Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 1703 answers
When you set a new boundary, people will test it. This is not malice — it is a natural social recalibration process. Expect it and plan for it.
When you set a new boundary, people will test it. This is not malice — it is a natural social recalibration process. Expect it and plan for it.
When you set a new boundary, people will test it. This is not malice — it is a natural social recalibration process. Expect it and plan for it.
When you set a new boundary, people will test it. This is not malice — it is a natural social recalibration process. Expect it and plan for it.
When you set a new boundary, people will test it. This is not malice — it is a natural social recalibration process. Expect it and plan for it.
Identify one boundary you have recently set or need to set — in a relationship, at work, with family, or with your own habits. (1) Write down the specific boundary in one sentence. Not a wish, not a preference — a boundary. "I do not take work calls after 6 PM" is a boundary. "I would prefer fewer.
The most common failure is caving during the extinction burst — the period of intensified testing that occurs immediately after the boundary is set. This is precisely the moment when the boundary feels most wrong, because the social pressure is at its peak. But caving at this point does not just.
When you set a new boundary, people will test it. This is not malice — it is a natural social recalibration process. Expect it and plan for it.
Adjusting boundaries based on context is different from abandoning them under pressure.
Adjusting boundaries based on context is different from abandoning them under pressure.
Adjusting boundaries based on context is different from abandoning them under pressure.
Adjusting boundaries based on context is different from abandoning them under pressure.
Adjusting boundaries based on context is different from abandoning them under pressure.
Adjusting boundaries based on context is different from abandoning them under pressure.
Identify one boundary you currently hold rigidly — something where you never make exceptions. Write down the boundary, then list three hypothetical scenarios where adjusting it might be appropriate. For each scenario, write: (1) what contextual factor makes this situation genuinely different, (2).
Two opposite failure modes operate here. The first is treating every request as a valid reason to adjust, which is not flexibility — it is capitulation wearing the language of flexibility. You know you are in this mode when you cannot name a single request you have refused in the last month. The.
Adjusting boundaries based on context is different from abandoning them under pressure.
The most important boundaries are the ones you set with yourself — limits on your own behavior, consumption, and tendencies that would otherwise undermine your goals and values.
The most important boundaries are the ones you set with yourself — limits on your own behavior, consumption, and tendencies that would otherwise undermine your goals and values.
The most important boundaries are the ones you set with yourself — limits on your own behavior, consumption, and tendencies that would otherwise undermine your goals and values.
The most important boundaries are the ones you set with yourself — limits on your own behavior, consumption, and tendencies that would otherwise undermine your goals and values.
The most important boundaries are the ones you set with yourself — limits on your own behavior, consumption, and tendencies that would otherwise undermine your goals and values.
The most important boundaries are the ones you set with yourself — limits on your own behavior, consumption, and tendencies that would otherwise undermine your goals and values.
The most important boundaries are the ones you set with yourself — limits on your own behavior, consumption, and tendencies that would otherwise undermine your goals and values.