vault backup: 2024-07-17 09:58:18
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		| @@ -20,11 +20,11 @@ You can validate another person's anxiety or other emotions such as hurt, frustr | ||||
| Healthy boundaries can dramatically improve relationships and wellbeing. You must stay true to yourself, and be prepared to let go of those who won't adapt to the boundaries you set. | ||||
| ## Requests vs Boundaries vs Ultimatums | ||||
| Requests and boundaries are both tools we can use to meet our needs.  | ||||
| ## Requests: The First Course of Action | ||||
| ### Requests: The First Course of Action | ||||
| A request is when you ask someone to do or not do something, in order to meet our needs. A request is *not enforceable*, the outcome is out of our control. For example: "Would you mind speaking to me more calmly?" | ||||
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| When you have a need in a relationship, a request is a good place to start. By making a request, we give the other party an opportunity to meet our needs. If the other party is receptive, you should offer a window of time for them to make a change to their behavior. | ||||
| ## Boundaries: The Second Course of Action | ||||
| ### Boundaries: The Second Course of Action | ||||
| A *boundary* is when you make clear what you will or will not tolerate. For example, "I can't continue this conversation when you raise your voice at me."  | ||||
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| A boundary is only meaningful *if you enforce it*. In the above example, that would mean ending the conversation when the other party raises their voice. | ||||
| @@ -39,12 +39,18 @@ At this point, we have two choices. | ||||
| When setting a boundary, you can ask yourself, "How willing am I to be with this person who is unable or unwilling to meet this need?" | ||||
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| If a person regularly hurts you and has been unreceptive to our requests to stop, it will create distance and space, or might end the relationship entirely. If a person regularly fails to meet your needs after you've clearly communicated them and given them time to change, you can set a boundary that acknowledges that the relationship is not working in its current state, and take space from it or end it. | ||||
| ## Ultimatum | ||||
| ### Ultimatum | ||||
| You might find yourself asking, "What's the difference between a boundary and an ultimatum?" | ||||
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| The line between the two is rather blurry, and it might be hard to quantify in a meaningful way. | ||||
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| However, the main distinction comes from the fact that a boundary is about our own limits, and an ultimatum is designed to c | ||||
| However, the main distinction comes from the fact that a boundary is about our own limits, and an ultimatum is designed to control someone else. Ultimatums focus on the behavior of *others*, not ourselves. | ||||
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| Ultimatums often revolve around trying to force someone else to change, and often come with a tone of anger and control. *You should consider an ultimatum, and realize that it's probablis the emotional form of a boundary, and whether it can be communicated in a healthy way.* | ||||
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| If someone frequently sets ultimatums they don't enforce, they highlight their attempts to control other people's behavior, rather than making attempts to protect themselves, and their needs. | ||||
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| ## Having questions | ||||
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