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How to Set Boundaries in Friendships for Women with Bipolar Disorder |
Friendships are essential for emotional support when dealing with Bipolar disorder, but without setting boundaries in your relationships they can become overwhelming for both parties. Many women with Bipolar disorder struggle with people-pleasing, emotional exhaustion and imbalances in their friendship relationships. It is important to remember that setting boundaries is key to making healthy connections with people, practicing self-care and mental health management. Setting boundaries is not selfish, rather it is a crucial aspect of maintaining long-lasting relationships that enhance your wellness journey rather than deplete your emotional well-being.
In this article I will examine why boundaries are essential to women with Bipolar disorder, explore signs of unhealthy friendships, and actionable strategies for setting and enforcing boundaries while maintaining meaningful relationships.
Understanding Boundaries: Why They’re Essential for Women with Bipolar Disorder
Defining Boundaries
Boundaries are the limits and guidelines that define acceptable behaviours and interactions in relationships and personal life, helping individuals feel safe, respected, and in control of their own well-being. Boundaries are also considered as the “invisible lines” that dictate what behaviours, thoughts, and actions are acceptable and unacceptable in a given situation or relationship. Types of boundaries include the following:
Physical boundaries: These relate to personal space, touch or physical needs. For example, you may find yourself in a situation where you are uncomfortable being hugged by your friend so it's important to communicate your physical boundaries to avoid invasion of your personal space.
Emotional boundaries: These involve protecting your feelings, thoughts, and emotional needs, and separating your emotions from those of others. For instance, if you are developing a new friendship with someone but you worry about oversharing because they are very open with their thoughts and feelings, setting emotional boundaries is a way to maintain balance in the friendship while still developing trust.
Intellectual boundaries: These relate to respecting your own beliefs, ideas, and opinions. For example, It is important to maintain your intellectual boundaries in your friendships without allowing others to overshadow or diminish your beliefs, ideas and opinions with their own
Time boundaries: These refer to the limits you set on how you spend your time, protecting your energy and ensuring you have enough time for what’s important, whether it’s work, personal life, hobbies, or self-care. When managing your mental health, sleep hygiene is very important so giving people a specific window to connect with you in the evenings can limit interruptions to self-care practice.
Sexual boundaries: These involve respecting your own and other’s right to consent and communicate preferences around intimacy. When dealing with a friendship where there is a possibility of sexual boundaries being crossed it is important to address and clarify what your preferences around intimacy are within the relationship.
Financial boundaries: These relate to setting limits on how much you spend or lend to others. Money can be a breaking point in any friendship when financial boundaries are not defined from the onset. You can feel disillusioned or taken advantage of if your friendship develops into a financial exchange rather than a mutually beneficial connection.
Spiritual boundaries: These involve protecting your own beliefs and values. Maintaining spiritual boundaries can involve saying ‘no’ to a friend or walking away from a relationship that compromises your core belief or value system.
The Impact of Poor Boundaries on Mental Health
Now that you have an understanding of what boundaries are and the different categories they exist in it’s important to examine the impact of poor boundaries on mental health. Increased stress, emotional burnout and mood instability can be the result of not setting and managing your boundaries in friendships. Because women with Bipolar disorder often exhibit people-pleasing behaviours in their friendships, stress, emotional and mood instability can increase due to their inability to say ‘no’ when they are feeling overwhelmed. Although setting boundaries is key to managing friendships these limits are considered poor boundaries when you allow them to be crossed without attaching a consequence.
There is the fear that when a boundary is crossed and you address the violation the friendship will end. This may be the case for some relationships depending on the boundary, how badly it's been violated and the resulting consequences but it is not true for every circumstance. When you set boundaries in a valued friendship this allows opportunities for open communication and understanding. Boundary-setting helps with mood regulation and emotional balance for women experiencing Bipolar disorder. We should not be afraid to say ‘no’ rather we should focus on the outcome for our mental well-being when we don’t adhere to the boundaries we set for ourselves in friendships. All action or inactions come with consequences so it is up to you to decide if the relationship is important enough to compromise my mental health journey.
Signs You Need to Set Boundaries in Your Friendships
Re-evaluating your friendships is always challenging. Deciding which relationships are healthy and beneficial for your journey to wellness and better mental health can be difficult but an important part of personal growth and self-care. Friendships go through ebbs and flows over the course of a lifetime. There is a saying that captures the nature of relationships: “Some people are in your life for a reason and others for a season.”
If you are feeling any of the following in your friendships perhaps it's time to consider setting healthy boundaries that speak to your mental well-being.
Signs You Need to Set Boundaries
Feeling Resentful or Irritated:
If you constantly feel resentful, irritated, or hurt by your friend’s actions, words or behaviours it's a sign that you need to set boundaries.
Feeling Overwhelmed or Emotionally Drained:
If you are constantly feeling overwhelmed or emotionally drained after interactions with a friend it is important to consider setting emotional boundaries.
Lack of Respect for Your Time, Feelings or Personal Space:
If your friend regularly disregards your feelings, time or personal space it's an indication that they are violating your intellectual, time and physical boundaries.
Difficulty Saying No or Expressing Yourself:
If you are having trouble expressing your feelings, beliefs, values or saying “no” to a friend consider evaluating your feelings around spiritual boundaries in your relationship.
Over-Relying On You:
If your friend relies too heavily on you for emotional or financial support and you are feeling unappreciated or de-valued, your emotional or financial boundaries need to be prioritized.
Gossip or Betrayal:
If your friend is constantly gossiping about other people or you have a healthy fear that they may betray you to others in the same way, it's important to set limitations to protect yourself and your personal information, consider setting intellectual or emotional boundaries.
Lack of Empathy:
If you have a friend that does not show empathy when you are sharing the challenges you face with your mental health, if they ignore or attempt to minimize your experiences perhaps it's time to set boundaries protecting your core beliefs and values.
Jealousy and Possessiveness:
If you have a friend that is jealous of your time with others or possessive of your attention this often leads to a violation of your personal time and time you need for self-care. It is important to address this issue by setting healthy time boundaries.
Anxiety and Stress Provoking:
Some friends can provoke anxiety or stress in you and you may not be sure why. I call these “The Walk on Eggshell” friendships. Perhaps they are emotionally volatile, substance users or experience mood instability. Whatever the reason they can trigger mood instability in you and therefore it's time to re-evaluate your boundaries within this friendship.
If you are experiencing any of the above in your friendships they are signs that you should consider establishing healthy boundaries or re-consider the current boundaries that you have set in your relationships. Setting boundaries will not be easy but they will benefit your mental wellness and the long-term health of your friendships by promoting open communication, empathy, understanding and mutual respect.
How to Set Healthy Boundaries in Friendships
Setting boundaries within a friendship can be challenging, especially if the relationship has already established norms and expectations that new limitations go against. It is important to remember boundary-setting is for both parties to maintain the long-term growth and health of the relationship. Below are a few guidelines you can use when establishing healthy boundaries in your friendship.
Communicating Boundaries Clearly and Kindly
Use "I" statements: Expressing needs without guilt or blame. Starting a conversation with “I feel,” “I think,” or “I believe” can go a long way in opening the line of communication for setting clear and kind boundaries.
Be direct yet compassionate: Balancing honesty with empathy. It is important to speak your truth in a direct and compassionate way. Using words like “Understand,” “Appreciate,” or "Realize" can help lay the groundwork for an open, direct and honest conversation about your need for boundaries.
Practice boundary-setting scripts to help you navigate difficult conversations. An example of a boundary-setting script can be “I appreciate that you are a night owl and would prefer to talk after 10pm, however I have trouble staying awake that late and often lose the thread of our conversations because I’m exhausted. I feel a better time for us to connect is after 7PM and before 10PM so we can both enjoy each other's company and get the rest we need.”
Maintaining Boundaries Over Time
Consistency is key: It is important to stay consistent when reinforcing your boundaries. Over time and in certain circumstances you may forget your boundary and its importance to your mental health. Writing your boundaries and their importance to you and the friendship might be helpful. Reviewing them regularly with your friends may also be beneficial for their respect and understanding.
Make Adjustments: Making adjustments to your boundaries as friendships evolve is essential. The friendships that you had in adolescence will evolve in adulthood and as you go through changes in your mental health journey the support you need and can give will change.
Self-check-ins: It is important to check-in with yourself to ask are your boundaries still serving you? It's not uncommon for boundaries to change as they are not meant to remain unmoving. As you grow, so will your wants and needs in your friendships. By re-evaluating the benefit of the boundaries you are allowing yourself to be flexible in the relationships.
Respect and honour your limits: Supportive friendships will always respect and honor your limits. These pillars of a relationship should be a continued indicator of whether or not your boundaries are being maintained.
Therapy and Support Groups: Connecting with a therapist, councillor or joining a peer support group is a good way to help you define your boundaries in friendships and gain valuable tools on how to maintain them over time.
Dealing with Pushback: How to Handle Resistance from Friends
Once you set your boundaries in a friendship there is no guarantee they will be followed to the exact letter. It takes time to establish long-lasting limitations and guidelines in a relationship as oftentimes your friend may not be used to you asserting yourself and the things you need within the friendship. On one hand, you should take pride in the fact that you voiced your wants and needs from your relationship but on the other there will be a feeling of guilt the minute you are required to enforce your boundaries.
There may be push-back from your friends because boundaries can sometimes feel like a punishment. More likely they are in a space of mental transition from who you used to be in the relationship and who you are becoming with the new boundaries. There are three things to remember when implementing your boundaries:
“No” is a complete sentence: It’s okay to say ‘no’ to the requests that cross your new and healthy boundary. Your friend may not like hearing the two-letter word but the more you use it to protect your boundaries the more you show that you value yourself as well as the health of the friendship.
Healthy Compromises vs. Overextending Yourself: It’s important when enforcing your new and healthy boundary that your friend may try to get around it. Ask yourself, will making a healthy compromise de-value my boundary or am I overextending myself and therefore violating my own boundary? Sometimes in friendships making healthy compromises are necessary but if you believe your boundary is being crossed with the concession you may have to re-evaluate and re-establish your boundaries later on.
Overcoming Disappointing Others: Everyone fears disappointing others when establishing boundaries but it's important to remember that disappointment is a natural part of life. No one can please everyone 100% of the time so thinks about maintaining your healthy boundaries so you do not disappoint yourself or compromise your mental, emotion, physical or spiritual well-being
The fact is once you set a boundary there is no guarantee it will be followed. You can examine the friendship, re-evaluate whether or not boundaries are necessary, set new and healthy boundaries following the advice set out in this article and you can enforce your boundaries changing the dynamic of the friendship. However, there is a possibility that your friend may respond with guilt-tripping, manipulation or dismissiveness. Recognizing when a friendship is no longer serving your mental health may be the next step in your boundary setting journey. Not all friendships are built to last and oftentimes boundary-setting can highlight the pitfalls in a relationship.
So when is it time to re-assess or walk away from toxic relationships? The answer for me has always been when I’m sure I’m ready to let go and allow healthier relationships to take their place.
Final Thoughts
Setting boundaries in your friendships can be hard, especially when there is already an established understanding of the norms and expectations you both have in the relationship. Boundary setting to some feels like a punishment or a negative limitation being introduced into a dynamic that previously seemed to work for both parties. However, the need for establishing healthy boundaries protects your mental health, energy, emotional stability and the longevity of the friendship. A healthy dynamic between friends honours your needs as well as allows you to manage Bipolar disorder symptoms like stress, emotional exhaustion, people-pleasing and mood instability.
So, when setting boundaries on your friendship journey, start small because one boundary at a time can lead to powerful changes. Remember every day is a new opportunity to do something you’ve never done before so today start creating boundaries that will serve your mental well-being and protect your peace.