Boundaries
- Norman L. Coad D. M.
- Nov 4
- 11 min read
Boundaries are guidelines, rules and limits, the purpose of which are to be able to
relate to one another without hurting or doing damage to one other. They are for
protection of ourselves and those who relate closely to us. Some boundaries are
societal or global, some are personal. Whatever type they are, the general goal is the
same. Boundaries help to define us as a people, and personally, as individuals.
Boundaries set limits for each person individually. They make clear the limits of our
personal freedom. Boundaries also set limits of appropriate behavior of society as a
whole in relation to its citizens. Neither individuals, nor governments, have unlimited
freedom.
Boundaries set the point at which a limit has been violated. They set the line where
societal authority ends and where individual authority begins, and conversely, where
individual authority ends and where societal authority begins.
For most people, boundaries are absorbed and interpreted from their family of origin.
If the family has reasonably good or healthy boundaries, then there is structure that
assures love, safety and security, etc. (See the article A Healthy Family Structure
an Interpretation of Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs.) As a rule, the healthier
the family, the better the boundaries. The healthier the family, the more functional and
well-adjusted the members of the family are. Families marked by poor boundaries
often exhibit dysfunctional adaptations to life. When corrupt behaviors, values,
thoughts and emotions occur, everyone in the family is afflicted. These faulty
adaptations to acute, ongoing dysfunctions result in dysfunctional maladapted
individuals. They often project this into the future with ongoing wounding to
themselves and those around them. Various types of abuse occur: verbal, emotional,
sexual, psychological, physical, ritual or religious. Abuse occurs when basic needs are
not nurtured. Negative, critical, faultfinding relationships of perfectionism often occur
and do great damage to children. Their self-esteem is not nurtured and they become
discouraged. Making age-inappropriate demands does its part to wound as does
emotional deprivation and shaming in a chaotic family environment.
In order to relate in such a way that we do not hurt someone else and they do not hurt
us, we must respect, accept and obey the limits set by others and ourselves. The
boundaries set by others for us all are arbitrary. We personally and directly are notgiven a vote in the matter. When we become aware of boundaries, they are found all
around us. They are everywhere at the same time and are of many kinds.
Arbitrary boundaries are imposed on us by the authority structures governing us.
Their purpose is to limit or stop the mayhem that intentionally or accidentally injures
others in some way. Their objective is to limit destruction, corruption, evil,
wickedness and violence against others. These set outside limits beyond which we are
not permitted to go. They are not intended to impose rigid, minute control but allow
us individual choice as to how we are to conform to the broad norms of society.
One group of arbitrary boundaries are our traffic laws. These are clearly set to protect
our lives and are systematically consistently reinforced. For example, a stop sign is
always eight sided, painted red and says “STOP.” Its meaning is defined in our traffic
laws: “Bring the vehicle to a full stop. Look both ways. When it is clear. Proceed
ahead.” Our highways are divided by lanes with painted stripes. We are taught to
drive on the right side of the road and stay in our lane except when passing. Daily we
pass many cars very closely but do not get hurt. However, if we decide to exercise our
personal freedom and drive on the left side of the road, our pain, and the pain of
others will go up dramatically. This is a misuse of our freedom and shows very poor
judgment. There are speed limits and warning signs as well.
All effective traffic limits require that they be reinforced. Police officers are
empowered by law to enforce the traffic laws. They write tickets, levy judgments that
bring certain negative results on the drivers from fines to revoking their license. This
lowers the pain of relating closely. It is a positive outcome. It is not selfish, or a
misuse of authority. It is necessary.
Another type of law is that which is self-imposed. This is the restraining power of
religious beliefs and practices. Traditionally, in America, the religious boundaries are
based on the Jewish Scriptures of the Bible. Biblical limits are placed on individual
and collective behaviors. The boundaries arise from the very nature of the Judeo-
Christian God, Who is three-in-one, Father, Son and Holy Spirit. He created us and all
that is. The boundaries instruct and discipline us so that we live in harmony with God,
nature and ourselves. Everything arises out of a personal, loving, obedient relationship
to Him.
The Ten Commandments are behavioral and moral limits for we humans to follow.
They are universal and transcend the laws of man of every language, nationality and
culture. They are for us all. They are a reduction of the Law of Moses into ten
principles of healthy living. (Exodus 20:1-17) They state:• Love Me (God) and keep My commandments.
• Do not misuse the name of the Lord your God.
• Worship the Lord your God. Do not worship idols. If you worship idols, you curse
yourself and your generations.
• Honor your father and your mother.
• Do not murder.
• Do not commit adultery.
• Do not steal.
• Do not lie.
• Do not covet.
There are many boundaries that limit damage done in interpersonal relationships:
Protection of Life
• If a man kills someone unintentionally, he is to flee to a refuge place. (Exodus
21:13)
• If a man kills someone deliberately—Take him away…and kill him. (Exodus 21:14)
• If someone hits a pregnant woman that causing severe damage he is to be fined
based on a premature birth and based on the damage done. (Exodus 21:22-25)
Protection of Property
• If a man steals an animal, he must pay back four to five times its value lost.
• If a man’s animal grazes into another man’s field and causes destruction he must
restore from the best of his field or vineyard. (Exodus 22:5)• When silver or gold is given to another for safe keeping and it is stolen, he shall be judged and pay back double the loss.
Social Responsibility
• If a man seduces a virgin who is not married and sleeps with her, he must pay the
bride price. (Exodus 22:16-17)
• Do not mistreat an alien or oppress him.
• Do not take advantage of an orphan or a widow. If they cry out to Me, I (God) will
certainly hear and kill you. (Exodus 22:22-24)
Laws of Justice and Mercy
• Do not spread false reports.
• Do not help the wicked man by being a false witness. (Exodus 23:1)
• Do not side with a crowd and pervert justice. (Exodus 23: 2-3)
Regulations About Infectious Disease
• Infectious diseases—Leviticus 13:1-46; 14:1-32.
• Unlawful sexual relations—Leviticus 18:3, 4, 6-8; 19:20, 21, 29.
• Various laws—Exodus 19:1-37.
These were summarized by the Lord Jesus Christ, “Love the Lord your God with all
your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind. This is the first and greatest
commandment. And the second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself. All the Law
and the Prophets hang on these two commandments”. (Matthew 22:37-40 NIV)
How to Set Boundaries
After 430 years in Egypt, most of it serving as slaves, the people of Israel left Egypt
and went to Mount Sinai. There the Lord spoke to Moses and began teaching former
slaves how to live as freemen and free women in society. He stated their purpose as anation, “You are to be for Me (God) a kingdom of priests and a holy nation (Exodus
19:6). Priests were to be wholly consecrated to His service and be channels of God’s
grace to the nations. (Genesis 12:2-3; 42:1-4; 49:8-12; Isaiah 61:6; I Peter 2:5;
Revelation 1:6; 5:10; 20:6) [1]
The first teachings about boundaries were directives to Moses from God: Go to the
people today and tomorrow and consecrate by washing their clothes and abstaining
from sex. Be ready for I will come down on Mount Sinai (in fire, thunder and
lightning, and a sounding of the trumpet louder and louder and God make. (Exodus
19:16-19)
Clear Instructions
• Put limits (boundaries) for the people around the mountain.
• Tell them, “Do not go up the mountain. Do not touch the foot of it.”
• Give the warning, “Whoever touches the mountain shall surely be put to death.”
• Put in place the means of enforcement: the offenders shall be stoned or shot with
arrows.
• This order is in place until the ram’s horn sounds a long blast.
Principles of Boundary Setting
The purpose of a boundary is to lower the pain of relating closely in community.
• Set the boundaries clearly for everybody involved.
• When the boundaries are set, expect that someone will violate them.
• Set consequences if the boundaries are not kept. (The consequences should fit the offense.)
• Set up a means of reinforcing the boundaries by following through with the consequences promised. Be consistent.
• When boundaries are set and reinforced you will lose painful, dysfunctional relationships.
• When the boundaries are set and reinforced you will gain low pain, functional relationships.
Codependency
It takes two to make a codependent relationship. These characteristics arose out of
study of alcoholic families. In codependent families there are three parts: the user and
abuser, the used and abused and the children who live in the family who make
dysfunctional adaptations in order to survive. They learn how to live dysfunctionally
and they are very wounded. In this section, the emphasis will be on the primary
relationship of the user and abuser and the used and abused.
These roles may be filled either by men as user and abuser or women. They may even
switch roles. However, the more common model is the male in the role of user and
abuser.
The User and Abuser
• They have been used and abused themselves. They are often given to self-
medicating with alcohol and drugs and are addicted.
• They feel they must dominate, manipulate and control, or their needs will not be met.
• Their means of control and manipulation vary from charm, use of sex, to violent aggressive behaviors.
• In the codependent life, they have chosen to always win. That means everyone else in the relationship must lose.
• They are profoundly self-centered.
• They seek and find those who will allow themselves to be used and abused in order
to fulfill their own need to control.
• They isolate their victims from all support systems they can in order to maintain
dominance.
• When the victim leaves, the user/abuser feels betrayed and that the victim is ungrateful. He has very low self-esteem.
• They blame the victim and almost never see themselves as aggressive users and abusers.
• Their denial of all responsibilities for the “break up” is absolute. However, if false contrition will get them back, then they will use it.
• After they give up getting the victim back, they seek and find another to take their place.
• Some users and abusers are aggressive to the point of physical abuse and kill their victim.
• Verbal, emotional, psychological and physical abuse, along with blaming and shaming, are commonplace.
• They continually violate and cross healthy boundaries.
The Used and Abused Victim
• She submits to the user/abuser all or most of the time in order to have relationship.
• She either has no boundaries, or very poor boundaries.
• The worse the boundaries, the worse the abuse and the greater the pain.
• She submits and feels used and abused.
• She internalizes the fear, pain and unmet expectations, and rages quietly within.
• She rationalizes to maintain the relationship: “He needs me. I can help him an make things better. He really loves me.”
• She often self-medicates with alcohol and drugs.
• She has very low self-esteem and feels if she does not submit then she will have no one.
• Codependent relationships are win/lose. She always loses. There is no balance, no give and take.
• The relationship will last as long as she can contain her anger/rage, or to the point
where fear, pain and unmet expectations can no longer be endured. She will break off
the relationship and leave at this point. The time of being a doormat and being walked
on is over (usually only for a while).
• She retreats within rigid walls, the purpose of which is to protect herself from being
hurt ever again.
• She builds the walls of isolation in various ways: by anger, by silence, by leaving and putting physical distance between herself and her abuser.
• Rigid walls protect, but they do not provide any means of relating. She becomes lonely.
• Loneliness cannot be endured. They may reason, “Any relationship is better than none at all.”
• They go back to what they knew and take up the victim role again. The process may
be repeated over and over again.
• They internalize the thought, “I do not know how to choose good men; I’m a mess. I
do not deserve any better.” They often destruct and hate themselves.
• They always wait for the abuser to do the right thing. They never, or only after time
and great pain, take the initiative to protect themselves and leave the abusive situation.
There are only four ways of relating to others. Only one of these is healthy and can be
maintained over time. What kind of relationship one has depends on what kind of
boundaries one has and that determines the amount of wounding you have.
Boundaries in Relationships
The four boundaries are: No Boundaries, Holes in Your Boundaries (poor boundaries), Rigid Walls and Reciprocal Boundaries:
No Boundaries (win/lose)
Others always decide. They are always being hurt. The pain is always extreme. Anger
and rage are internalized until the emotional, psychological and physical pain cannot
be endured.The relationship is over, at least for a while, and the relationship comes to an end.
Poor Boundaries (holes in boundaries)
This person usually has good work boundaries but poor personal boundaries. She does
not know how or just does not set personal boundaries. They love their work. The
boundaries are set for them. They love the structures the boundaries provide, and they
feel safe and are able to function well.
In their personal life they live like the person with no boundaries. Their personal life
is a painful shamble.
Rigid Walls
This is usually a short-term fallback place of protection from pain. The walls of protection do not allow relationships, only isolation. They become lonely and seek relationship like what they had in the past. They feel acute loneliness, find someone and go to euphoria, repeat the same mistakes, become enraged and pain filled. Then they repeat the whole process over again.The last boundary they learn is the only one that works overtime. It is a permeable boundary:
• The person sets and maintains a complete boundary around himself/herself at all times.
• Within the boundary is a door that allows relationships when needed and sought after.
• The door only has a handle on the inside of the boundary so that the person within has sole authority to open and close the door.
• The person within takes authority and assertively maintains the boundary and decides when and for what reason to open the door. They are in charge of their own space.
• Accept that the people they relate to have and should have the same authority to
maintain their boundaries and relate as they choose as well as they.
• They give themselves the right to say “Yes” or “No” without guilt or feeling selfish.
They know that this is healthy and normal, not selfish and wrong.
• Their relationships are marked by a balance between them of giving and receiving or
give and take.
• There is reciprocity between them. It is not all give on one side and all receive on the
other but giving and receiving that goes back and forth.
• They realize that no one is without wants and needs. The relationship is maintained
so that those wants and needs are naturally met.
• If one always gives and one always takes then the one who gives becomes “mined
out” and ends up empty, depleted of emotional, psychological and physical resources.
For more information and help check out Dr. Coad’s book, The Divided Soul in the
Book Store.
Category: Norman's Place
Tag: Multiple Personality Disorder





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