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Boundaries: A Therapist’s Complete Guide to Setting and Maintaining Healthy Limits

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Boundaries: A Therapist’s Complete Guide to Setting and Maintaining Healthy Limits

Boundaries: A Therapist's Complete Guide to Setting and Maintaining Healthy Limits — Annie Wright trauma therapy

Boundaries: A Therapist's Complete Guide to Setting and Maintaining Healthy Limits

SUMMARY

You struggle to set boundaries not because you lack willpower, but because early relational trauma wired your nervous system to prioritize others’ feelings over your own safety and needs, making honest limits feel dangerous or impossible. Boundaries are not walls or weapons; they are your clear, compassionate expressions of what you need to protect your emotional well-being and maintain genuine connection without losing yourself.

Relational trauma is the emotional injury that happens when the people who were supposed to keep you safe — often caregivers in childhood — instead made you feel unsafe, ignored, or unlovable. It is not simply difficult experiences or stressful relationships; it’s trauma because it wounds your capacity to trust, connect, and protect yourself emotionally. This matters to you because relational trauma shapes how you learned to relate, often leaving you caught between wanting connection and fearing it, making boundary-setting feel like a risk rather than a right. Understanding relational trauma helps you stop blaming yourself for struggling with boundaries and see your responses as survival strategies that now need new tools to heal. Healing starts when you recognize this both/and: the pain of your past AND your power to change it.

  • You struggle to set boundaries not because you lack willpower, but because early relational trauma wired your nervous system to prioritize others’ feelings over your own safety and needs, making honest limits feel dangerous or impossible.
  • Boundaries are not walls or weapons; they are your clear, compassionate expressions of what you need to protect your emotional well-being and maintain genuine connection without losing yourself.
  • Healing means learning to recognize your triggers, practice saying no in relationships that matter, and standing firm in protecting your emotional space — even when it feels unfamiliar or stirs guilt.
  1. What Healthy Boundaries Actually Are (Hint: They’re Not Walls)
  2. Why Boundaries Feel So Impossibly Hard for Trauma Survivors
  3. The Different Types of Boundaries You Actually Need
  4. Setting Boundaries with Family — Especially Difficult Parents
  5. Boundaries at Work for the Driven Woman
  6. When Boundaries Trigger Guilt (Because They Will)
  7. Practical Scripts and Exercises for Setting Boundaries
  8. When Boundary Work Needs Professional Support
  9. References

Summary

If you grew up in a household where saying “no” felt dangerous, where your needs were dismissed or mocked, or where love felt conditional on compliance, you probably didn’t learn how to set boundaries — you learned how to abandon yourself to keep the peace. Boundaries aren’t walls or weapons. They’re the honest expression of what you need to function, connect, and stay true to yourself. For trauma survivors, learning to set them is one of the most radical — and most necessary — acts of healing. This guide walks you through what healthy boundaries actually are (and aren’t), why they feel so impossibly hard for driven women with relational trauma histories, and exactly how to start setting them — with family, at work, and in the relationships that matter most.

Boundary work is one of the most powerful — and most challenging — aspects of codependency recovery; if you’re looking for reading to support this, see our list of the best resources for codependency recovery.

Imagine this: Your mother calls on a Tuesday afternoon — again — to relitigate your childhood bedroom being turned into a craft room. You’re between meetings, your stress cortisol is already through the roof, and within thirty seconds of picking up, you feel that familiar sensation: the stomach clench, the slight constriction in your throat, the subtle narrowing of your own internal world as you prepare to manage her feelings instead of your own.

You’ve read the books. You know you’re “allowed” to say no. But in the moment, with her voice on the other end of the line, “I can’t talk right now, Mom” feels about as possible as announcing you’re moving to Mars. So you stay on the phone for forty-seven minutes, arrive late to your meeting, and spend the rest of the day feeling vaguely furious at yourself for not being able to do the one thing every self-help article makes sound so simple.

This is what how to set boundaries actually looks like for most of the women I work with. Not a lack of information. Not even a lack of desire. A visceral, nervous-system-level block that no amount of knowing-better has been able to override.

After fifteen years of sitting with clients — accumulating more than 15,000 clinical hours working specifically with driven women who carry the marks of relational trauma — I want to offer you something more than “just say no.” I want to offer you a real understanding of why this is so hard, and a genuine path toward change.

What Healthy Boundaries Actually Are (Hint: They’re Not Walls)

DEFINITION
BOUNDARIES

Boundaries are the psychological limits that define where one person ends and another begins, encompassing emotional, physical, time, and energy parameters. Healthy boundaries are not walls or acts of aggression; they are acts of self-definition that communicate what you need to feel safe, respected, and whole in your relationships.

Before we go anywhere else, let’s clear up the biggest misconception I encounter in my practice: boundaries are not about shutting people out. They are not coldness. They are not punishment. And they are definitely not a sign that something is wrong with your relationships.

Healthy Boundaries

Healthy Boundaries: A healthy boundary is a clear, honest expression of your limits, values, and needs — communicated in a way that respects both yourself and the other person. Boundaries define where you end and someone else begins. They are not about controlling what others do; they are about clarifying what you will and won’t do, accept, or participate in. In the context of relational health, boundaries are what make genuine intimacy possible — because real closeness requires that two separate, intact people actually show up.

Here’s the thing about boundaries: they’re not actually about keeping people out. They’re about keeping yourself in. In. The room. In. The relationship. In. Your own body and sense of self. When you don’t have them, what tends to happen is that you start to disappear — slowly, incrementally — until you wake up one day and realize you’ve been running your entire life around other people’s needs, preferences, and feelings, with very little left over for your own.

Nina Brown’s research on relational enmeshment (2010) describes this beautifully: the absence of psychological boundaries doesn’t lead to closeness — it leads to a kind of fusion that actually prevents real intimacy, because you can’t truly connect with someone who has obliterated themselves to accommodate you. You can only connect with someone who is actually, distinctly there.

So when I talk about helping my clients learn healthy boundaries, I’m talking about helping them become more present, more authentic, and more genuinely available in their relationships — not less connected. This is also deeply tied to your attachment style — because the capacity for genuine intimacy that boundaries protect requires a secure enough base to tolerate being a separate self in the first place.

Why Boundaries Feel So Impossibly Hard for Trauma Survivors

If you grew up in a home where your needs were reliably met, where “no” was treated as useful information rather than a declaration of war, where the adults in your life were emotionally consistent and non-retaliatory — then setting boundaries in relationships probably feels, at most, mildly uncomfortable.

But if you grew up in a home where expressing needs was met with anger, guilt, withdrawal, or punishment — where compliance was the price of love — your nervous system learned something very specific: self-expression is dangerous. The very act of saying “I need” or “I don’t want” or “that doesn’t work for me” became encoded as a threat to survival.

This is not melodrama. This is neurobiology.

Research by Bowlby (1988) and later attachment theorists established that children organize their behavior around maintaining proximity to their attachment figures — even when those figures are frightening or inconsistent. If saying no reliably resulted in your parent becoming cold, angry, or volatile, your developing nervous system didn’t file that under “healthy self-expression.” It filed it under “emergency: do not attempt.” This is why understanding your attachment patterns is so directly relevant to boundary work — they’re two aspects of the same early wound.

Van der Kolk’s (2014) groundbreaking work on trauma and the body showed us that these early survival adaptations get wired into the body at a somatic level — meaning they bypass conscious thought entirely. That stomach clench you feel before telling your boss you can’t take on another project? That constriction in your throat when you try to say no to your mother? That’s not weakness. That’s your nervous system executing a program that once kept you safe, even if it’s now keeping you stuck. For a deeper look at exactly how this works physiologically, the relationship between trauma and the nervous system offers essential context.

Take Meredith (not her real name — I’ve changed identifying details to protect her privacy). She’s a 41-year-old attorney, partner at her firm, and the kind of person who negotiates multi-million-dollar deals across the conference table without flinching. She came to see me after her second marriage ended — a pattern she desperately wanted to understand.

In session after session, the same thing emerged: Meredith was fearless in professional contexts where the rules were clear and the stakes were impersonal. But the moment a relationship felt emotionally important to her, something shifted. She’d start monitoring her partner’s moods, smoothing over friction before it became conflict, apologizing for things that weren’t her fault, shrinking her own preferences to avoid rocking the boat.

“I know how to set limits with opposing counsel,” she told me once, with a kind of rueful laugh. “But with my ex-husband? I couldn’t tell him I didn’t want to go to his parents’ house for Christmas without rehearsing it for a week and still apologizing the whole drive there.”

Meredith grew up with a mother who experienced her daughter’s independence as abandonment. Any assertion of preference — a different opinion, wanting to spend the weekend with friends, not wanting to call every day — was met with extended cold silences that could last for days. Meredith learned, in her bones, that self-expression in close relationships equaled loss of love. No amount of professional confidence could override that early wiring without deliberate therapeutic work. This is the same pattern I explore in depth when discussing people-pleasing as a trauma response — it’s not a character flaw, it’s an adaptation that deserves compassion and a path forward.

Trauma Response

Trauma Response: A trauma response is any behavioral, emotional, cognitive, or physiological pattern that the nervous system developed in response to threatening or overwhelming experiences — originally as a means of surviving those experiences. Trauma responses (including people-pleasing, fawning, emotional shutdown, and the inability to set limits) are not character flaws or personal failings; they are adaptive strategies that made sense in the original context and that require compassionate, body-based therapeutic work to gradually rewire.

The Different Types of Boundaries You Actually Need


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Part of why “how to set boundaries” can feel so vague is that the concept covers a remarkably wide range of human experience. In my practice, I find it helps to get specific. Here are the main categories of boundaries, and what they look like in real life:

Physical Boundaries

These involve your body, your space, and your physical comfort. Who can touch you, how, and when. Whether your bedroom door is closed or open. How much physical proximity feels comfortable. Physical boundaries also include your need for rest, sleep, and bodily autonomy.

Emotional Boundaries

Emotional boundaries define the difference between empathy and absorption. They allow you to care about someone’s pain without taking it on as your own responsibility to fix. They protect you from becoming a container for others’ emotional regulation — which, for many women with relational trauma histories, has been a lifelong role. Emotional boundaries also determine how much of your own emotional life you share with others, and when.

Time Boundaries

Time is finite, and how you spend it reflects your values. Time boundaries involve being honest about your availability, protecting your rest and recovery time, and refusing to let urgency (yours or others’) consistently override your own priorities. For driven, ambitious women, this is often where things break down most visibly — saying yes to everything until the calendar becomes a prison.

Intellectual and Belief Boundaries

These protect your right to your own thoughts, opinions, values, and beliefs — even when they diverge from the people closest to you. In families where conformity was survival, developing an independent perspective can still feel, decades later, like an act of dangerous rebellion.

Digital Boundaries

A newer but increasingly essential category: whether you respond to texts and emails at midnight, what you share on social media, and how available you allow yourself to be at all hours. For driven women in high-demand roles, digital boundaries are often the last to be established and the first to collapse under pressure.

Setting Boundaries with Family — Especially Difficult Parents

“If you grew up in a household where saying “no” felt dangerous, where your needs were dismissed or mocked, or where love felt conditional on compliance, you probably didn’t learn how to set boundaries — you learned how to abandon yourself to keep the peace.”

Of all the boundaries with family my clients work on, family-of-origin boundaries consistently prove the most charged, most complicated, and most important. The reason is simple: the family is where the original programming happened.

If you grew up with difficult family dynamics, you know that holiday visits, Sunday dinners, and even phone calls can feel like stepping back into a version of yourself you’ve worked hard to outgrow. The old roles — the good one, the peacemaker, the one who holds everything together — activate automatically, no matter how much work you’ve done.

Research by Minuchin (1974) on family systems theory gives us important language here: families develop implicit rules, and those rules tend to resist change, even when individual family members grow. When you start setting boundaries with parents, you’re not just having a different conversation — you’re challenging the structural logic of the system. Families often push back hard, not out of malice, but because systems are conservative by nature. If there was also narcissistic abuse in your family of origin, this pushback can be particularly fierce — and particularly disorienting.

What this looks like practically:

  • Be specific, not global. “I’m not able to talk on the phone for more than thirty minutes on weeknights” lands better than “You call too much.”
  • State what you will do, not only what you won’t. “I can do Sunday dinners twice a month — not every week” gives something positive to hold onto.
  • Expect the first response to be pushback. Guilt, protests, hurt, manipulation — this is the system trying to reassert its homeostasis. It doesn’t mean you did anything wrong.
  • Repetition is part of the process. You may need to state the same boundary multiple times before it’s actually respected. This is normal, not failure.

A note specifically on setting boundaries with parents who have personality disorders or high narcissistic traits: the usual logic — explain yourself, invite dialogue, appeal to their empathy — often doesn’t apply. Brief, clear, low-drama statements work far better than lengthy emotional conversations. Less information gives less to argue with. I go deeper into the specific dynamics of navigating a narcissistic mother in that piece, which many clients find grounding when they’re working this territory.

Boundaries at Work for the Driven Woman

Here’s a pattern I see constantly: the same woman who can barely get through a phone call with her mother without collapsing her own needs entirely has somehow managed to build a highly successful career. She’s direct in meetings, she advocates for her team, she can tell a client that their timeline isn’t realistic.

But then the 11 PM email comes in from a demanding senior leader, and she answers it. And the weekend “quick question” that takes two hours, and she responds. And the colleague who reliably dumps emotional labor on her, and she absorbs it. And slowly, without ever making a single dramatic choice, she’s working seventy-hour weeks and wondering why she feels so depleted.

This isn’t about lacking professional confidence. Research by Babcock and Laschever (2003) documented how women face a documented social penalty for direct negotiation and limit-setting at work — what’s assertive in a man is often labeled aggressive or difficult in a woman. So for many of my clients, workplace boundary-setting isn’t just personally challenging; it carries real professional risk. This dynamic is explored in depth in my piece on workaholism and ambition as armor — where the overworking itself becomes a way of proving worth that was never unconditionally given.

And yet, as I explored in detail in this post on how boundaries impact every area of your life, the absence of work boundaries doesn’t just affect your productivity. It affects your health, your relationships, your sense of self, and your capacity for the deep, creative work your ambition actually deserves.

A few principles for workplace boundaries that don’t require you to become someone you’re not:

  • Use “let me check my calendar” as a buffer. It’s not a lie — it creates a pause between request and response that allows you to answer from intention rather than anxiety.
  • Make your yes more meaningful by making your no possible. When everything is urgent and everything gets a yes, the word “yes” loses all value — including to you.
  • Your job description is a boundary document. Understanding the actual scope of your role gives you legitimate ground to stand on when asked to absorb others’ responsibilities.
  • Model the culture you want. If you want a team that respects work-life limits, start by demonstrating that you respect your own.

When Boundaries Trigger Guilt (Because They Will)

One of the things I want to be honest with you about: setting boundaries will, for a period, feel terrible. Specifically, it will likely produce guilt — sometimes a quite intense guilt that interprets any limit-setting as selfishness, cruelty, or abandonment.

This guilt is not a signal that you’re doing something wrong. It’s a signal that you’re doing something new in a nervous system that spent years learning that self-expression equals danger.

Cloud and Townsend (1992), in their foundational work on this topic, make a crucial distinction: guilt can arise from actually violating your own values — which deserves attention. But it can also arise from violating someone else’s expectations of unlimited access to your time, energy, and compliance. That second kind of guilt is information about the expectation, not about your actual wrongdoing.

It can help to ask: Did I behave according to my own values in that interaction? If yes — if you were honest, kind, and clear — then the guilt is the nervous system’s old alarm going off in a new situation. It doesn’t need to be acted on. It just needs to be felt and let pass. This is closely related to the work of recognizing and interrupting self-sabotage — because guilt-driven backtracking on limits is one of the most common ways trauma survivors sabotage their own growth.

As I’ve written about in this post on signs your boundaries need work, chronic guilt about self-assertion is one of the clearest indicators that something important needs attention. It’s not a character flaw — it’s a symptom, and it responds to treatment.

Practical Scripts and Exercises for Setting Boundaries

The Broken Record Technique

When someone continues to push past a stated boundary, the most effective response is often calm, consistent repetition — not escalating explanation. Choose one clear sentence and repeat it without elaboration: “That doesn’t work for me.” “I’m not available for that.” “I’ve already said no to this.” Each additional explanation you add gives more material to argue with.

The Delay Script

For those moments when you know a yes is forming in your mouth before your actual preference has even registered:

  • “Let me think about that and get back to you.”
  • “I need to check in with myself before I commit to that.”
  • “I’ll need to look at my schedule — I’ll follow up tomorrow.”

This sounds simple, but for chronic people-pleasers, creating a gap between request and response is genuinely revolutionary. That gap is where your actual preferences live.

The Somatic Check-In

Before responding to a request you feel ambivalent about, take a single conscious breath and drop your attention into your body. Notice: does your chest feel open or tight? Does your stomach feel calm or contracted? Does your body feel expansive or like it wants to shrink? These somatic signals often register your true response before your conscious mind has had a chance to override it with obligation.

Journaling Practice: The Inventory

At the end of each week, take 15 minutes to journal through these questions:

  • Where did I say yes this week when I wanted to say no?
  • What did I agree to out of guilt, fear of conflict, or people-pleasing?
  • Where did I successfully honor a limit, and what made that possible?
  • What is one boundary I want to practice next week?

This isn’t about self-criticism — it’s about building awareness, which is always the first step. You can’t change patterns you can’t see.

The Values Clarity Exercise

Many people find it helpful to get clear on their actual values before trying to identify their actual limits — because boundaries grow from values. Spend twenty minutes writing out answers to these questions: What are the five things that matter most to me in how I spend my time and energy? What do I need to function at my best — physically, emotionally, relationally? What am I consistently sacrificing that I actually need back?

As I explore in this post on what my toddler’s bookshelf taught me about boundaries, sometimes the clearest lessons about limits come from the most unexpected places — and the key insight is almost always about the difference between connection and enmeshment. And if you’re working through the values piece with a broader lens, trauma-informed goal setting offers a framework for aligning your ambitions with what you actually value — not what you’ve been trained to chase.

When Boundary Work Needs Professional Support

I want to be real with you: for many of the women I work with, the intellectual understanding of healthy limits came long before the actual capacity to hold them. If you’ve read every book, know the theory, and still find yourself collapsing every time someone expresses disappointment, that’s not a failure of effort. That’s nervous system work — and it often requires professional support to shift.

Working with a trauma-informed therapist on boundaries goes beyond learning scripts. It involves identifying the specific childhood experiences that made self-expression feel unsafe, processing those experiences at a somatic level so they no longer hijack your present-day responses, and building a new internal template for relationships where your needs are treated as legitimate — starting with the therapeutic relationship itself. For a clear-eyed look at what this process actually involves, how therapy actually works demystifies what you’re signing up for.

EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) can be particularly effective for the specific memories — a parent’s rage, a partner’s manipulation, a childhood incident of being punished for saying no — that are still running the show. EMDR therapy has a strong evidence base specifically for these kinds of attachment-based trauma memories. IFS (Internal Family Systems) therapy is useful for understanding the “part” of you that does the people-pleasing: not as a flaw to eliminate, but as a once-protective adaptation that can gradually learn new ways of keeping you safe.

If you recognize yourself in what I’ve described here, I’d gently invite you to consider that working on your boundaries is not optional self-improvement. For women with relational trauma histories, it’s often the linchpin of everything else — relationships, health, ambition, and the basic lived experience of feeling like your life is actually yours.

Here’s to healing relational trauma and creating thriving lives on solid foundations.

Warmly,
Annie

RESOURCES & REFERENCES

  1. ; felt dangerous, where your needs were dismissed or mocked, or where love felt conditional on compliance, you probably didn&#
  2. ;t learn how to set boundaries — you learned how to abandon yourself to keep the peace. Boundaries aren&#
  3. ;t walls or weapons. They&#
  4. ;re the honest expression of what you need to function, connect, and stay true to yourself. For trauma survivors, learning to set them is one of the most radical — and most necessary — acts of healing. This guide walks you through what healthy boundaries actually are (and aren&#
  5. ;t), why they feel so impossibly hard for driven women with relational trauma histories, and exactly how to start setting them — with family, at work, and in the relationships that matter most.
How can I start setting boundaries without feeling like I’m being selfish or hurting others’ feelings?

It’s common to feel apprehension when first setting boundaries, especially if you’re accustomed to prioritizing others. Begin by identifying one small area where you feel consistently drained and practice asserting a minor need or saying ‘no’ gently. Remember, healthy boundaries are an act of self-care that ultimately leads to more respectful and balanced relationships.

I often feel guilty after I set a boundary, even when I know it’s necessary. Is this normal, and how can I manage it?

Yes, feeling guilty after setting boundaries is very common, often rooted in past experiences where your needs might have been overlooked. Acknowledge the guilt without letting it control your actions. Remind yourself that establishing limits is a crucial step towards honoring your own well-being and fostering healthier interactions, not a selfish act.

What if setting boundaries causes conflict or pushes important people away from me?

It’s a valid concern that boundaries might introduce tension or shift relationship dynamics. However, genuine connections are built on mutual respect and understanding. Those who truly value you will adapt to and respect your limits, while those who resist might be revealing an imbalance that needed to be addressed for your long-term health.

I’m a high-achiever, and I often feel like I need to do everything myself. How do boundaries fit into this drive for success?

For driven women, boundaries are essential for sustainable success and preventing burnout. They help you delegate, protect your time, and ensure you’re not constantly overextending yourself. Setting limits allows you to channel your energy more effectively, leading to greater fulfillment and preventing the exhaustion that can accompany relentless striving.

I’ve tried setting boundaries before, but I struggle to maintain them consistently. How can I make them stick?

Maintaining boundaries requires consistent practice and self-compassion. Start by clearly communicating your boundaries and the consequences of them being crossed. When challenges arise, gently reassert your limits without shame or apology. Over time, consistency reinforces your boundaries and teaches others how to treat you, making them easier to uphold.

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About the Author

Annie Wright

LMFT  ·  Relational Trauma Specialist  ·  W.W. Norton Author

Helping ambitious women finally feel as good as their résumé looks.

As a licensed psychotherapist, trauma-informed executive coach, and relational trauma specialist with over 15,000 clinical hours, she guides ambitious women — including Silicon Valley leaders, physicians, and entrepreneurs — in repairing the psychological foundations beneath their impressive lives. Annie is the founder and former CEO of Evergreen Counseling, a multimillion-dollar trauma-informed therapy center she built, scaled, and successfully exited. A regular contributor to Psychology Today, her expert commentary has appeared in Forbes, Business Insider, Inc., NBC, and The Information. She is currently writing her first book with W.W. Norton.

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Annie Wright, LMFT

Annie Wright

LMFT · 15,000+ Clinical Hours · W.W. Norton Author · Psychology Today Columnist

Annie Wright is a licensed psychotherapist, relational trauma specialist, and the founder and successfully exited CEO of a large California trauma-informed therapy center. A W.W. Norton published author, she writes the weekly Substack Strong & Stable and her work and expert opinions have appeared in NPR, NBC, Forbes, Business Insider, The Boston Globe, and The Information.

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