If you’re constantly irritated, feel demotivated or drained out, there’s a strong possibility that you’ve failed to set personal boundaries at work.
Your personal boundaries involve setting limits and defining expectations on what you will and will not tolerate. Working without boundaries can impact your productivity and harm your mental health. Exhaustion from being available 24/7, never saying no, or tolerating bad behavior can impact you emotionally and make you ineffective in your job.
When you give boundaryless freedom to others, they can manipulate your time and energy which can prevent you from doing your best work.
Not having boundaries also makes it difficult for others to meet your expectations. Unspoken boundaries are often invisible—easy to violate as they’re based on each person’s own life experience. Don’t assume others are bad or they’re out to get you—they may just value different things or have different priorities in life.
Setting boundaries inevitably involves taking responsibility for your choices. You are the one who makes them. You are the one who must live with their consequences. And you are the one who may be keeping yourself from making the choices you could be happy with.
— Henry Cloud
You don’t have to put up with schedules, people, and practices that put your well-being at risk or turn you into a resentful person. You just have to learn to communicate your needs by setting healthy boundaries and ensuring others take it seriously.
Do this by following these 5 practices:
When it comes to setting boundaries, you can’t consider only work priorities while ignoring family and personal goals. You need to look at your life as a whole and determine what you wish and value.
Clearly laying out these boundaries is important because others can’t give you what you need unless you take the initiative and communicate your priorities and expectations.
To do this, you must first know what you want.
Think about:
For example:
When we fail to set boundaries and hold people accountable, we feel used and mistreated. This is why we sometimes attack who they are, which is far more hurtful than addressing a behavior or a choice.
— Brené Brown
When you’re clear about your own priorities, it’s possible to convince others to respect them.
The biggest problem with effective communication is the illusion of transparency—assuming our thoughts and feelings are evident to others even though we haven’t communicated our needs verbally.
Under the effect of this
You have to say it out loud. You have to repeat it. You can’t communicate your boundaries once and expect others to remember it. You have to use every opportunity to reset your expectations.
When you give yourself permission to communicate what matters to you in every situation you will have peace despite rejection or disapproval. Putting a voice to your soul helps you to let go of the negative energy of fear and regret.
— Shannon L. Alder
While doing this, you must demonstrate positivity in your body language—don’t use facial expressions or hand gestures that demonstrate resentment or bitterness towards the other person. When others sense disrespect, all they can think about is hurting you back.
For example, you can say:
I noticed that you’ve scheduled a meeting on Friday at 5 pm. I understand that I need to be part of that meeting. It appears you forgot that I leave early on Friday to take my daughter out for her music lessons. Can you reschedule it, please?
I understand that you want me to take up this new responsibility because I have the required knowledge and experience to drive it well. However, I already have too many things on my plate. I don’t see how I can take it up without giving up something else. Can you help me re-prioritize and create space for this task by identifying work that can be delayed?
Be firm and direct. Communicate your needs more than once. Others are more likely to respect your boundaries when you communicate them constructively.
You may be willing to say no, but when you need to enforce it, do you allow what you can’t tolerate or do you stay strong?
Others can’t take you seriously if you’re flexible all the time and fail to behave in a manner that keeps your boundaries strong and does not make them weak.
Thinking “I’ll allow just this once” should be an exception, not a norm.
Behaving in a manner that aligns with your goals and values conveys a strong message to others. They’re more likely to pay attention to your needs. If you keep giving in to others demands and never push back, they’re more likely to take you for granted or ignore your needs.
How can we expect people to put value on our work when we don't value ourselves enough to set and hold uncomfortable boundaries?
— Brené Brown
Stop giving others permission to behave in a manner that’s unacceptable to you by aligning your words with your actions.
For example:
If you need to leave the office by 5 pm and your colleague refuses to reschedule the meeting, leave the office as communicated. Let them know that you won’t be available and they will need to get your inputs later.
If your senior shouts at you for not meeting their requirements on a research project, politely let them know that they can communicate their expectations calmly. Ask them about the gaps and discuss what you plan to do next and by when.
Actions speak louder than words. Don’t refuse to put your foot down, don’t compromise, and don’t give permission to others to negotiate in matters that are important to you.
People with a strong tendency to seek approval, be likable or those who can’t face criticism have a hard time saying no.
They may not realize it, but this is how they behave:
If you want to enforce boundaries, you have to let go of your tendency to please everyone. It’s ok if some people dislike you, get mad at you or don’t understand your priorities. As long as they don’t get in your way, you can choose to ignore them.
To do this, you first have to accept that you may be a people pleaser. Ask these questions:
The hardest thing about implementing boundaries is accepting that some people won’t like, understand, or agree with yours. Once you grow beyond pleasing others, setting your standards becomes easier. Not being liked by everyone is a small consequence when you consider the overall reward of healthier relationships.
— Nedra Glover Tawwab
Building the courage to be disliked is essential if you want to contribute without compromising on your mental health. Learn to let go. Stop trying to make everyone happy.
Defining boundaries assists you in making better decisions. But much like any other process, you can’t define them once and then decide to stick to them forever.
Your boundaries need to evolve with time. You need to adapt them to your specific context and situation.
\You also don’t need complete clarity on your boundaries from day one. You can experiment with different things to see what works and what doesn’t work for you. You can learn from your experience and adapt your boundaries to meet your new goals and aspirations.
To do this:
An experimental mindset helps you keep up with the changing times. Instead of sticking to boundaries that no longer serve you well, it enables you to learn, adapt and evolve.
There are reasons to set boundaries for yourself, but there are also reasons to keep doors open.
—Ashley Graham
However, remember this: if your work environment is toxic, setting boundaries can’t protect you. In such environments, others will repeatedly disrespect your boundaries and you will receive constant pushback on things you value.
Instead of trying to fight the system or trying to fix a broken culture that is beyond repair, spend that time and energy in finding a new job.
Quitting and moving to a healthy workplace is your only option.
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