Critical aspects Boundary setting is the practice of openly communicating and asserting personal
values as a way to preserve and protect against having them compromised or violated. When asserting values and boundaries, communications should be present, appropriate, clear, firm, protective, flexible, receptive, and collaborative. •
Honoring and defending: Making decisions consistent with the personal values when presented with life choices or confronted or challenged by controlling people or people not taking responsibility for their own life.
Jacques Lacan considers values to be layered in a hierarchy, reflecting
“all the successive envelopes of the biological and social status of the person” from the most primitive to the most advanced. Personal values and boundaries operate in two directions, affecting both the incoming and outgoing interactions between people. These are sometimes referred to as the 'protection' and 'containment' functions.
Scope The three most commonly mentioned categories of values and boundaries are: •
Physical –
Personal space and
touch considerations;
physical intimacy •
Mental – Thoughts and opinions
Assertiveness levels Nina Brown proposed four boundary types: •
Soft – A person with soft boundaries merges with other people's boundaries. Someone with a soft boundary is easily a victim of
psychological manipulation. •
Spongy – A person with spongy boundaries is like a combination of having soft and rigid boundaries. They permit less
emotional contagion than soft boundaries but more than those with rigid. People with spongy boundaries are unsure of what to let in and what to keep out. •
Rigid – A person with rigid boundaries is closed or walled off so nobody can get close either physically or emotionally. This is often the case if someone has been the victim of
physical,
emotional,
psychological, or
sexual abuse. Rigid boundaries can be
selective which depend on time, place or circumstances and are usually based on a bad previous experience in a similar situation. •
Flexible – Similar to spongy rigid boundaries but the person exercises more control. The person decides what to let in and what to keep out, is resistant to
emotional contagion and
psychological manipulation, and is difficult to exploit.
Unilateral vs collaborative There are also two main ways that boundaries are set: •
Unilateral boundaries – One person decides to impose a standard on the relationship, regardless of whether others support it. For example, one person may decide to never mention an unwanted subject and to make a habit of leaving the room, ending phone calls, or deleting messages without replying if the subject is mentioned by others. •
Collaborative boundaries – Everyone in the relationship group agrees, either tacitly or explicitly, that a particular standard should be upheld. For example, the group may decide not to discuss an unwanted subject, and then all members individually avoid mentioning it and work together to change the subject if someone mentions it. == Situations that can challenge personal boundaries ==