Alex Moliski
One of the biggest misconceptions people have about self-care is that it’s mostly about adding things to your life: bubble baths, massages, vacations, pedicures, yoga classes, meditation apps. And while there’s absolutely nothing wrong with any of those things, most people don’t actually need more self-care activities. They need to stop overriding themselves.
They need to stop saying yes when their whole body is saying no. They need to stop performing participation while secretly counting the minutes until they can leave. They need to stop exhausting themselves trying to keep the peace while quietly abandoning themselves in the process. That’s where self-care boundaries come in, because real self-care isn’t just about what you add to your life. It’s also about what you stop forcing yourself to endure.
I was reminded of this when I reread a message from a former client. She had gone away with family for Thanksgiving and texted me something that perfectly captures what healthy boundaries actually make possible. She said:
“I just ended up backing out of a family hike because I hate hiking and needed alone time. I was able to let them know I just need some alone time, and they should go on without me. And it was so freeing, and I’m so enjoying soaking up these quiet hours alone.
If I hadn’t done this, I don’t think I would have been very pleasant on the hike or at dinner tonight. But now I’ll be rested up and ready to talk all evening. Thank you for teaching me how to do this gracefully.”
I love this story because on the surface, it sounds so simple. She skipped a hike. But underneath that decision was an enormous internal shift. She stopped abandoning herself in real time, and honestly, that’s what self-care boundaries are really about. Not controlling other people, becoming rigid or refusing to participate in life. And not turning into someone who only does what they want all the time. It’s about learning how to stay connected to yourself while you’re making decisions.
That means being able to hear yourself clearly. Being able to notice your own limits before resentment takes over. Being able to remember what’s true for you, even when other people are disappointed, confused, or doing things differently than you would.
For many people, especially women who grew up in dysfunctional families, this is incredibly difficult because we learned that being “good” meant going along to get along, being easy-going, low maintenance, always available, and being accommodating. So we override ourselves constantly and call it being “nice.”
But eventually that creates exhaustion, resentment, irritability, emotional shutdown, and disconnection from ourselves as well as others. Then we wonder why we don’t even know what we want anymore. It’s because we’ve spent years leaving ourselves.
What struck me most about my client’s message was not that she hated hiking. It was that she finally allowed that truth to matter.
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