Okay, correct me if Iām wrong, but it seems like when you constantly go out of your way for a partner who never returns the favor, itās usually you who ends up hurt. Let me give you an illustration: I run a lot to keep fit, but at the moment Iām out of commission because of a compensation injuryāhave you heard of that? If one leg has a knee or hip issue and you donāt compensate carefully, the other leg starts doing too much, taking on extra load it wasnāt meant to bear, and eventually it gives out too. Thatās exactly how some relationships play out. If you feel persistently overlooked, if youāre always the one adjusting, apologizing, or bending and thereās little to no reciprocity, youāre likely over-functioning. Youāre carrying more than you were meant to carry, and you end up depleted or hurt. We all know this only works when effort is mutual. When you realise the effort is one-sided, and youāve raised your concerns in a calm, vulnerable way only to be laughed at or dismissed, the bond begins to decayāyou stop trusting that person, intimacy fades, desire diminishes, and connection weakens, because itās all connected. Now comes the difficult part: accountability and honest self-reflection. We must be willing to admit how weāve played a role in creating that pattern. Instead of letting the natural consequences of someoneās neglect unfold, we often step in and say, āItās fine, Iāll take on the mental load, the emotional weight, the sacrificesāout of love.ā The problem is that abandoning our own boundaries and needs isnāt love; itās compensatingāperhaps for wounds from long ago, when a caregiver taught us that love had to be earned, that our value lay in serving others, in prioritizing their comfort and anticipating their needs. So we compensate and we erase ourselves in the hope of avoiding abandonment. As Jordan Pickle puts it, when you start drawing boundaries some relationships will fall apart because your self-neglect was the only thing holding them together. You might respond, āBut Iāve done thatāI told them I feel neglected, I voiced my needs, and they just donāt care.ā While I recognize how painful and exhausting that is, hear what youāve actually declared aloud: they donāt want a relationship with you. Anyone who dismisses your feelings, mocks your pain, calls you names, refuses to make you feel safe or valued, takes no responsibility and pins the blame on youāeither doesnāt want a real relationship or is too immature to give any relationship what it needs to survive. Does that mean ādivorce them tomorrowā? Iām not saying you should take that step immediately, but it does mean you must protect your safety, stop constantly second-guessing yourself, stop burying your needs and emotions, and stop overcompensating. If mirroring their level of effort causes the whole partnership to collapse, it was never sustainable to begin with. Trust me: giving more than youāre comfortable with only breeds resentment, distance, and deeper disconnection. So first, stop fightingāconflict requires two. Then, learn what you actually need and deserve; understand what the minimum standards of respect and kindness look like, and begin to advocate for yourself again. Wanting safety, consistency, and for someone who claims to love you to learn what that love means to you is not being ātoo needyāāthatās valuing a person. And remember: people can only meet you as deeply as they have met themselves. Boundaries arenāt a punishment we inflict on others; theyāre a question: has this person shown me they deserve this level of access to me? Itās heartbreaking when we must shield our hearts from our partners, but the alternative is what youāre living nowāsacrificing and bending until youāre brokenāand we can all agree that doesnāt work either. Sometimes, to save whatās left of yourself and, paradoxically, to give the relationship its only chance, you have to be willing to accept that it might end.
Signs Youāre Over-Functioning
- You are almost always the one initiating fixes, apologies, or compromises.
- You downplay your needs to keep the peace or avoid conflict.
- You feel exhausted, resentful, or ātaken for granted.ā
- You hide feelings to keep the relationship stable, or you make excuses for the other personās behavior.
- You fear that expressing a boundary will result in abandonment, so you avoid saying anything at all.
Practical Steps to Start Setting Boundaries
- Clarify what you need. Write down the behaviours that make you feel safe, respected, and cared for (e.g., consistent check-ins, shared chores, honest apology when hurtful things happen).
- Begin small. Test a modest boundary firstāa phone-free dinner twice a week, or asking for help with one household taskāand notice the response.
- Use clear, calm language. Use āIā statements and specific requests. Example scripts:
āWhen you cancel plans last minute, I feel dismissed. I need at least 24 hoursā notice or a heads-up when things change.ā
āIām not comfortable managing all the logistics alone. I need you to take ownership of X by next week.ā
- Set a consequenceāand follow through. Consequences arenāt punishments; theyāre natural limits that protect you. For example: āIf this continues, I will reduce the time we spend together until we can both meet each otherās needs.ā
- Track progress. If the boundary is respected, acknowledge that change. If not, reassess whether the relationship can meet your needs long term.
How to Communicate Without Escalation
- Choose timing: bring up serious topics when both are calm and not distracted.
- Stay specific and avoid global accusations (āYou alwaysā¦ā). Focus on behaviours and the impact on you.
- Invite collaboration: āCan we find a solution that works for both of us?ā If they refuse to engage, that itself is meaningful information.
- Use reflective listening: repeat back what you heard to ensure accuracy and reduce defensiveness.
When Your Partner Pushes Back
Expect some resistanceāboundaries change the status quo and can trigger insecurity or anger in a partner. If responses are curious, apologetic, or solution-focused, thatās promising. If responses are mocking, gaslighting, shaming, or retaliatory, take them seriously. Stay firm, and bring in outside support if needed (therapist, trusted friend, or mediator).
Repairing the Pattern (If Both People Want It)
- Agree to concrete, measurable changes and a timeline (e.g., weekly check-ins for two months).
- Try couples therapy or a skilled mediator to identify blind spots and build empathy.
- Practice reciprocal vulnerability: both partners share one thing they need and one thing they will do differently this week.
- Celebrate small wins to rebuild trust and motivation.
When to Consider Ending the Relationship
Consider separation if repeated attempts to set boundaries are ignored, mocked, or punished; if thereās ongoing emotional, physical, or sexual abuse; or if the other person is unwilling to take responsibility or seek help. Ending a relationship can be a healthy, courageous choice when it protects your wellbeing and integrity.
Self-Care and Rebuilding
- Reconnect with activities, friendships, and values that remind you who you are outside the relationship.
- Work with a therapist to explore patterns from family of origin that may drive people-pleasing or fear of abandonment.
- Practice saying no in low-stakes situations to strengthen your boundary muscles.
Safety and Resources
If you feel threatened, unsafe, or abused, prioritize your physical safetyāreach out to local emergency services, a shelter, or a domestic violence hotline in your area. If the problem is chronic but not violent, consider individual therapy, couples therapy, support groups, or trusted friends and family for emotional support.
Boundaries are not cold or cruelāthey are the scaffolding for healthy connection. They create clarity, protect your capacity to give, and force the relationship to either meet you or show itself for what it is. That honestyāpainful as it can beāultimately gives you the chance to preserve your dignity, your health, and the possibility of a real, reciprocal intimacy.
Relationship Adviceļ¼ Abandoning your Boundaries isnāt Love">


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