June 27th, 2025
By: Kayla Hollett, Therapist and PhD Candidate
Learning to honour your emotional, physical, and practical limits later in life can be both scary and liberating. If you often feel overwhelmed by life or anxious when interacting with others, you may benefit from interpersonal boundaries that protect your time and energy resources.
Interpersonal boundaries are the limits we set through our actions and words to protect our time and energy from the demands and expectations of others. Creating boundaries starts with recognizing what works and what doesn’t work for you in relationships, then adjusting your behaviour accordingly. Maintaining healthy boundaries requires clearly communicating your needs, managing uncomfortable emotions (like fear and guilt), and navigating others’ reactions. At their core, your boundaries are based on your values and represent what matters to you.
What Can Interpersonal Boundaries Do For Me?
Interpersonal boundaries protect our emotional, physical, mental, and spiritual well-being. They help shape the relationships, circumstances, and environments that allow us to feel respected, supported, and autonomous. They can help you manage resentment and improve your interactions with others. Boundaries can also help you know when and how to remove yourself from situations that negate your needs or assert yourself in demanding or inequitable conditions.
Why Didn’t I Learn About Boundaries in Childhood?
Difficulties maintaining boundaries in adulthood can develop early in life if a person’s physical and emotional needs or limits were inconsistently acknowledged or ignored during childhood. Children are highly attuned to caregivers’ emotional states and will instinctively adapt to behave in ways that appease their caregivers most. If a caregiver’s reactions to a child’s needs or limits are based on their own emotions rather than the child’s, the child may feel confusion about what is acceptable to ask for or refuse. In some cases, a child may be rewarded or punished based on their attempts to meet the emotional needs of the caregiver, thwarting the child’s capacity to identify and express their own emotional needs. Often, these messages are unintentionally passed on to children during early years of development and reinforced throughout adolescent and early adulthood. As an adult, a person may not know exactly how or when they came to struggle with boundaries.
Identifying Your Boundaries
If communicating your needs and limits is new for you, give yourself time to grow comfortable with the process. You may notice fear, guilt, or a sense of shame when thinking about changing your behaviours in ways that will impact others. You may find it helpful to first reflect on what your values are, how you spend your time, and what gets in the way of prioritizing what you value most. Understanding what behaviours you would like to modify is the first step in planning a boundary to experiment with. You might ask yourself:
Tips for Boundary-Setting in Adulthood
Creating interpersonal boundaries as an adult takes time, patience, persistence, and trial and error. You may find that there is no clear endpoint to practicing boundaries as you find yourself ever-changing and adapting to new environments and relationships. With experience, setting boundaries can become more subtle and intuitive – so give yourself time to learn to trust yourself. Hopefully, honouring your limits will help you feel more in control of your time and energy and create more balance in your relationships.
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