[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":172},["ShallowReactive",2],{"glossary-healthy-boundaries":3},{"_path":4,"_dir":5,"_draft":6,"_partial":6,"_locale":7,"title":8,"description":9,"datePublished":10,"canonical":11,"readTime":12,"glossaryCategory":13,"faq":14,"relatedPosts":27,"relatedTerms":34,"body":44,"_type":165,"_id":166,"_source":167,"_file":168,"_stem":169,"_extension":170,"sitemap":171},"\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fhealthy-boundaries","glossary",false,"","Healthy Boundaries: Meaning & Definition","Healthy boundaries are clear, communicated limits that protect your wellbeing without controlling others. Here's what they look like and how to set them.","2026-04-01","https:\u002F\u002Fhilainie.com\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fhealthy-boundaries\u002F",4,"general",[15,18,21,24],{"q":16,"a":17},"What are healthy boundaries in a relationship?","Healthy boundaries are directly communicated limits about what you need and what you won't accept — they protect your wellbeing without controlling your partner. They're about your own choices and behavior, not rules you impose on someone else.",{"q":19,"a":20},"How do you set boundaries with someone who doesn't respect them?","State the boundary again, clearly, once. Then follow through on whatever you said the consequence would be. Boundaries without consequences become suggestions. Persistent disregard of clearly stated limits is a pattern worth taking seriously.",{"q":22,"a":23},"Why do I feel guilty for having boundaries?","Often because you were raised in an environment where your needs were secondary, or where expressing limits was treated as selfishness or conflict. A useful reframe: expressing your needs honestly is what makes genuine connection possible.",{"q":25,"a":26},"Can you have too many boundaries?","Theoretically yes — rigid, excessive, or weaponized 'boundaries' that are really about control or avoidance rather than genuine limits can be a problem. But most people struggle with too few, not too many.",[28,31],{"title":29,"href":30},"How to Set Boundaries in Relationships","\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fhow-to-set-boundaries-in-relationships\u002F",{"title":32,"href":33},"Signs of a Healthy Relationship","\u002Fblog\u002Fwellness\u002Fsigns-of-a-healthy-relationship\u002F",[35,38,41],{"label":36,"href":37},"People-Pleasing","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fpeople-pleasing\u002F",{"label":39,"href":40},"Conflict Avoidance","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fconflict-avoidance\u002F",{"label":42,"href":43},"Codependency","\u002Fblog\u002Fglossary\u002Fcodependency\u002F",{"type":45,"children":46,"toc":160},"root",[47,56,62,118,124,155],{"type":48,"tag":49,"props":50,"children":52},"element","h2",{"id":51},"what-healthy-boundaries-look-like",[53],{"type":54,"value":55},"text","What Healthy Boundaries Look Like",{"type":48,"tag":57,"props":58,"children":59},"p",{},[60],{"type":54,"value":61},"Healthy boundaries are:",{"type":48,"tag":63,"props":64,"children":65},"ul",{},[66,78,88,98,108],{"type":48,"tag":67,"props":68,"children":69},"li",{},[70,76],{"type":48,"tag":71,"props":72,"children":73},"strong",{},[74],{"type":54,"value":75},"Communicated directly",{"type":54,"value":77}," — stated clearly, not implied through withdrawal or resentment",{"type":48,"tag":67,"props":79,"children":80},{},[81,86],{"type":48,"tag":71,"props":82,"children":83},{},[84],{"type":54,"value":85},"About your own behavior",{"type":54,"value":87}," — what you will or won't do, not what the other person must do",{"type":48,"tag":67,"props":89,"children":90},{},[91,96],{"type":48,"tag":71,"props":92,"children":93},{},[94],{"type":54,"value":95},"Proportionate",{"type":54,"value":97}," — appropriate to the relationship and situation, not rigid or excessive",{"type":48,"tag":67,"props":99,"children":100},{},[101,106],{"type":48,"tag":71,"props":102,"children":103},{},[104],{"type":54,"value":105},"Flexible",{"type":54,"value":107}," — adjustable as trust and circumstances change, not absolute walls",{"type":48,"tag":67,"props":109,"children":110},{},[111,116],{"type":48,"tag":71,"props":112,"children":113},{},[114],{"type":54,"value":115},"Enforced through your own actions",{"type":54,"value":117}," — if a limit isn't respected, you act on the consequence you stated",{"type":48,"tag":49,"props":119,"children":121},{"id":120},"common-boundary-types",[122],{"type":54,"value":123},"Common Boundary Types",{"type":48,"tag":57,"props":125,"children":126},{},[127,132,134,139,141,146,148,153],{"type":48,"tag":71,"props":128,"children":129},{},[130],{"type":54,"value":131},"Emotional:",{"type":54,"value":133}," Limits on conversations you're willing to have when you're not ready, or what information you share. ",{"type":48,"tag":71,"props":135,"children":136},{},[137],{"type":54,"value":138},"Time and space:",{"type":54,"value":140}," Needing alone time, needing time with friends, keeping certain activities your own. ",{"type":48,"tag":71,"props":142,"children":143},{},[144],{"type":54,"value":145},"Physical:",{"type":54,"value":147}," What physical contact you're comfortable with. ",{"type":48,"tag":71,"props":149,"children":150},{},[151],{"type":54,"value":152},"Digital:",{"type":54,"value":154}," Availability expectations, what you share on social media, access to your devices.",{"type":48,"tag":57,"props":156,"children":157},{},[158],{"type":54,"value":159},"Setting a boundary once isn't always enough — sometimes it needs to be restated. But a partner who consistently disregards clearly communicated limits is giving you important information about the relationship.",{"title":7,"searchDepth":161,"depth":161,"links":162},2,[163,164],{"id":51,"depth":161,"text":55},{"id":120,"depth":161,"text":123},"markdown","content:blog:glossary:healthy-boundaries.md","content","blog\u002Fglossary\u002Fhealthy-boundaries.md","blog\u002Fglossary\u002Fhealthy-boundaries","md",{"loc":4},1775272859609]