Stop Feeling Drained: How to Build Healthy Boundaries Now

Do you ever feel drained, exhausted, or guilty after spending time with certain people? Do you always say "yes" when you desperately want to say "no"? If so, you likely have unhealthy personal boundaries.

Boundaries are not mean or selfish. They are the essential rules you create to protect your time, energy, and emotional health. Without them, you give other people permission to drain you.

Here are common signs your boundaries need work, and simple steps to fix them.


The Weak Boundaries Quiz: designed to help you identify the tendency of having weak boundaries.

Take the Quiz


Signs You Have Unhealthy Boundaries

 

What to Do About Your Unhealthy Boundaries

Embrace the Power of Delay

Never give an instant answer. Give yourself time to check your schedule and energy.

  • The Script: Practice a neutral, delaying phrase:

    • "Let me check my calendar and get back to you later this afternoon."

    • "I need a moment to think about that and see if I have the capacity."

  • The Follow-Up: This time allows you to say "no" clearly and kindly without over-explaining. A simple, "Thanks for asking, but I can’t take that on right now" is enough.

Use the "Broken Record" Technique

Decide on your boundary, state it clearly once, and do not defend it. If the other person pushes back, calmly repeat your boundary—like a broken record—without starting a debate.

  • Example Script:

    • You: "I have to leave the office at 5:00 today."

    • Co-worker: "Can’t you just stay 15 minutes longer to finish this?"

    • You (Calmly): "I understand, but my cut-off time is 5:00."

    • Co-worker: "But this is really important!"

    • You (Broken Record): "We can pick this up tomorrow."

Practice Stating Low-Stakes Preferences

Build your boundary "muscle" by confidently stating what you prefer in low-pressure situations.

  • The Start: When making casual plans, be the first to suggest something you want. Instead of waiting, try: "I’m really in the mood for Thai food tonight. Does that sound good?"

  • The Practice: If someone suggests a plan you dislike, politely suggest an alternative. Your goal is simply to state your desire and be okay with the outcome, whether they agree or not.


Your Boundaries Are Your Well-Being

Setting boundaries might feel uncomfortable at first, and you might worry about being called "selfish."

Remember: The only people who get upset when you set a boundary are the ones who were happy when you had none.

Start today: Protect your "yes," keep your explanations short, and honor your own preferences. As your boundaries get stronger, so will your confidence, your energy, and the quality of your relationships.


Take the Weak Boundaries Quiz:

The Weak Boundaries Quiz: designed to help you identify the tendency of having weak boundaries.

Take the Quiz

The Babe Staff

The Babe Staff is dedicated to helping people learn, grow, and experience better relationships.

Previous
Previous

Overcoming Feelings of Unworthiness in Romantic Relationships

Next
Next

Emotional Unavailability: How to Move from Unavailable to Available in Relationships