"We don't warn one another how hard this part is." Sometimes setting a boundary feels less like self-care and more like you’re about to get in troubl
“We don’t warn one another how hard this part is.”
Sometimes setting a boundary feels less like self-care and more like you’re about to get in trouble. You feel it in your body—tight chest, racing thoughts, guilt. But that fear isn’t proof you’re doing something wrong. It’s a sign that you’re doing something new. Something radical. Something right.
Here’s why setting boundaries can feel so wrong—and why that feeling doesn’t mean you should stop:
1. You were taught that being “good” meant being available
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Many of us, especially women, were raised to equate goodness with compliance.
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So when you say “no,” it feels like you’re betraying the version of you that always said “yes.”
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2. You’re afraid of being punished
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If you’ve been gaslit, abused, or controlled, your body remembers that boundaries once triggered retaliation.
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Now, even safe boundaries can feel like a threat to your survival.
3. You fear being called selfish, mean, or difficult
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Setting boundaries goes against social conditioning—especially for women, Black women, and Survivors.
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We’ve been told our needs make others uncomfortable. That’s not truth—it’s manipulation.
4. You’re grieving the loss of who people wanted you to be
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When you start healing, you stop people-pleasing.
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And that can feel like you’re disappointing others… even when you’re finally showing up for yourself.
5. You’re stepping into power—and that’s unfamiliar
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Boundaries aren’t walls. They’re doors. And they only feel harsh when you’re used to leaving everything wide open.
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Feeling wrong is often a sign you’re leaving the familiar cage.
🧠 Gentle Reframe
Feeling like you’re “doing something bad” when setting a boundary is often just trauma echoing through your nervous system. But your fear doesn’t mean it’s wrong.
It means you’re unlearning.
It means you’re healing.
It means you’re building a new way of being—one that centers your safety, not just your survival.
✨ 5 Healing Affirmations
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I am allowed to protect my peace, even if others don’t understand it.
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Feeling fear doesn’t mean I’m doing something wrong.
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My safety is not up for debate.
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Boundaries are not punishments—they are sacred acts of love.
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I do not need permission to put myself first.