Boundaries, hmmmm what have I learned…
I remember waking into my therapist office and she told me we would be working on boundaries. I remember telling her, "I don’t even know what that means…what are boundaries?"
I recall the "boundaries are where you end and I begin" quote, it still took me quite some time before I could learn to really apply them.
I also remember my therapist telling me I would be in charge of my own healing. Her exact words were, "We heal ourselves." To which I replied in anger, "Seriously? That’s not fair. My WS gets to dump all of this crap on me and I have to heal MYSELF? She does nothing to help?!" I was so mad.
Eventually I learned why this was…if I had kept the very transactional dynamic and "relied on my WS to heal me " (gosh that feels weird to even type) well then I would never freaking heal. I’d be stuck there. That’s a lot of power to give someone else. That’s a very helpless place to be…there’s no control over your own life there.
One last thing my therapist grilled into me was, "We cannot MAKE anyone feel." She would repeat that to me regularly, and every time I would say, "I made her feel" she’d correct me…(because that’s a lot to put on myself). Every time I brought up my WS in a session she’d say, "We got into talking about WS because I asked _____. Let’s go back to you."
You repeat something over and over and over again to someone and it eventually starts to stick. Add to that my failed attempts in going to my WS for comfort during these painful times and being met with awful responses that only served to injure me further. I realized that my WS didn’t know how to be there for me, if I kept going to her with the hurts she caused me, I could only expect that she’d respond in a hurtful way. So I stopped going to her and learned to be there for myself. I started to pay a lot of attention to how people around me responded to me in my times of vulnerability, and adjusted myself in who I could share with that was safe and who I absolutely could not share with. I learned who my support system was.
I also realized that I would talk about my WS a lot, A LOT. It was always about how she did this and she did that, "Welllll…yeah ok maise…she did…but what else is this triggering within you? We could sit and focus on pointing the finger at her and all the ways she hurt you and all the ways she isn’t showing up for you, we could act outward, OR we could pause and go inward and see what is coming up and where we can work on healing ourselves further. Label the feelings you have, acknowledge them, let them flow. Where have you felt these things before in the past? What messages have you told yourself they mean about you?"
Slowly, over time I learned to detach. My codependencies kept me in a loop of not seeing self clearly, of not acknowledging myself, of doing this very transactional way of having relationships at my own expense. It was all I knew.
Another thing my therapist told me was, "As you begin to heal, all of your relationships will correct and you’ll get everything you ever wanted from them." That was astonishing. She was right, but I remember thinking, how?!?!
The inner work I did on confronting my own hurt self and nurturing myself, allowed for me to let go of the fears I had in changing my relationships and applying boundaries. Boundaries are what give me a voice, what I make sure I implement so that I can be seen and heard by not only others but my own self. I let go of the fear of losing relationships in my life, and realized that if people couldn’t love me when I grant myself a voice or draw certain lines that keep me from self sabotage, then they weren’t really worth keeping anyway. They weren’t actually loving ME anyway, they were loving my performance, or what I give them or “make them feel” about themselves. It taught me my value and my worth.
I feel like in my new partnership we both show up as whole people, and we join one another in each other’s life journeys. My joy doesn’t come FROM my partnership. I have that along with my own independence away from a partnership, when we join one another we add but we do not fill. We do not have expectations…we meet one another where we are and we go from there, respectfully, with integrity, with care, with consideration, with love.
If we trigger, we communicate that without throwing it on our partner. I find for me that if an emotion I’m feeling is really large then it’s probably a trigger. I’ll acknowledge that with myself, sort through it and communicate what happened. If we accidentally hurt one another, we own it and we correct. We hear one another and create space to discuss and to emotionally be *there*. If we have insecurities? Those don’t get thrown on the other person either. I’ll acknowledge my insecurity without making my partner responsible for “making me feel better”. We establish trust in knowing that I can be safe with my partner, and my partner can be safe with me in all aspects… physically, emotionally, mentally, spiritually, sexually.
So to take it back to our trusty quote, "boundaries are where you end and I begin"…well, for me, I had to dive deep into myself to learn about me. To learn to hear me, to see me, to pay attention to me, to nurture me, to empower me, to value me, to heal me…that all had to be done in order for me to properly establish where I begin and where someone else ends. The codependency and enmeshment had to be untangled so I could see clearly and learn to use my voice, and establish boundaries.
[This message edited by maise at 3:03 AM, Tuesday, March 19th]