing that,
there are generations and we have somehow
equated worry with love.
Right, so that's a whole nother thing. But you, one day, I called you,
I think I used to hang up with mom and then just call you to bitch about whatever had just happened,
right? I think that was the general pattern of those times. Historically, yes.
So I would just call.
And then mom would be calling in on the other lines so she could report to me what was
happening.
I mean, listen, poor sister is just the translator, the everything, okay, for everybody, for
everyone in our family.
So I called you one day and said, I just spun.
I said, she's making me feel like I can't do the thing.
And I feel like I'm constantly justifying myself or explaining myself.
And it just makes me so upset.
And you said, do you remember what you said to me?
Yes.
I believe I said something like you're so defensive of what you're doing and the only
reason you need to be defensive ever is if you feel like someone can take something
from you, then you have to defend it.
But you are a grown-ass woman and no one can take this from you. If you decide that Abby is what you want
and this life is what you want,
you can stop defending it and just do it.
Yes.
And I don't know why that was so shifting,
it was shifting for me, right?
It was like, that is it. It's defensiveness or
that sort of panic we have is only for people who feel like what they have can be taken.
Right? And so, I was enacting this wrong pattern or power thing with with mom, which was like, it was almost an asking permission.
Right? Like, it's, it's like, I was trying to convince her that it was okay, that I was okay by
telling her how okay it was, but no one has ever convinced anyone in the history of the world that
they are okay by talking about how okay they are, right?
The only way we convince people that we're okay is we just go about being okay and we allow them
to witness it and eventually they go, huh, I guess she knew what she was doing, right? Correct.
Correct. And I think, I mean, it's not that mom could have literally taken that away.
It's not that you would have not been able to do it if mom didn't understand it. It's this idea that
if we that we live under that is if that if we are not able to bring that the people that we love in line
So they're affirming our decisions then we will not allow ourselves
To do the thing that we need to do so her so the taking it from you
In your head was well, if I can't
Convince my mom that this is okay, can I convince myself that this
is okay?
Yes.
And that's okay.
So that's what you're talking about in terms of what I'm responsible for.
I, for some reason, felt I was responsible for everyone feeling amazing about my decision.
Right?
Right. right? When in fact, it wasn't my job to convince anyone else, right? That's the part that was
panicking me and taking me away from my knowing and taking me away from my peace, right? That
was mom's job to figure out and it was my job to just say, here it is, here's the decision.
my job to just say here it is, here's the decision. Godspeed. Right. And to be fair, it's very hard to be responsible for your own decisions when you're looking around at people who love
you and care about you. And they are not affirming those decisions. So it's either I'm not responsible
for your reaction to my decision.
And the equivalent of that is I am responsible for my decisions
and having peace in making my decisions,
regardless of anyone else understanding.
Yet, yet, yet, yet, why this decision is the next right thing for me.
Yeah, I saw this meme recently that said, it's not everyone's job to understand your calling.
It wasn't a conference call.
Yeah, I saw that too.
We'll find who we need to find out who said that because that's so true. It's so it's amazing how many times I have had to whether it's in work in in in my family
and parenting just be like nobody gets this but it's right anyway and
eventually they will right.
I'm Jonathan M. Hevar. I'm a podcast producer and I'm someone who likes fancy things.
But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, girl, we're not doing that anymore.
You'll hear from people who told me awkward embarrassing
and strangely intimate things about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner, I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself.
Classy.
A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now.
Wherever you get your podcasts.
Okay, so here's the rest of that story.
So after that conversation that we had on the phone, I found myself, I think I was at
a track meet.
I was at one of Chase's track meets. But anyway, I remember a standing under tree mom called
She was I could just feel the fear feel the worry in her voice, you know, and she said we're coming dad and I are coming
Right to Florida and I and I just
Remembered what you said and I had this moment and I said no, you can't come.
You cannot come because you are still afraid.
You are afraid and my children are not afraid.
They don't carry the fear of the world that you have for many reasons because of the way we raise them,
because of the generation they're from, because of the way we're walking through this,
because of the people they are. And so if you come here, they will see the fear in your eyes
and they will take it on. They will help you carry it, because they love and trust you.
because they love and trust you.
Right, so it's my job as their mother,
as the parent to make sure that they don't feel like they have to carry that fear from you,
to make sure that that contagious fear
doesn't get to them.
So, right, so I said, what I need to tell you, mom,
is I love you so much.
And it sounds like you have a problem.
I don't have that problem. my kids don't have that problem. This fear that you have is your problem and so I need you to go on your own and figure out
this problem that you have, which is your fear. Right? And when you've worked out that problem and you are ready to come to our family with nothing,
but respect, enjoy, and celebration,
then we will lower our drawbridge for you,
but not one second sooner.
Yeah, I'm quite sure that I didn't say it
with that much eloquence, but that was the gist, okay, and
and
And it was so weird. It was so weird, and I just remember mom being like I
Think her exact words were I will think about what you've said honey
I know that love her. She's always trying.
She's always trying.
But what you did in that moment is you clarified
what she was not responsible for
and what she was responsible for.
Right.
It didn't.
It's not like you took away the fear from her,
but you, you, you said,
I am not responsible. I, Glen and I am not responsible for making you feel okay.
About and mom, you're not responsible for the way the world in the future responds to our family. But what you are wholly responsible for is how you respond to our family.
Right? Because in all these situations, I mean, just being a teacher, just working with kids for so long,
like I believe that a kid can handle whatever the world brings to them.
As long as at the end of the day they know they can look at their parent and that their
parent wouldn't change a hair on their head.
Right?
That's what I have seen be true over and over again, but so often that the parents are so afraid
that they bring the very fear that
their worried exists in the world, right to the doorstep.
And it's amazing because it's the same, it's not a fundamental shift.
I mean, if love from a parent in this situation we're describing is this like rushing flood,
it's just, she was rushing her love, was rushing towards you to try to
help you not make a decision that she thought was going to be devastating to you,
and to your family. So, but it was just diverting that flood to, no, it's
channel it this way, channel it this way, and all of that love will be used effectively. But over here, this is not where your love belongs. Your love belongs channeled this way.
And it was sometimes it's a simple shift of understanding and a relief.
Like I absolve you, mom, of responsibility
to make the world okay for me.
Yes.
I absolve you of responsibility for my decisions.
All you have to do is show up and love me.
Right.
And by the way, it's so interesting what happens then,
because I see people, there's so many different ways to react
as apparent in this situation, but
it seems like there is a couple major channels that people take and one is I am so afraid
that I'm going to try to change you for the world.
And then there is this other take that mom seems to have taken on, which is, no, you're
perfect.
And I am going to change the world for you.
Okay.
So what you listener might not know is that my mom is now the fiercest freaking activist
in our family.
Like she has been since since this time, she's probably been to more marches than we. I mean, she and
my dad show up with their little rainbow flags at gay pride marches by themselves. Right?
Just like they they have taken on this whole, I mean, my mom plans transgender remembrance
ceremonies at her. She goes to what kind of church is she?
Unitarian church. She goes to a unitarian church because the Christians were pissing her off too much with all the homophobia.
So she has just become, she's political.
She writes letters, she organizes.
She has just, God damn cheated her way through this.
She just said, okay.
Yeah, her flood is flowing in a totally different direction.
I want to change.
But it's still the intensity.
The same intensity that she was worried
is now the intensity that she's she's
channeling for that.
I mean, Godlover, I'll be like,
can you babysit the kids?
Oh, I'm sorry, honey, I'm down at the Senate.
Yes.
I just have to I just have a couple more hours
of this um, particular action.
Yes.
So sorry.
Yes, it's so fascinating.
And by the way, I'm sure it doesn't always work that way.
I mean, so many people set boundaries
and they lose people.
Correct.
I mean, that has happened to me too.
But the idea of the idea that when I mentioned the draw bridge
and this idea of untamed about the the island metaphor is you know when we were
first starting to tell our story to the public. I don't know maybe it was on social media. I don't
know but I started to feel overwhelmed. The internet had feelings as it does. Yeah, about me and Abby. And so, you
know, sometimes I'm really good at filtering that stuff out. And sometimes I'm terrible
at it. And I had a bit of a breakdown one night about some cruelty, some homophobia
that was coming towards me and Abby sat me down and she said, okay, here's what we're gonna do. She said, we are going to think of our love as an island.
Okay?
We have found the thing.
We have found the thing we both have been looking
for our whole lives where we have found this.
Love that is so desperately wanted by human beings.
We have it, it's a treasure, it's on this island. It's you and me and the kids in Craig.
We are on this island. Our love is young. We have to protect it.
Right? Everybody else and all of their opinions are on the other side of the moat.
Right? And our moat has crocodiles in it.
Right? And our moat has crocodiles in it.
Crocodiles in it and we will only lower the drawbridge for love, wild acceptance, celebration.
And they can yell and scream as much as they want on the other
side of that mode. We can't even hear them. We're too busy over here dancing on
our island, right? And that is the metaphor that we carry all the time. And it's so
interesting because I think that sometimes we make the mistake of thinking, okay,
it's my job and especially for women, okay, it's my job to make sure that everybody on my island
loves and respects and accepts me and my family.
And I think actually it's like no,
our job and joy is to only allow people on our island
to already do respect and love and celebrate us, right?
Mm-hmm.
So, you know, we talk all the time about what,
if we have a co-builder in our life
or if we're building on our own,
just thinking about what are the non-negotiables?
Like, what are the things that we will not allow on our island ever? And it's so interesting because
it's often not, I think we say we think that we have to decide what people are allowed on and off.
But then that's what screws us up, right? Because if you decide that, well, obviously,
my mom's allowed on my island,
what happens if she's bringing some early homophobia?
No, right?
If we decide, well, obviously, my father
and laws allowed on my island,
what happens when he brings his racism?
The hard thing is that our non-negotiables are often ideas and things. And people, even
if they're the people closest to us, don't get to come on and bring it. Right? I mean,
the time, the moment I had to tell my mom, no, you may not come on my island, was I think
the hardest boundary I've ever set, sort of a final frontier for me. And I think the
moment when I became an adult, the moment when a mother and a daughter became two mothers.
Right? It was like, oh no, no, no, no, no. You had your chance to build your island.
Now it's my turn.
Right.
Now it's my turn.
You're a guest now.
You're not a co-builder with me.
Right.
Yeah.
Your protection, your attempt to protect me is interfering with my protection of my children.
So.
So, if I have a choice to choose between daughter and mother,
I'm choosing mother every time.
Right?
Yeah.
Okay, let's take a break.
And when we come back,
we will answer some hard questions about boundaries. Hi sister!
Hi Sissy!
Okay, we have questions.
Alright, our first one is from Lindsay.
Hi G and sister.
This is Lindsay and I'm calling for some advice.
So I recently set a pretty tough boundary with my mother-in-law, which actually took a lot
of courage and I'm really proud of myself for doing it.
And in the moment, she seemed to handle it well and I felt good about it going forward.
And then the next day, she called my husband to complain.
And she also called my sister and lots of gossip about it,
which as you can imagine, didn't feel great.
And now she's being really cool to me and person,
and the whole thing feels like a big mess,
and I just kind of don't know where to go from here.
So any advice you have, help me please, love you both.
Yes, this feels very familiar.
Okay, so Lindsay, what I have learned is that the hard part of setting boundaries is not actually the setting of the boundary.
It's actually not saying the thing. That's not the hardest part. Okay.
The hardest part of boundaries is withstanding whatever happens next. Okay. The hard part of boundaries
is being okay with the outcome and the outcome
of setting a boundary is usually people having feelings
about it.
It's like that Seinfeld episode where it's like
the taking of the reservation isn't the important part
of the reservation.
It's the keeping of the reservation.
That's the most important part of the reservation.
That is it.
That is it. That is it.
The pattern is that we finally get the nerve to set the boundary with somebody, right?
But we are so conditioned and obsessed with being liked that when the person has feelings
about it or when the person's mad at us are disappointed or cold or gossip, we take
that as a sign that we did something wrong, that there's a problem, that we now
have to fix.
And then we go about fixing things, which is usually an undoing of the boundary.
So it's like two parts.
Setting boundaries is two parts.
It's the first part where you're saying the thing and setting it.
And then it's the second harder part,'re saying the thing and setting it. And then
it's the second harder part, which is being like a strong little tree in a storm. When
the storm starts and everyone has the feelings, just staying rooted and grounded until it passes.
Right. So I feel this is just reminding me of something that happened to me a while back.
So quick story.
So my kids go to school, right?
And I have a complicated relationship with when my kids were an elementary school.
Whenever I go to school for a school event, I end up feeling like I did an actual school.
I don't know where to stand. I don't know which moms to stand with or sit with. I'm not in on the social happenings of like the PTA
while I'm very grateful I'm not in on it
because of many reasons.
So I feel a little bit anxious sometimes
when I'm visiting school.
And so I have also, because I'm an introvert
and all the things, I have maintained over time
that when I'm at school, I'm there to like see my kid and be with my kid.
And I'm not very social, right?
Which works out fine, usually.
But there was a time recently where I realized that my kid
was having a trouble with another kid.
And I knew this other kid's mom, right?
So I call the mom and I say, oh my gosh, this sucks.
Like, let's help them figure it out, okay?
And she says, well, actually, this has been going on for six months. And I said, wait,
what, why didn't you tell me about this? And she said, well, honestly, I find you to be unapproachable. Okay.
Sister, I'm sure you remember this day.
I'm sure that you remember me calling you from the car.
Hesteric, like freaking out.
I thought that this was the worst thing that it ever.
I thought that this was failure, like some kind of terrible failure as a woman
that my kid could have been struggling and one of these mothers did not find me approachable,
right? I thought being an unapproachable was the worst thing that somebody could say about me.
So later that night I call Liz, you know, Liz is the besides you, the other person that I
talk to about my challenges's my very many challenges.
I told her the story and I said,
and then she said,
I'm unapproachable.
Liz was quiet and then she said,
okay, so what's the problem?
I said, she called me unapproachable and Liz said,
okay, so do you want to be approached?
And I said, no.
And she said, okay honey, then well done.
Good job honey, that's done. Good job, honey, head.
That's what she calls me, honey, head.
And I thought, oh my gosh, okay.
So the consequence of me taking care of myself
in that school situation, right?
Is that some people might have perceptions of me.
When we set a boundary, other people might have perceptions of me. When we set a boundary, other people might have perceptions of us.
And what our business is, is the boundary. What our business is not, is other people's definitions
of or perceptions of that boundary. Does that really true?
It does.
I think it's totally natural.
I mean, that mother-in-law of Lindsay, I mean, she's obviously using the tool she has
and if she's gossiping, and that's one thing, that's not the healthiest tool.
But every time, everyone is always just adapting.
They're either adapting to the boundaries you don't set,
or they're adapting to the boundaries that you do, right?
So you can either choose to not upset the ecosystem
and keep it the way it's always been,
or you can choose to set something,
in which case there's going to be shifts
that happen around you.
And I guess it's just, be shifts that happen around you.
And I guess it's just, it comes down to what you always say, Glennon,
which is like you can either disappoint other people or you can disappoint yourself.
But if maintaining the status quo and not setting your boundary
isn't nothing, it is in fact disappointing yourself
because you are aware of a boundary that you are
then not maintaining because of the kind of the disturbance in the force that it...
Right, disturbance in the force.
So you just count the cost beforehand, right?
You say, I understand that I'm going to set this boundary and that there might be Ripples and consequences that I will have to withstand in the short term
Because we teach people how to treat us and when we set a boundary we're changing something
We're changing a pattern that people have become comfortable with so when we change a pattern
People become uncomfortable and that is okay
It is okay to allow people to be uncomfortable so that you can find some comfort in the relationship,
right?
And I think it's also okay to just say that's the price and I'm willing to pay that price
because I have fought so hard for my peace that I think maintaining it is more important
to me actually in this moment than being liked and approved of.
And it's helpful because then you know that is a consequence that will happen.
Yes.
So it's not, it doesn't mean there's something wrong with your boundary.
It means it's a natural consequence of setting boundaries.
Yes.
It doesn't mean that you've misstepped.
No, it just means it's working.
Carry on.
Okay, we have another question.
This one's from Kathleen and she wrote, I understand my boundaries in general.
In general, they are very clear to me, but when someone crosses one in real life, everything
suddenly feels less clear, and I never react in real time in a way that feels honoring
up my boundaries.
Ooh, I feel that one.
Me too.
Because it so often feels like my boundaries are in conflict with expectations.
The whole world seems to have agreed on.
How can you tell if your boundaries are reasonable or whether you're just being
high maintenance?
Oh, Kathleen.
I feel this one so deeply.
First of all, I think, you know, words like high maintenance or even even controlling sometimes control
freak difficult. These are words that people say about women who have thoughts and opinions.
And so, you know, I'm always on the lookout for not being too concerned about those words. But
what really what I really connect to in this question is that I have so many boundaries that I have accepted the rest of
the world may not have, right? It's like boundaries are, they're just, they're not universal often.
They're, they're often specific to you, right? So, so the whole world may have decided that this one
thing doesn't cross their boundary, but it might still cross yours.
And the whole world acclimating to it doesn't matter.
It matters what fits you, Kathleen.
Right?
So you have to listen to you or you will be forever frustrated and better.
So I have a hundred examples of these boundaries that don't make sense to other people.
I mean, we could talk about one of the things that constantly appalls people is my texting boundary.
It's one way that the world just decided
we were gonna communicate with each other
without asking anyone's permission.
This idea of texting that, you know,
any time of the day, no matter what I'm doing at any point,
someone can just send me a text.
As if they're just like sending me an IOU, right?
Like, or an IOU that.
Right.
I'm just my name out of business trying to stay balanced throughout the day, which is
very difficult.
Just trying to do all the things I have to do, just trying to, you know, human my way
through the day, but at any moment, anyone who happens to be,
who need something from me or think of me or whatever can just send me a text.
And then I am obligated to stop whatever I'm doing and write them back, okay?
And then, and then if I don't write them back, then I'll get like a passive aggressive
thing that's like, I don't know if you saw this. And then if I dare not to write back to that,
if I happen to see that human being, are you okay? Oh my god, are you okay?
I just didn't know. I just, is everything okay? Because I didn't,
I know. And I just feel like I cannot spend all day
indebted to people that I didn't ask for input from.
For input from, right?
And then, and then I'll feel guilty.
So like half the day I'm thinking about
all of these people that I owe something to, right?
So then, if I decide to actually text them back,
because I will literally write on my things to do,
text this person back, text this person back, text this person back,
which takes me longer than it would just to text the person back.
Right?
Of course, especially when you rewrite it on all of your lists
because you definitely didn't do it the day you were supposed to.
Every day, for a month, right?
And then I go to bed with shame that I didn't text the person,
right? But here's the thing about texting. You text them back, you finally write it, take it off
your to-do list, and then what happens? They text you back. It's a never-ending, it's untenable. It's
the tyranny of the text, truly. It's also like when did we decide to take this on
as a side hustle?
Just a whole nother part time job
that we're just gonna be in constant communication
with people all day long about various things.
I mean, I know, I know it's, I know it's like,
we're talking about it in a funny way,
but I actually feel it's not right on a deeply human spiritual level.
Like, I do not wake up in the morning on this earth to be in constant response to everyone
else.
Like, I actually want to be in creative mode.
I want, and I don't mean I'm making writing books all the time.
I just mean I want to intentionally decide what to do with my time.
And I don't want to constantly be owing everybody.
It's just, it's a new thing.
This is not the way that humanity has lived
until like yesterday, right?
When we all decided we owe each other
constant check-ins.
So anyway, I don't text people back, right?
And I know that it hurts people's feelings,
but it hurts my feelings more to try to get away.
I choose my self.
There's two sets of feelings here, people.
I mean, choosing mine.
To the point where when I got married at my wedding,
so Abby and I made our wedding list.
At first, we had everyone we love on our list, right? And it was like way too huge. So we said, okay, let's do everyone we love
and like, big different. And then it was like 20 people. Right. So we had like 25 people
that are wedding, all at a big table. And I stood up. And I said, thank you for coming
to our wedding. And I, I, what I want you to all do is look at each other and I want you to tell
your neighbor if I have ever texted you back.
Okay.
And so I want to take this moment to prove that it is not personal.
I love and like you, you're here.
But I will never text you back.
So anyway, texts are not the boss of me.
I will not be ruled by texts.
Well, it's just an example of things that don't work for you.
Just because there's a new thing that everyone's doing.
Just because it works for the person who is texting you, it is in fact convenient for
them to reach out.
They do.
It works that mode of communication.
It works for them to reach out. They do, it worked that mode of communication works for them.
It doesn't mean that you should shift yourself to make that work for you.
No, that's right.
That's exactly right.
You have to know yourself too.
I am an anxious person.
The idea that I would add this level of anxiety, that makes me feel fuzzy, it makes me feel ungrounded,
but I just don't choose it because I know myself.
And I think there's, when plenty of my friends,
when I talk about this, they look at me like,
I have lost my mind, they have no idea
what I'm talking about.
True, that's very true.
Texting causes them no extra anxiety.
It's delightful, actually, for people.
To be, it's the difference between people are like that either feels like a
Happy little
Moment throughout their day or it feels like someone just poking you in the forehead all day long. Okay, that's what I feel
I feel like it's someone poking me in the forehead and
Then getting mad that I didn't smile and hug them. It hooked me in the forehead
But that's what I mean.
We're not making a universal commentary on the texting.
It's just that there are different experiences of that.
And if it doesn't work for you, you do not
need to succumb to the tyranny of the text.
You need to just explain that that is not part of your life.
Right.
So then the funny thing is that people will be like,
okay, then should I call you?
And I'm like, hello.
Hello.
Hello.
Are you out of your much?
Should I come to your house then?
Oh, no.
For Christ's sake.
Gosh, what is this?
The 80s were not calling people.
The 70s were not coming to their home.
Actually, it's so dramatic that I will text people
in advance of the very rare
time that I have to call them about something and say, I'm about to call you. Everything's
okay. Everyone's healthy. Nothing's wrong. Because people are so alarmed if I actually
call them that they think, well, someone has perished. Yes. Yes. Right. So, so that is a boundary texting is a boundary for me.
Sister, what is a boundary that you don't think is healthy that you're trying to let burn?
Boundaries have been a struggle for me to understand my whole life because I feel like when you
Grow up like we did with a dominant personality like with someone who's
There's one person your family who's emotional fluctuations kind of dictate the experience of
other family members. It you learn very early to be highly emotionally attuned
to that person's emotional calibration. So you can kind of stay one step ahead. So you can keep the piece and all that.
And so I kind of did that my whole life and then only learned after much after that that's an
actual thing that like folks who experience that have this kind of practice called emotion monitoring,
which basically means that they're living all of their lives and all of their personal relationships in this kind of hyperactive awareness of everyone else's experience in that moment.
So, and you learn that your role is kind of to accommodate, keep everyone comfortable, and you're so busy being a fixer in that situation that you lose touch
with the fact that you're actually having your own experience. So in other words, you have
completely lost any boundary between everybody else's experience of a situation and your own
experience of the situation because yours is theirs. So this is the situation where you and I will be at a restaurant and we will not even
be enjoying our experience or even having an experience because we will be worried that
a person at the next table is talking too loud or a person at the table over there is having a bad experience or we're on egg shells constantly
because we learned that we have to make this environment perfect so that this one person doesn't get upset.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, I mean, it got to the point for me for airplanes were untenable for me.
I mean, it would be like, the guy on 16E
is taking up too much space
and that girl doesn't have enough space
and that baby is crying
and I'm so worried about that mother
and also that person is talking too loud.
At their earphones are up too loud
and this whole thing, and I'm responsible for all of this,
all of this, and it's a sick place to live
for yourself and for people who then are watching you.
So I recently, my son is very, he is a high monitor as well. And I have seen him recently say things
him recently say things like, why is so and so so upset about that? Like very subtle,
you know, please, please don't be mad at so and so. I mean, it's a very, and this pattern of handing down is what I need to break. And it's just a boundary that I'm working on. So I have just started practicing the boundary
of that I am not responsible for the energy in the room.
That in fact, the reality is that everyone
is responsible for their own experience right now.
And not only am I not responsible for theirs
and getting upset when they're having bad behavior
and getting defending the one who isn't having justice in her seat, you know, it's it's like I am actually
responsible for my experience and being responsible for everyone else's I'm absolving myself of being responsible for making this experience the best one it can be for me. Am I family?
Instead of taking on all the emotions,
good, bad, and ugly in the room.
Well, then because we're ruining our kids' lives,
like just, I mean, Chase said to me
we were playing a game recently
where we were asking each other deep questions or something.
And one of the questions said something like,
what would you change about this person, me,
that you think would make their life better? If you could, that was the question. And Chase said, okay, I guess I would say, I wish you were better able to adapt to different situations without
having to control everything so much to be comfortable. I wish you could just be more comfortable
so much to be comfortable. I wish you could just be more comfortable in many different situations.
And I know. And what he means is you chase means that he has grown up, worried all the time about every room he's in because he's worried about his mom's experience. Okay. He's seeing it
through your eyes. What is it?
Yes.
Okay, to you, what is not, that's exactly right.
I mean, I got to the point where I was trying to rush,
like growing up really special, wonderful events,
just wanting them to be over instead of enjoying this.
Yes.
Yes.
And then recently Abby said to me that she feels herself
having more anxiety in any social situation.
Why? Because if somebody starts interrupting, she knows that interrupting is one of my
boundaries. And so she's worried that this person is interrupting and now I'm going to
freak out or this person's dominating the whole conversation. And she knows that I hate
that so much. And so she's constantly living the experience
through her fear of how I'm living the experience.
And you know, it's tricky because I think that
people who are highly sensitive tend to have
to as coping mechanisms create all kinds of boundaries around them, right?
Like, I'll never forget, Abby and I were at a hotel and we went down, just pre-COVID,
obviously, we went down to the like free breakfast or whatever. We walked into this free breakfast room,
okay? It was 12 minutes of hell, okay?
There was like a baby screaming at this table
and then the mom was working so hard to try to help the baby,
but the dad was just watching CNN without doing a damn thing,
leaving this woman just scream,
like the baby was not even belonged to him.
There's a man and a woman arguing like so unkindly
over at a table.
There was a kid trying to get her cereal,
but no one would help her.
She's so upset, right?
So the whole thing was so overwhelming,
we get back to our room,
or maybe just to the elevator.
We walk, yeah, we walk into the elevator,
and I am holding a roll.
That's it.
I have a roll.
Okay, I don't eat a roll for breakfast.
Abby has her whole breakfast.
She goes, what happened?
What happened?
Why don't you have anything?
I'm like, what do you mean?
Like that was it.
We were just in a war zone, right?
I was just trying to get through it.
I was just trying to get out of there.
And she was like, what?
She just had a lovely experience.
She had noticed none of it.
Well, she got her.
That's distressed.
Not only did she not notice it,
like you actually had those experiences.
You were the mom who was trying to control.
Like, it's hard to explain,
but you're actually that experiences, your experience.
So you walk out having had all those experience
completely depleted.
Yes.
And it's why social experiences are exhausting.
Cause you are having the experience
of every person in the room and you're
metabolizing all of that all at once while also trying to be your own self in the room. It's exhausting.
It's exhausting and I do believe that being a highly sensitive person has helped me figure out all of my boundaries, right? As we talked about in the
earlier episode, we have, I have created an island, right? What I would say about that
now in my life is that the challenge of my life is that I'm always overdoing everything. Like, if moderation is not your bag.
No, if you tell me, like this face cream, this mask,
if you put it on for six minutes, it will change your life.
I'm like, well, if it will change my life at six minutes,
what if I leave it on for six hours?
Like, it's, I'm gonna like become, so always, right? It's like, I'm going to like become so always, right?
It's like there is zero moderation.
And so I have boundaries myself so much, Sister, and you know this.
But Abby and I talk about, I don't have any friends.
Like I'm everything bothers me, right?
Everything's a deal breaker, everything's, so I have overdone the boundaries. It's like I spent so long creating
this self knowing like who I am and what I need and what I'll accept and what I
won't that now I have this amazing sense of self but nobody else. Right.
Because if you cannot tolerate interrupting,
if you cannot tolerate people talking too much,
if you cannot tolerate people using loud voices,
if you cannot tolerate, like, people are people.
And so, at what point, I remember talking to Liz Gilbert about this
and being like, I feel like I have spent my 30s and 40s figuring out my sense
of self and my boundaries. And now I have to spend the next decade somehow disintegrating
all of it. Right? And that seems so exhausting. And like, it was all worthless. And she did
tell me a story about how she was working with this spiritual guide who said that
we do all inevitably have to figure out that the self
is not real, that we're all connected, but that the only way that she can help people get to that
part is when they've already created a strong sense of self. So it seems to be a pattern that we have to do first before we can.
But I mean, Abby and I do talk all the time about the fact that we want to go into this
next decade of our lives and like add more people to our island.
You're out of have friends.
Right.
And to me, it goes back to like my definition of boundaries being deciding what you're out of have friends. Right. And to me, it goes back to my definition of boundaries
being deciding what you're responsible for.
You are actually not responsible for the fact
that somebody else doesn't act the way you want them to.
But you're not responsible for someone else's interrupting.
That's literally not your business.
I know, but it just upsets me because I feel so strongly about everybody getting a chance
to show themselves, to talk.
And then it's, it's some people takes longer for them to finally reveal the thing and
finally say the thing.
So when somebody is finally saying the thing and then somebody else comes in and cuts
them off, it makes me want to stick a fork in their eye.
Right? Because I feel like they're ruining that other person's experience of life.
Right. So you're taking responsibility for that other person's experience of life.
Yeah. Who I don't know.
Let's just be totally clear. And yes, that's obnoxious and annoying, but it is not.
It is not yours to carry. No.
And just to be clear, while I'm worried that that is going to ruin everyone's experience,
I am for sure ruining everyone's experience.
100%.
Yes.
You're ruining everyone's experience because you are sending out the energy that everything
is not okay in this situation.
Right.
Like, I want us all to be kind and I will kick everyone's ass
if they're not.
I will rein tear over this until everyone is comfortable.
That's exactly right.
Okay, so what is a boundary that you are trying
to work on setting?
If setting boundaries is this process
of deciding what you're responsible for,
it seems I made the decision a long time ago that I am
solely responsible for myself. So that boundary makes parts of me inaccessible. It kind of
stunts my relationships in ways, and I think with my husband, John. So I view, like when I'm struggling, when I'm worried,
when I've heard, it's very hard for me to ask for help.
It's very hard to say that I'm having a hard time
because that to me suggests that I'm not doing the thing
I'm responsible for, which is taking care of myself.
So what I'm trying to do is tear down this boundary
that I'm responsible for handling all of my shit
with no help and no support from the people who love me.
So I'm just practicing saying things like,
I'm having trouble for,
I'm really struggling with this
because it does come out no matter what.
I'm just much more comfortable with anger
than I am admitting that I'm having trouble
taking care of things.
So we call that, we call that in our family, the bulletproof vest, the ingors, like the
bulletproof vest that we put on over fear or...
Right.
So that's how it comes out instead of just being, like, I'm really struggling with this.
And that's why I'm acting this way.
Instead of just being like, well, damn, if I could get some help around here,
maybe I would.
Right.
You know, so that is my boundary.
Brunei.
Brunei calls that, let's try to be scared
without being scary.
Yes.
Yes.
We get straight to scary.
Right.
Okay, let's move on to the next right thing.
This week, I think to the next right thing.
This week, I think that the next right thing should just be this. Let's all just think of one boundary
that we want to set and one boundary that we want to let burn. And let's not even worry about doing it.
Let's just write it down first.
That's your job for this week, that's it.
Thank you so much for being with us this week
and we will see you back here next Tuesday
when things get hard this week, don't forget.
We can do hard things, right Sissy?
Right Sissy. I give you I chased as I year I made sure I got once mine
And I continue to believe that I'm the one for me
And because I mine, I walk the line
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak
So man, a final destination
You can fly, you stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring, we can do a heartache.
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star
I'm not the problem, sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe
The best people are free
And it took some time
But I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers
And heartbreaks on man
A final destination with that
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do a heartache heart
Those perfecturers and heartbreaks are mad We might get lost, but we're only in that
Stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be long
We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things.
Yeah, we can do hard things.
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