We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Say No: Boundaries with Nedra Glover Tawwab (Best Of)
Episode Date: January 5, 20251. Five signs that you might have a boundary problem. 2. Why each of us should stop pretending we’re not a needy person. 3. How to stop arguing like a lawyer – and start communicating like a kinde...rgartener – to get what you need. 4. How to know when to end an argument, how to exit a friendship, and how to respond to passive aggressiveness. About Nedra: Nedra Glover Tawwab, MSW, LCSW, is a New York Times best-selling author, licensed therapist, and sought-after relationship expert. She has practiced relationship therapy for 15 years and is the founder and owner of the group therapy practice, Kaleidoscope Counseling. Every day she helps people create healthy relationships by teaching them how to implement boundaries. Her philosophy is that a lack of boundaries and assertiveness underlie most relationship issues, and her gift is helping people create healthy relationships with themselves and others. Nedra earned her undergraduate and graduate degrees from Wayne State University in Detroit, MI. She has additional certifications in working with families and couples and in perinatal mood and anxiety disorders, plus advanced training for counseling adults who've experienced childhood emotional neglect. Nedra has appeared as an expert on Red Table Talk, The Breakfast Club, Good Morning America, and CBS Morning Show to name a few. Her work has been highlighted in The New York Times, The Guardian, and Vice and has appeared on numerous podcasts, including Good Life Project, Sofia with an F, and Therapy For Black Girls. She runs a popular Instagram account where she shares practices, tools, and reflections for mental health and hosts weekly Q&As.  TW: @NedraTawwab IG: @nedratawwab To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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We have a very exciting trip coming up.
Oh, I can't wait.
Pod Squad.
We are going to stay in Park City in a big house
with all of the people who we worked with to produce
Andrew Gibson's documentary, which is called
Come See Me in the Good Light, OK?
So we've been working on this documentary all year,
and it's going to Sundance, yay yay,
and we all wanted to stay together.
And so Abby and I found this big, beautiful house
that all the, I mean, I think it's pretty much all lesbians,
mostly all lesbians.
It's gonna be a very gay, cozy house.
We all want to have our own spaces,
but we all wanna feel connected.
So we went with Airbnb.
If you're traveling with family or friends this winter,
like we are, consider an Airbnb. Those extra rooms and a full kitchen make all the difference. And if you're traveling with family or friends this winter like we are, consider an Airbnb.
Those extra rooms and a full kitchen make all the difference, and if you're going solo,
you can still find a place that feels like your own little sanctuary, no matter where
you are.
So next time you're planning a winter getaway, give Airbnb a try.
Trust me, it's an experience you won't regret.
What's in this McDonald's bag?
The McValue Meal.
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Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things. I just want you all Podswaters to know that you just missed a scintillating conversation
between the three of us where I asked everyone to please watch their facial expressions on
the pod because my listening face is, what is it?
It's so weird.
It's different.
It's different.
My face, the way it looks, I'm listening hard.
Yeah, when you're in your active listening,
you get your squint eye, and you have one eye
that squints a little bit more than the other,
and then your mouth goes down.
Yes, it's special.
And it's because I'm concentrating really hard.
I know.
It's because I'm really...
And by the way, my whole life I thought, oh, my eye just squints.
But really my eyes are two different sizes.
Mine are too.
No way.
Yeah, they are.
I just thought it happened in pictures because I...
Same.
So I just thought, that's so weird how my eyes in pictures look different sizes.
And then I realized, oh, wait, if in every picture they're different sizes, that just means pictures look different sizes. And then I realized, oh wait,
if in every picture they're different sizes,
that just means they're different sizes.
Let me check it in the mirror.
Oh, same, same.
Well, you know, sister, about the person at a signing line
when I take all the pictures with people
and one lady waited the whole nother hour
to come back and say,
do you think we could take another picture?
Your eyes look like they're two different sizes
in my picture.
And I was like, that's just what I look like.
That's what I think.
Sorry, can't help you.
So super excited to talk today
with an expert about boundaries.
And I want to tell you how we found this amazing person.
So I was a while back talking to our dear,, Levy Ajayi-Jones. We
were just having a conversation about... Speaking of fix your face, she's the one
who taught us to fix our faces. Oh my god! That's right. That's right. Levy, I would be doing speaking
engagements with her and I'd be on stage. We were speaking with a group and so we
would always sit next to each other and get in trouble together. But if somebody
was speaking and I didn't like what they were saying,
I just have no poker face.
And there was a huge screen behind us.
So my, they would be speaking and then my face would be on the screen with like
this huge what the fuck face.
So Levy used to squeeze my leg and say, Glunan, fix your face.
Fix your face.
So anyway, I'm talking to Levy and I'm telling her my boundaries
predicament and my boundaries predicament is that I lived the first half of my life
with no boundaries and I hated myself. And so now I overcorrect it and I live my life with so many boundaries that I hate everyone else.
So I would like to find balance, boundary balance.
So Levy suggested Nedra Glover to Wab.
So we are going to have Nedra on the pod today to talk about boundary balance and also what
are you hoping to talk about today, Cissy?
I am fascinated about the concept of unconditional love
because to me it seems like what that's saying
is that there is love with no boundaries.
And I don't have that.
I don't either.
So I want to hear the good professor of boundaries
talk to me about that.
Is it real?
That's so good because I have much more of a leniency
when it comes to people.
And so I'm more...
Clearly, I'm who you're with.
I'm more capable of that unconditional love.
And it's interesting being married to somebody
who is more boundaried in that way.
I think that that is maybe a source of friction at times
because I'm more, and I don't mean to say this,
I'm more open and you have a tendency to be more,
what word would you use?
Close.
Close like Fort Knox?
Close like Fort Knox. Clothes like Fort Knox.
And so that poses problems.
I love that sister, that's really good.
I'm actually really interested in talking about
the concept of boundaries.
And those who I sometimes notice as being boundary,
sometimes can be seen as a-holes.
Right, like your wife.
No, I wasn't saying any names.
A-holes. Right, like your wife?
No, I wasn't saying any names.
But for me, I very much am other people-minded.
I'm very big people pleaser.
And so I don't wanna come off as an A-hole.
I wanna be kind of known as-
You wanna be a good guy.
I wanna be a good-
You wanna be loved.
So your question is, can I be very, very loved?
And is it possible to have a boundary?
And my question is, can I have all my boundaries?
And is it possible to have love?
Yes, that's good.
Okay, let's figure it out.
Let's figure it out, Jal.
Can nice people have boundaries?
Can boundered people be nice?
So boundaries, everyone talks about this
as something that they're all struggling with.
So we're gonna get to people's questions
because we get more questions about this
than most anything else.
But it is clear that these boundaries
are very, very good for us.
Like people who have and hold healthy boundaries
have the keys to the queendom, it seems.
Like when you look at the data, folks with healthy boundaries have better sleep, less
burnout, longer lasting and healthier relationships, less stress and more joy.
So it really seems like it's an idea worth sharing.
Yes. Isn't that like Ted talks or something?
Okay. All right. We'll think of it.
It's a hard thing we can do.
It's a hard thing worth sharing.
Excellent. Let's go ask these things of our expert.
Neja Glover-Tawab is a licensed therapist and sought after relationship expert.
She is the author of the New York Times bestseller Set Boundaries, Find Peace,
and the forthcoming book Drama Free.
Hell yes.
Available 3-7-2023.
That's amazing.
Nedra is also the founder and owner of the group therapy practice Kaleidoscope Counseling,
which helps people create healthy relationships. Her philosophy is that a lack of boundaries and assertiveness
underlie most relationship issues, and her gift is helping people create healthy relationships
with themselves and others. Nadja, welcome.
Hi, that was such a warm welcome. I think I want to record it and just take it and use
it for everything that I do now.
Okay, perfect.
Nadra, this is my sister.
This is my wife, Abby.
Thank you for joining us.
You're welcome.
It's funny when you mention you're related to someone,
you immediately look for it.
Like, yeah, you have the same nose.
Yeah.
Well, we do have the same eyes.
I loved your book, Nadra.
And I was fascinated to know that so many of the things that so many of us are struggling
with are in fact symptomatic of not being healthy boundaries.
So can you walk us through some of those things?
Because I feel like this is a case of you might have
a boundary problem if and then everything that my friends are talking about happens.
Yeah.
So as a practicing therapist, this started to show up first as work-life balance issues.
So many of my clients come in with being parents, being partners, managing a social life.
We don't know how to say no.
We don't know how to leave work on time
or really go on vacation.
I am amazed at the amount of people
who do not take vacation days.
It's almost like homework.
Like use your vacation before December.
Don't even wait till December. Use your vacation.
It is so normal for us to not think about ourselves and to allow the burnout to come in
with work that we're just like, this is normal. Burnout is normal. Teach me how to manage it.
Teach me boundaries so you don't experience the burnout. I think another big area where I notice boundary issues is relationships, where we're mad at
our partners.
We're upset about how we parent.
We're upset at the requests coming in from friends or how our parents are hovering.
All of these things, it's difficult conversations that we need to have
and those conversations are really around boundaries.
This is happening, this is what I need to feel better.
So what are the ways that people come to you feeling?
They walk into you, you said burnout is one,
how does burnout manifest and like what other feelings
are they having that they don't even know are a result of not having boundaries?
I think with burnout, what we see a lot of is people wanting to leave their jobs.
They're wanting to go on leave from work.
They're wanting to switch positions because it is the boss.
It could not be them causing some of these issues.
So they're looking for a fresh start.
I would say the predominant feeling
that I'm seeing is anxiety.
It is anxiety around how to speak up,
when to speak up, curating the perfect sentences
to say to other people.
And another thing that we see is depression.
You feel disempowered to really own and control some of these situations.
It's like, I can't do anything about it.
So I will suffer with these things.
I can't do anything about how my parents treat me or my partner doing this or not doing that.
So I feel defeated.
So how do you define boundaries?
So if somebody's feeling this way, somebody comes to you,
they're anxious, they're depressed, they're burnt out,
they're feeling apathetic or resentful.
You, as a therapist, go, okay, there's boundary issues here.
When you say that, what do you mean?
Like, what is a boundary?
How do you define it? So, I define boundaries as needs that need to be expressed verbally or through your behavior.
It can be you saying to a person, I need help with, no, I would like more of, please don't
do blank.
Or it could be you stepping back in a relationship when you've
stated a boundary. It could be you leaving work at the time that you've designated as
your cutoff time. It's funny, this is how I know my clients follow me on social media
because they start using the word boundaries. I don't use the word boundaries a lot. I call
it so many other things. What are your expectations for this situation?
I wonder what you're needing here. I wonder what's causing you to be upset. I recognize
it as a boundary issue, but I don't like to scare people off by overboundarying the situation.
Like you have a boundary issue. It's more like you're having an issue. What do you need
to communicate?
I love that because also when we say boundary, it makes it sound like we're having an issue, what do you need to communicate?
I love that.
Because also when we say boundary,
it makes it sound like we're building a fortress
around ourselves and that kind of feels scary
and negative and aggressive.
So you think of in terms of,
oh, you just don't know how to get what you need yet.
Right? Is that what you're saying?
Like you haven't figured out how to say
or believe that you even are worthy of getting what you need.
Absolutely.
I heard you say that, um, boundaries are what you need to feel safe and supported.
And that felt so warm to me.
And I just, it was interesting because that seems so particular to the person.
And I've kind of been tripped up before by thinking, okay, boundaries have to be reasonable.
You can't just be out here with some crazy boundary.
You know, it has to be making sense within the ecosystem.
But is it possible that you would have
just some idiosyncratic boundary
that made you feel safe and supported,
and that would be justified, even if it made no sense
to the rest of the world?
Sure, like what if someone said, you know,
hey, after six o'clock, we don't turn on lights in our house,
please don't turn the light on.
I mean, it might not make sense to you,
but it's their thing.
If you're in their house, can you respect it?
Ooh, I like that example.
What are some weird ones like that, that people...
I feel like I'm about a weird boundary person.
Confirm. Because a highly sensitive person might be somebody who has more...
Didn't you say at some point that boundaries are like the instructions
you gave the babysitter watching your newborn?
Like, but you're the newborn.
Yes, I am the newborn.
Oh my gosh, first kid, instructions for babysitters?
I apologize.
But they were so long and thoughtful.
I looked at Pinterest for ideas.
It was like a book.
It was my first book, I think.
It was very detailed and it probably came across
as weird, especially if you're giving it to your parents who's watching your child.
I used to do that. Yeah.
It's like, okay, I know you don't know how to burp a baby mom, but these are the steps we go through.
I used to leave my parents the directions
that they had to read Goodnight Moon.
And then I'd put little index cards in between the pages
so I could make sure that they did it
because I would see if they were gone or not.
Now that is some crazy ass boundaries.
No control issues here at Nedra.
I don't think that's a boundary.
That's just crazy talent.
I think that's just control.
Yeah, okay, nevermind.
But speaking of crazy and control,
I realize that the vast majority of us need more boundaries. So I don't want to spend too much time on this That's just crazy talent. That's just control. Yeah. Okay. Nevermind.
Speaking of crazy and control, I realized that the vast majority of us need more boundaries.
So I don't want to spend too much time on this because we all live on the boundary
list zone.
But is there a world in which somebody has a boundary with you where it's a kind of red
flag?
What if they said, I need to look through your phone.
I need the passwords to your email.
That's what I need to look through your phone. I need the passwords to your email.
That's what I need to be safe and supportive.
Is it always the case that we should be accommodating
people's boundaries?
Somebody else's boundaries, that's good.
That's a really good one.
I would say that is not a boundary
as much as that is something to do with attachment.
I think we can't over analyze things as boundary issues.
And I think we do that sometimes
when we're trying to justify our behavior.
My boundary is you have to give me your phone.
I would say you're trying to control someone else's
behaviors, their life, their interactions.
And that's very different than managing yourself with
your boundaries. I think in that situation, the boundary would be, I will not look through your
phone or something else. I don't think it would be, you have to show me your phone to make me feel
safe in this relationship. And how do you deal with marriage boundaries?
I'm somebody who wants the lights turned off at 6 p.m.
I'm not really, but like,
but my partner would like to see after 6 p.m.
So I say, what makes me feel safe and warm
and taken care of is to have the lights out.
And my partner says, what makes me feel safe and warm
is to not have the lights out.
How do you negotiate two married people's boundaries?
Because the Venn diagram of boundaries is something that we're constantly.
Yeah, it's evolving.
And a lot of people kind of rely on, well, you knew this when you got into the relationship
and actually people evolve and they're always changing.
Sometimes things change.
Sometimes you become somebody who wants to turn the lights off at six o'clock and the
other person becomes a person that doesn't want that.
How do you negotiate and navigate that?
Well, I think about how do we accept differences,
how do we acknowledge them and how do we live with them.
I think if you are in a home with another person,
hopefully it is a home that has multiple rooms.
And perhaps you can go to a room and turn the lights out.
And this other person, they can go in this room and have the lights as bright as they
want to have them.
We may not be able to exist in the same space.
And maybe sometimes I come over to your well lit room and sometimes you come over to my
dark room. And at nighttime when we agree that it can be dark after 10 o'clock, we collectively
cuddle up together.
That's in a perfect world.
Now I think the challenge is in relationships when we are living with people, roommates,
marriages, just partner situations,
what's really tough is different living styles, right?
Like I am a quiet person.
So loud TVs and I see that look, you know,
loud TVs and music.
I am often caught sitting in my closet
because I can't even hear it if I sit in my closet.
So I have a whole meditation pillow.
I just hang out in there because I think you should be able to listen to the loud
TV and you should be able to listen to the music.
I'm going to go to my little secret spot and just zone out for a minute.
Now, there are times where I will say, you know, to my kids on the weekends,
especially before 9 a.m., you have to wear headphones
if you're listening to something.
I don't want to hear anything before nine.
But after nine o'clock, it's, I don't know,
whatever this thing is, and it's super loud.
It's like, is anyone watching this?
What's happening?
You just saved our marriage.
You just solved a pretty big marital.
This is why Lovey was like, you will talk to Nedra.
You will talk to Nedra Lennon Doyle.
Okay, because what you are saying is the opposite of like co-dependence and control.
It's not me and Abby sitting in a room discussing lightness and darkness until we die.
It's remembering there are separate rooms in our house. And it's
not me going upstairs and saying, this is insane how loud this TV is. It's like going
to my special spot.
It literally just happened the other day, y'all. She walked out of the bedroom. She
wasn't even in, nobody was in the room I was in. And I was listening, I was watching a
TV show. Happened to be like a fight scene. And it was this, it was distressing to her. She opens the door. It always happens to be a fight scene, Nedra. It always happens be like a fight scene and it was this, it was distressing
to her.
She opens the door.
It always happens to be a fight scene, Nedra.
It always happens to be a fight scene.
Yeah, she opens the door and she's like, who is listening to the TV that loud?
I was like, it's just me up here.
And that was upsetting to her.
So this is good.
This is good, Nedra.
This is so perfect because what you just said, it sounds so simple.
Like you go into a room, you go into a room, but it presupposes a giant host of very evolved
thinking.
We don't actually have to be in a relationship beside each other all the time.
We don't have to sit in this room where I'm just shooting devil darts out of my eyes at you
because how the hell can you have these lights and can't see on my face that I need them darker?
Acknowledging each other's needs and being separate and not thinking that threatens your love.
It's very good.
Nedra, I do have a quick question.
I think it's really interesting how linked boundaries are with knowing what you need.
How much work do you do talking to your patients
about them working out what they really want?
Because I should have struggled in my life
creating boundaries because I didn't really know
exactly what I wanted or how to express that
and communicate that with other people.
Cause it's two different steps.
It's first knowing what you need
and then learning how to express it.
That's right.
I would say the real work is paying attention when you are having uncomfortable feelings
and that will reveal what the needs are.
When I am feeling anxious, what is the thing?
Is it that I have to interact with a person who doesn't allow me to speak about myself ever.
So my need is to talk more about myself in this relationship.
So when we have the discomfort of anxiety,
depression, resentment, being confused,
those are all times to really think about why.
Why am I feeling this?
And the need will come up.
We have grown to try to fix ourselves
to accommodate others, right?
So we have a problem.
I can't have any need.
Why do I have the TV so loud instead of,
I really like the TV loud.
You know, it's like, should I accommodate this?
Some things in relationships should be accommodated,
but there are other things that
we don't have to compromise on.
And I think there are things about me
that probably annoy other people.
And it's like, hey, I'm gonna do it all by myself,
because I realize this is not your thing and I don't want you to feel
like you have to do these things with me
because they're important to me
because I want you to have fun.
I want you to experience joy.
It's like me trying to watch sports.
I'm not a big sports person.
I'm the worst person to watch sports with
because I'm telling you about this person's story.
Oh, I saw this guy.
He was the guy whose mom, you know, it's like nothing to do with sports. So you don't want to
watch sports with me. You want to figure out a way to watch sports with the people you enjoy.
It's not going to be me. Glennon would like to watch sports with you. Yeah, you can talk about people's sisters
and their dogs and what they've overcome. Not so much about goals. Oh, I will pick a team based on
someone's story. Yes. I'm like, that is the guy whose parents were in a car accident.
I want that team to win. That's exactly it. That's who I want to win. ["The Greatest Showman"] Proof to who? Everyone. So, the story starts. Better Man, now playing in select theaters.
What other reasons why we don't know what we need?
Like, why do we not grow up with healthy boundaries?
Why, Nedra, why is everybody freaking figuring this out
when they're 45 years old?
Yes.
It just seems so basic.
Like we should learn as human beings
what we individually need
and then learn how to communicate it.
So why is it a crisis in our midlife?
We are talked out of them.
I think we have boundaries when we are little people
and we know exactly what we want,
but it is not what the adults want for us.
The teacher doesn't want you to get up and jiggle your butt.
The teacher doesn't want you to just walk
into the pencil sharpener and doing all these things.
Your parents want you to be around
a particular set of people.
Your parents want you to show up in a certain way.
They will force you to wear a dress.
They will force you to love dance. you know, all of these things.
And so we start to force ourselves to do things we don't like.
We start to force ourselves with discomfort
because we don't want to upset other people.
So we have been taught to please others.
We have been taught to go with whatever someone else
is saying should be for us.
What I know is about women,
when we get ready to go out,
someone sends a text and says,
what are you wearing?
Right?
That's right.
Because we all want to dress alike, right?
It's like, oh, if you're wearing pants,
then I'm gonna put on some pants.
So you wearing jeans?
I'm gonna put on some jeans too.
We don't want to stick out in any way so we conform.
We don't want to upset, ruffle feathers,
be the unique person in the crowd.
We want there to be this melting pot
and we want to present as, oh, I love everything.
I get along with everyone.
That is really hard because we're all unique
and it's not true.
And we're constantly fighting against that.
I have said to people who say things like,
I'm always late, okay.
You know, how do you embrace that about yourself?
How do you build a life
and start to let people maybe know that?
You know, when I say five o'clock, I really mean 5.15.
You know, instead of feeling bad, trying to force yourself,
like all of these things, I'm a morning person.
I am shocked at the amount of people
who will try to force themselves into being a morning person.
Stay up late if you want to.
That's what works for you. That is your
creative time for me. I can't really do anything but watch TV past eight o'clock. I can't create
anything. That doesn't work for me. But how do you embrace who you are? Because we live
in a world where there's constantly this idea of you need to be this or you need to be that.
Why aren't you doing more baking? Why aren't you doing more baking?
Why aren't you doing more traveling?
It's okay to not like to travel.
It's okay to love a back salad over cooking an elaborate meal.
I feel like what you talk about so beautifully, this fear of rejection or appearing mean,
because people will say all the time,
I just don't know how to tell them no.
I don't know how to.
But it's like, yes, you do.
You just said it.
You literally, like, so we tell ourselves we don't know how to say it.
But really we know exactly how to say it because we just said it to you.
We just don't want to.
We just don't want the reaction to it or we don't want other people to see us
in a certain kind of way.
Yeah. And so...
We want to be liked. Yeah, because it's confrontation.
It's more than we want to get what we need. Because isn't it true, Nadra, that it's the
knowing of the need, which I love what you said, if you want to know what you need,
think about what makes you uncomfortable. That's why we miss it too,
because we're taught not to be uncomfortable.
So instead of interrogating discomfort, we just numb it.
Right?
So if we sit with our anxiety or our anger,
we figure out, then that might be pointing to a need.
Then we have to figure out how to communicate it.
Yeah, how the heck.
And then we have to deal with the after.
The after's way worse.
Because then people have a reaction.
So do you get that from people where they set a boundary
but then the hardest part is the keeping of the boundary
and then dealing with other people's discomfort after.
What are the strategies for dealing with the after
of setting a boundary?
This is the really tough part
because we do know what to say in many cases.
We do know how to kind of figure out what we need.
I do think the challenge is controlling
how the other person responds.
And we are trying to figure out the nicest way to say no.
The nicest way to say,
I actually don't want to come home for Thanksgiving.
The nicest way to say all of these really
hard things. And I don't think it's our job to manage how people feel about our boundaries.
That is really hard to get to a space where you stop the management because it's so much
work just to create the boundary, just to speak it. And we can't figure out how a person will respond or what they will do.
And unfortunately, there are people who get really upset with your boundaries.
They may give you the silent treatment, they may even end the relationship.
But I would say in most cases, people want to be in relationships with you, they might
be upset for a little bit. It hurt their feelings.
But they will move on with that boundary.
And so the idea that we can protect people from that,
it's really not possible in all cases.
I think what we can do is be better
at letting people have boundaries with us.
That is the work that I try to do
when my friends set boundaries with me.
I try not to question it.
I try to honor the boundary.
I will even try to get other people to do it.
At the top of COVID, I was on a girls trip
and I had a friend say, no one bring up COVID.
And I said, hey, you're about to start.
She said, do not bring up COVID. And I said, hey, you're about to start. She said, do not bring up COVID, right?
So I think it's one of those things
that we have a lot of power right now
to honor other people's boundaries.
And that lets them know it's okay
to set boundaries with Nedra.
She actually listens to your boundaries.
Now, Nedra can set boundaries with me. There
is this two-way street of you have a boundary, I have a boundary. Other people have boundaries.
I can think of so many boundaries people have set with me. I have not ended the relationship
because they asked me, hey, can you give me a quick call before you stop by?
Hey, actually, I don't want to go anymore.
Yeah, I haven't, oh, this person is not my friend anymore
because they no longer wanted to go to lunch.
I just said, okay, you know, I had an outfit picked out.
It hurt my feelings a bit, but I moved on.
I actually feel cozier and safer and more secure in relationships and friendships where
folks have set boundaries with me because I don't have to question whether they are
thinking something about me or feeling a way about me that they have not expressed.
Yeah, or they're doing something they don't want to do with you.
I'm thinking as you're saying this on the top of my head, the people that I feel like
I have the biggest trust in are the people who have over and over been clear about their
boundaries.
It's not the people I feel most hurt by.
I feel the most hurt by people who haven't expressed their boundaries.
And then I found out later, ooh, they were holding a lot of things that they weren't saying.
And so I think it brings people closer.
The kids' parents that I respect the most, who are friends with my kids,
are the parents who do the really awkward thing and like reach out to me and are like,
do you have any guns in the house? And are they locked up?
My kid can go to their house anytime, but that's scary to do.
I feel like we talk so much about boundaries
with other people, and we're gonna get to that.
All of our questions from PodSquadders
are about other people.
But can you talk a little bit about what you mean
about boundaries with self?
Those are the boundaries where,
and I mentioned one earlier,
I will leave work at five o'clock.
I've had enough to drink.
I need to not answer my phone when I am not in the spirit
or available to speak to this person.
I need to go to bed at 10 o'clock
so I can get up early in the morning refreshed.
It's all of those things that have to do
with what we can control about our behavior.
There are so often times where we put things
on other people, like this person is always calling me.
They can call your phone all day.
You have the ability to not answer.
You can block them.
You can tell them you don't like it.
You have a lot of power in this situation.
You may not be able to stop them from calling,
but I know I have a cell phone.
There is a way that you won't even see when they call.
What's one of your self boundaries?
Because you said even a morning routine is a self boundary.
It's a way that you feel that honors yourself
and brings you peace.
And it feels like that would be a good way
for people to start,
if it's too scary to make boundaries
with other people first.
What's one of your self-boundaries
that helps bring you peace and honor?
I would say one of my favorite boundaries
is using the do not disturb on my phone.
I constantly think about the 90s
and how when you left home, that was it.
It was like, where are they?
It was like.
The good old days.
Yes.
We're so reachable.
When my phone rings, sometimes I get so annoyed.
You would think that someone is like poking me with my phone rings, sometimes I get so annoyed. You would think that someone is like poking me when my phone rings.
And I have found that the best thing for me to do is to just not have the sound.
And when I want to return the call, I return the call.
If I want to answer, I answer it.
I'm trying to remember, turn your phone on when your husband leaves the house.
Because he's like, you're unreachable.
And you're like, correct.
Correct, that is the point.
So I'm trying to remember that.
Turn your, okay, turn your ringer on sometimes.
But I really like using the phone
when I want to use the phone.
I think that's a wonderful boundary for me.
Did you hear that Pod Squaders?
Use the phone when you want to use the phone, okay?
The tyranny, the tyranny of the text.
It's carrying a little teeny dictator
in your pocket all day that can tell you
what to do every second.
It's not right.
I know we have to go to Pod Squad's questions because they have so many for you.
But can real quick, could you just tell me, Nedra, whether unconditional love is a real
thing?
Because I kind of think it's bullshit.
If boundaries are a way of ensuring health, then how can there be such a thing as unconditional love?
That is a tough one because I think,
particularly in adult relationships,
they come with a lot of conditions.
I mean, even our dating phase is set up for conditions,
like, you know, do you like to travel?
Where would you like to live?
Oh, I don't like your parents.
You know, like all of these things are conditions.
So can we really say like,
I love this person unconditionally.
No, you love them if they like to travel, right?
And when they don't want to travel anymore,
that is a new condition.
Thank you, Dutra. I don't know.
Maybe when I'm a hundred, I can really answer this question because my kids are not old
enough yet.
I'm 90% sure I love them unconditionally.
I can't imagine a thing that they could do where I would be like, oh, that's it.
I haven't imagined.
I really haven't imagined.
You have one.
Well, as a recovering addict, okay?
So I think just having worked with lots of addicts
and like in this world for a long time,
I think that there is unconditional love for kids often.
But I think that love is defined differently.
It's not unconditional access.
Or it's not unconditional relationship even.
If my kids did horrific, horrible things and became like Republicans.
Oh my god.
I thought you were going to say murderers.
No, I could deal with that.
Oh my God.
I feel like I could, I would always love them,
but we might have some serious conditions about access and relationship and all of that.
That's good.
Right? But a feeling of deep, deep love and angst and yearning would always be there,
no matter what. Yes. So, unconditional love for kids in adult relationships, we start them with
conditions. So, can we really be unconditional if, you know, a person has to meet certain criteria?
So good. And they don't have to, people. You do not have to meet certain criteria. Yeah.
So good.
And they don't have to, people.
You do not have to love your boyfriend unconditionally.
You don't know.
In fact, you should not actually.
You should not.
Definitely not.
That's a recipe for being treated like shit
and calling it honorable.
You know?
That's interesting.
You said, if you're in a relationship with someone
only because of the label it carries,
sister, cousin, father, you don't have a relationship, you have an obligation.
Giant love. So you might have obligations throughout your life,
but don't tell yourself it's an unconditional love relationship.
Absolutely.
Okay, let's hear from our first pod squatter. That's what women have,
unconditional obligations. That's what we have.
Yes.
All right, let's hear from Delaney.
Like Abby, I've always been a people pleaser and I'm now working through that. The roadblock
I keep running into is how do you exit friendships and situations where you don't want to say
something too mean, but you also need to establish that this only worked
for the people-pleasing version of you.
So, please let me know, and thank you for all that you guys do.
Oh, and my name's Delaney. I didn't even say that.
I think that we need to try to leave relationships
in the most drama-free way possible.
We don't want to leave them and let people know everything that we think about them because
it's not helpful and it's completely biased.
This relationship has changed for you, but clearly this person is in other relationships
where who they are is working, right?
Do they need to know, you know,
I no longer want to be friends with you because X, Y, and Z.
I don't think people always need to know that.
I think there are tons of ways to leave relationships.
We've been leaving relationships since the beginning of time.
I don't have any friends from elementary school.
Middle school, yeah.
You know, how did we leave those relationships?
They just sort of fizzle out.
They just decrease over time.
There wasn't a conversation where I said to my eighth grade best friend, hey, we're not
going to be best friends anymore because we're going to different schools.
It just sort of happens that way.
So how do we allow things to fizzle out
without feeling like we have to keep
this constant connection with people?
That's how most friendships end.
And I think that's a beautiful ending
because here's the thing, we change.
And we might wanna go back to this relationship.
But if we told people, you're a horrible person,
I never really liked your spaghetti, your
boyfriend sucks, all of these terrible things, I don't think you're leaving the door open
there.
That's right.
And sometimes we can step away and we may need to get back in there at some point.
With our friendships, we are so vulnerable, we give so much.
If something happens to their parents or your parents, can you imagine not being able
to support a person because you've shared
all of these terrible things about them?
You know, maybe we need to leave with our integrity intact
and also their confidence.
We don't have to say all of these terrible things
to end a relationship.
We can just slowly walk away, you know,
cut back a little bit on communication and still, these terrible things to end a relationship, we can just slowly walk away,
cut back a little bit on communication and still,
hey, happy birthday if that's what you want to do.
But there doesn't need to be this formal breakup
of friendships all the time.
Sometimes you do need a formal breakup,
but I would say in most cases you do not.
I love that.
And it's in the recovery community,
like I'm a recovering alcoholic and I had a lot
of really strong friendships when I was in the active phase of my addiction and I don't have a
lot of those friendships anymore and I didn't have like a, hey we're no longer friends. I do think
that in the recovery world you do need to build your new life. And that sometimes takes time.
And so having that door that's always available to maybe include them in your sober life.
It's gentle. I like that approach. We don't hear about that a lot. It's always so dramatic these
days. Like you have to say the things, but you're so right, Nadjah. Like it's just our perspective
on them. Like we do so much, I have to tell the truth,
but it's always just our truth.
It's not the truth.
Yeah.
Cool.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Cool.
Yeah.
So this question is from Alex. Hi, my name is Alex.
I was calling with a question about parents and I guess people in general and the whole
idea of keeping score.
So for some context, I have lived at home in my parents basement, which they have really
lovingly finished for me for the past year while I did my master's degree in special education and taught full-time.
And I am so privileged and it was really wonderful,
but now as I'm coming out of that year I am noticing,
and this has been happening kind of my whole life,
anytime I set a boundary or communicate differing views
the score card is brought up. The oh, we've been over backwards for you
and I'm just wondering if you have any advice
for where to begin dealing with it
because I love my parents more than anything,
but also I'm my own separate human.
So this woman lived in her parents' basement.
They did a ton for her.
She's living with them, trying to set boundaries.
When she tries to set a
boundary, they like basically present back to her how much they've done for her as if
she is not entitled because of that exchange to have a boundary.
I think that's a beautiful thing to say. All of the stuff you just said. I realize that
you do a lot for me. I greatly appreciate it.
However, when you help, it seems like it comes
with some sort of strings attached.
I have to be hyper thankful.
I can't have an issue with anything else.
And that's very hurtful because I do appreciate it,
but I also want to be able to have boundaries
in this relationship.
And Nedra, that could work or... Or it could be that those parents are like, but the thing is you're in my basement.
So, I mean, there are exchanges where it's like, maybe you are treating some freedom.
You're actually on other people's bounds.
Yeah.
Trying to make boundaries, tricky.
Yeah, I think about this sometimes,
especially with folks who are parenting adult children,
and they are saying, oh my gosh, they need so much.
And I wonder how comfortable are you making it for this person
to be in a space you don't want them to be in?
How comfortable are you being a child with your parents
to the point that they don't even consider you an adult?
You know, sometimes with adult parents,
when you're ready to be treated like an adult,
you have to engage in full adulthood.
And you really have to detach so
they don't have anything to hang over your head.
It's wonderful when you have parents who help you and they don't mention it, but in many
cases people do feel like if I'm helping you, there are some contractual agreements, I have
some say so, you may need to do these things.
And I can say to you, remember that time I helped you. Things do happen as a result of receiving
help from your parents. Yeah. I think this is going to be an ongoing conversation of negotiation,
because especially with the economy now, I mean, I just read that 30% of all Gen Zers are living
with their parents. It might have to be a conversation that's bigger.
It's almost like I'm not living with my parents.
We have communal living now, right?
But if you have communal living, that means all kinds of different contribution.
So a boundary conversation might go both ways in that situation.
Like if you're coming to us with your boundaries, you also better be coming to us with your paycheck
sort of situation.
A portion of it.
Yeah, or even, you know, I'll cook a few days
or instead of having a housekeeper,
hey, I will clean the house on Saturdays,
perhaps giving a little bit will help them see you
as like this autonomous person
or even as someone who lives in the home and not just like their
kid that they're taking care of.
Okay, let's hear from Deanna.
My name is Deanna.
About a year ago, I moved out of my apartment from my parents' house.
I'm in my own place, my own city.
I'm 24 with a job and it's my first time really being on my own.
The first couple of relationships I experienced throughout my teens and early twenties were
really, really difficult, toxic relationships.
They were not good for me.
So as soon as I moved to this new apartment a year ago, I met my neighbor.
He's a really nice guy.
And now here we are 12 months later, we've been dating for about seven months now.
It's the healthiest relationship I have ever been in and it's just, it's so easy and effortless
and we have so much fun together.
However, there's definitely been some issues when it comes to boundaries as we are neighbors
and our front doors are literally three feet apart from each other.
I was wondering if you guys had any tips on boundaries in a relationship like
this? When it's your first healthy and enjoyable and really, really fun relationship in a long time,
it's hard to kind of make the time and space for the things that are important to you individually
and just making sure you're paying attention to yourself, taking care of yourself, just as much as you would if you weren't in that relationship.
So good, Deanna.
I hear a lot of self boundaries here.
I hear a lot of, I'm going to the movies.
Exactly.
I am going to grab something to eat and not necessarily inviting your boyfriend to be a part of those
things.
And when he attaches himself to those experiences, being clear that you are trying to carve out
some alone time and offering, hey, I'm going to the movies today by myself, but maybe on
Saturday we can do this thing. So it's not just
I'm spending all of the time by myself, we can do some things together and I want to do things
separately. In the beginning of relationships, oh gosh, I'm so excited that the honeymoon phase
does not last because it's impossible. The amount of energy you have in the beginning of relationships is like,
ugh, I didn't sleep, I was talking on, it's just, you know,
you want to be with this person all the time.
And at some point, there's this click of, oh, I have friends.
Oh my gosh, remember I used to be on the soccer team?
Yes.
It's like, where was I?
You were falling, you know?
And once you get to that space of recognizing like, okay, whoa, back to self, back to self.
Oh my gosh.
You know, there is this slowly moving back to that and acknowledge it.
We have just been spending so much time together that I actually forgot that I really like to bowl.
Like, I want to go bowling just by myself.
It's my thing.
I want to get back to that.
Just letting that new partner know that,
wow, this has been amazing.
Let's keep it up.
And also, I need some time to myself.
So good.
And that's sexy.
Having a self is sexy.
That is the sexiest thing, Deanna.
Like, it's like, if you're going to say, I love you, there has to be an I and there
has to be a you.
Right?
It's like in the beginning, there's no I or you, which just means it's not even love.
It's being on drugs.
It's being on drugs.
It's so wild.
Right?
I and the you are the real thing. It's being on drugs. It's being on drugs. It's so wild. Right?
I and you are the real thing.
I was walking this morning by myself
and I had this like grateful moment that I was alone
and which is a big deal for me
because I'm a people person big time
and so it's taken me a long time to get comfortable
by being by myself.
Just this year, I've been like consciously making choices to do things on my own.
The codependency that we had for so long, me just making sure you're okay, doing everything
together.
But today on my walk, I was like, look at you.
You're walking by yourself and happy about it.
Well, and Nendr, you would have been so proud of us. A year ago, we stood on the beach and argued
because I wanted to walk on the beach
and Abby wanted to sit on the beach.
So we had a very long argument about whether we would walk
or we would sit.
And it took us a half an hour to figure out,
oh, I can walk and she can sit.
Yes.
Wow.
But don't you think that's such a cultural disservice,
this idea that if we loved people enough,
we would want to do all the things with them.
This idea that if you haven't found someone
you want to be with all the time,
then you haven't found the right person.
That's not the perfect partner, that's right.
Nedra, can you speak for just a moment
on the difference between enmeshment and attachment?
Because that is not actually a signal
of your healthiest connection you can have with someone.
Yeah, enmeshment is giving up of self.
So if you are enmeshed and you are doing things
that you don't actually enjoy, it's not really fulfilling. You're doing it for this other person. And to some extent, there are doing things that you don't actually enjoy, it's not really fulfilling.
You're doing it for this other person.
And to some extent, there are some things
that you will do in a relationship for the other person,
but what are you doing for yourself?
What things do you enjoy by yourself,
maybe with friends outside of the relationship,
with family members?
We do think that, oh my gosh,
I want to be around this person all the time,
this is love.
But there are tons of people,
I think about many grandparents who stay married,
sleeping in separate rooms.
You know, it's like, this is the only way we can be together,
because I can't take that snoring,
or whatever that is.
It's like, we're still together because we're not sleeping
in the same room.
We always thought like, oh, this is terrible.
Maybe it's not.
Maybe it's not terrible.
Not looking so terrible now, folks.
Yeah, it's like maybe we have different sleep habits.
Isn't it a healthy thing to be able to sleep at night?
So if that means that, hey, I can still be in this relationship,
but I just need to go down the hall at nighttime.
Hey, what is the problem there?
We curate the rules for our relationships.
And sometimes we are looking at other couples,
we're looking at our parents and people on TV.
Hollywood, yeah.
Yeah, and we're saying, this is what a relationship is supposed to be like.
It's like, that's what that relationship
is supposed to be like.
You have to figure out what works for you.
For you, Abby, you've discovered,
you like watching movies really loud by yourself.
That's your thing.
You know, you wanna do that with someone who enjoys it,
and guess who it is? It's you. Me. It, you want to do that with someone who enjoys it and guess who it is.
It's you. Me. It's you. It's me. I get to do it with me. Yeah. Can you imagine doing that with
Glennon and she's complaining? You get to have it on full blast and hear all of the sound effects
on your action movie. I've gotten so good at reading movies
because I just turned the captions off
so the volume could be lower.
Well, every time I'm locked in the closet,
hiding from the, I'm gonna call Nedra from the closet.
Okay.
Closet to closet communication.
The last question is from Kathleen,
with whom I am obsessed.
Okay.
My name is Kathleen, and here's my situation.
The other night, Saturday, I decide I'm super sleepy and I'm going to go to bed and I tell
my husband and he's very angry and then he sort of does that passive aggressive, I'm
not going to pay attention to you, whatever, until the next morning.
And the next morning I asked why he was still angry and he says, it's so aggravating.
It's like you're on your own schedule.
And I kind of hesitate and don't respond and go about life.
But it's been eating at me and I have to think,
what the fuck does that mean?
Of course I'm on my own schedule.
I'm a grownup, my kids are grownups,
whose schedule should I be on if not my own schedule?
So there's my thought.
Talk amongst yourselves.
Nadja, Kathleen wants to know, what the fuck does that mean?
Well, time is a huge boundary area.
And it's one of the big things that we can control.
And you do get to decide how you want to spend your time.
At nighttime, you may not want to spend your time. At night time,
you may not want to go watch TV. I think what has happened here is her husband is under
the impression that he controls the time that they spend together. So there has to be some
shifting in the relationship of boundaries. There has to be some communication. All of those things she just said.
My kids are out of the house.
I am a grown up.
When I am ready to go to bed, I will go to bed.
At that time, I will go read a book.
Whatever I want to do is what I will be doing.
So I think that needs to be made clear.
We know that, but does he know that?
It sounds like it was a shock and a surprise.
It sounds like it was a shift from the normal routine.
So there needs to be this consistency
in you doing what you want to do with your time,
particularly if the kids are out of the house
and things have gone a certain way until this point.
And Nanja, if somebody comes back with passive aggressive,
because bless all of our hearts, that's all we've learned.
Nobody taught us how to be assertive.
We just, when we're pissed, we just say something shitty
and then like, so when our-
Or the silent treatment.
Right.
So when our friend Kathleen, when her husband
is doing the passive aggressive thing
and is saying, oh, it's like you have your own schedule.
How do we respond to passive aggressiveness
in a way that actually helps us get to the root
of something as opposed to just playing a ping pong game
of passive aggressiveness?
Name it, you know, saying to someone,
you are being passive aggressive.
This morning you didn't talk to me for an hour
and then when you said something it was rather mean.
I take my my language back to kindergarten. It's very simple. That was mean. I don't like that.
That hurt my feelings. I use those statements a lot. I want people to know I didn't like that.
And so you have to be able to communicate that in a very simple way and let him know
that this behavior is not okay.
When you're upset with me, I would prefer it
if you had a conversation around what's bothering you.
And let's think about some compassion here
and a little bit of empathy.
Your husband is also in a space
where the kids are outside of the house.
I don't know the level of involvement there,
but that can be a difficult transition sometimes.
And so perhaps he is looking forward
to spending time with you.
I'm sensing a bit of disappointment.
I missed you, you know, is what I'm hearing.
And I feel hurt that you didn't want to be with me
in that time.
So how do you all have a conversation about what you're really feeling and get all of
this tough guy stuff out of there?
Like all of this tough stuff that we do instead of really saying like that hurt me, I'm afraid,
I'm disappointing, there's a lot of changes happening and you are the only consistent
thing because that's what I'm hearing, I'm disappointing. There's a lot of changes happening and you are the only consistent thing
because that's what I'm hearing from that scenario.
Nadra, can you give us a little script
at ways in which setting boundaries can be done easily?
For me, it would be good to have like in my back pocket
as we end this conversation today to be able to say,
okay, I can maybe start there.
Something like the most simple way to set a boundary.
I think of a few starter phrases like,
I need or I want or I expect or no.
And just simple sentences.
I think sometimes we really complicate it
because not only are we stating the boundary,
we're trying to get the other person to agree with it.
Yes.
And so we'll say, you know, a whole bunch of stuff.
I need you to sit with me because the other day
I sat with you and this is really important to me
because every time I sit down, I think about you.
And it's like, what are you saying?
So if we can keep it simple,
and if there's a conversation to be had,
perhaps going to that conversation,
but lots of boundaries are just statements.
Yes.
You know, when I think of,
I need you to watch the kids while I'm cooking dinner,
that's just a statement.
There's no conversation to be had.
That's a sentence.
When you're upset with me,
I'd like you to talk about that
instead of treating me as if you're upset.
That's a sentence.
So I think sometimes we're trying to think
of these talking points.
It is not necessarily required.
You talked about arguing on the beach for 30 minutes.
And one of the things that I try to teach couples is,
argue, but don't do it for a long period of time.
Because if you're doing it for 30 minutes, an hour,
you're just repeating yourself.
That's right.
You're not really saying anything new.
Nothing is being discovered.
I know that.
Yeah.
That's for sure.
I had a new awakening after four hours.
Thank God we got to that 43rd minute where we really got to the crux of it.
Yeah.
It's really like my point, my point, my point, my point again, my point, point, point.
You know, you're just going and it's like, are you going to say something different?
Do you have a new example?
Yes. It's really not new stuff.
You're really just trying to get this person like, agree with me.
This was good.
I said it differently.
And it's like, you're saying the same thing.
This really could have been five minutes.
It's so good.
So true.
What are we spending time on here?
Yeah.
Everything that you teach is, it starts with the foundation of believing
that you are worthy of having it.
Because I think the reason why I do the 40 minute
presentation, like I'm a lawyer, right?
Like I'm preparing a case is because somewhere I believe
I need to have a case prepared because I have to prove
that I'm worthy of having needs.
Mm-hmm.
So what if we just all started with the actual definition
of being a human being, which is that we will all have needs.
So everyone is worthy of having needs.
Mm-hmm.
Everyone is needy.
Yes!
It's so funny because people say,
I am needy. I'm like, me too. What do you need?
Yes!
We're all needy. We all
need stuff. Some of us are more open to expressing those needs. And that's how you get that label of
being needy. But I have a lot of needs. Sometimes, you know, we will diminish our needs because we
don't want to present as needy. But I think 100% of humans are needy. Yep. We have all sorts of preferences. Now, whether we communicate those or not,
but we have preferences in there.
And it's just a part of being human to have these needs.
So how do we get better at expressing them?
I remember when I stopped eating pork
and I would be so afraid to tell people I didn't,
I'm in the South, right?
So I would be so, they put pork in everything.
Oh my gosh. I just, every single thing. I'm in the South, right? So I would be so... They put pork in everything. Oh my gosh. I just...
Every single thing.
I'm from Detroit.
So when I moved here, I was like,
oh wow, I really have to ask,
is there pork in that cornbread?
You know?
It's...
It's...
It's...
It's...
It's...
Is it pork in that lemonade?
You know, everything is like pork infused.
Bacon, bacon.
So how do you start to express to people,
like is there an option where I don't get pork in this meal?
Can this be prepared that way?
So many times I used to just pick it off.
Like, oh, I don't want to inconvenience them.
I'll just eat around it. But once people start to say, yeah, yeah, they'll just take it off. Like, I don't want to inconvenience them. I'll just eat around it. But once people
start to say, yeah, yeah, they'll just, they'll just take it off. It's like, oh, wait, you'll
listen to me? Wonderful. Yeah. Let's end with that. Yes. That is the best metaphor I could
imagine. We're out here living our lives just picking pork out of stuff. That's what we
can have a life that isn't that.
That is pork free if we just effing ask.
And we say, I am needy.
Because people who pretend they're not needy
are bitter people.
That's right.
Yes.
I loved this conversation.
Yeah, of course you did.
Cause you get to watch your fricking TV.
The repercussions of this conversation, Nedja, are many.
So we appreciate you.
Thank you for teaching people how to have healthy relationships through boundaries.
It's really beautiful work you're doing.
You're welcome.
For the rest of you, figure out who you're in a relationship with this week that only
allows your people-pleasing self.
That sentence got to me.
It's an interesting question.
And also start your sentences with,
I need, I want, I expect, I prefer, the end.
And now.
See you next week.
Bye.
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We Can Do Hard Things is created and hosted by Glennon Doyle,
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