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If you have long-term feelings of
resentment, anger, manipulation, being treated as unimportant, etc.,
you probably need to set some limits in your relationship.
Take your good friend who just left her husband.
Do you offer her a place to stay, money, advice, help with
baby-sitting, a blind date or two?
Or take the friend who can never make it to the end of the month
on a budget. Every month you bail him/her out.

How much is enough?
And how much is too much?
What fosters self-esteem and self-reliance for the other person
plus mutual respect for both of you while avoiding the pitfalls
of dependency?
All relationships need limits whether they are friendships,
sibling relations, mate/lovers, business relations, etc. On some
level, all limit setting means saying "no." However, it is usually
a qualified nay that says what, where, when, and under what
circumstances you will give or not give to another person.
If you have long-term feelings of resentment, anger,
manipulation, being treated as unimportant, etc., you probably
need to set some limits in your relationship.
There are five steps to limit setting:
1. Choosing to set limits. You will tolerate a difficult
relationship situation just as long as you choose to tolerate
it. You are the one choosing to set boundaries in place.
2. Identify the source of your feelings. It often takes some
real soul-searching on your part to figure out the source of
your anger or resentment.
3. Decide where to set the limits. Think about the entire
situation. Consider your time, emotions, and means. Then
consider whether you are helping the other person or merely
allowing them avoid or postpone his/her own problem solving. Aim
to do something to help the other person without taking on the
whole problem.
4. Express the limits clearly. For example, you say to your
friend, "I will loan you up to 2000 no more than once every
three months. And I expect each loan to be repaid within three
months and certainly before you can borrow more."
You say to another friend, "You can stay here for three
weeks but you must help me with expenses and cooking and
definitely find your own place before the three weeks is up."
You say to your newly divorced friend who calls often to
rehash her hurt and anger, "I have to go in five minutes."
5. Stick to your limits. You are not responsible for making the
other person <169>obey<170> the limits. You are only
responsible for following the limits yourself and for
reinforcing them.
Your divorced friend says at the end of five minutes, "But I'm
not through. I really need to tell you one more thing."
You say, "<169>I know we're in the middle of something but I
must go. Perhaps we could take this up again Thursday after work." Read Also:
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Setting Limits with Friends
Your friend has repaid $125.00 of his/her $200.00 loan and asks
for $200.00 more. You say no. He/she gets emotional then says,
"Well just loan me the $125.00 again. I need this money to cover a
bad check. If you cared for our friendship, you would do it."
Again, you say no, not because you don't care for him/her but
because you do. You are forcing your friend to detach him/herself
from dependence on you because you care.
Limit setting is difficult because people mistake it for
rejection. However, limits mean that you care enough not to get
entangled in your friend, lover, sibling's problems; you care
enough not to take care of him/her...
Limit setting is often stressful and painful. It will probably
give you an intimidating sense of aloneness.
You are separating yourself from old familiar roles and
behavior patterns. Any loss brings feelings of anxiety, stress,
and even emptiness.
And limit setting inevitably brings guilt. Bear in mind, it
doesn't mean you have deserted or quit loving your friend, lover,
or sibling. It does mean you are expressing that love in a
different and more helpful (to both of you) manner.
Setting limits is a challenging task at work; it often seems an
insurmountable task when love is involved. However, like all
people skills, setting limits is a process that gets easier with
practice. |