How to Set & Hold Boundaries with Melissa Urban
October 27, 2022
Glennon Doyle:
Welcome to We Can Do Hard Things, do we have a treat for you. This is how our song goes. We have a treat for you.
Abby Wambach:
Is it?
Glennon Doyle:
Was that good?
Abby Wambach:
No.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. You know with this podcast, We Can Do Hard Things, we’re just trying to answer easy questions like just how do we live?
Abby Wambach:
Super easy.
Glennon Doyle:
How do we do this? How do we live? We have somebody here today that it is very helpful to help us answer that question. Her name is Melissa Urban. Melissa Urban is the co-founder and CEO of Whole30, a six time New York Times best selling author and her highly anticipated book, The book of, one of our favorite words here at We Can Do Hard Things, Boundaries. The Book of Boundaries is available now. She is the host of Do the Thing Podcast, Building Community Health and Entrepreneurship. She lives in Salt Lake City, Utah. Hello, Melissa.
Melissa Urban:
Hello, Glennon, Abby, Amanda, it’s so good to be with all of you today.
Abby Wambach:
Same.
Glennon Doyle:
What a treat.
Abby Wambach:
You’re such a ray of sunshine.
Glennon Doyle:
I know.
Abby Wambach:
I know that the listeners can’t see it, but your presence and your energy, I just am really excited to be talking to you.
Melissa Urban:
I came in beaming because you are some of my favorite people. This is one of my favorite podcasts and this is one of my favorite subjects, so it’s like my best day ever right now.
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, that’s good.
Abby Wambach:
Aww.
Glennon Doyle:
She does glow, I think that might be what having good boundaries looks like.
Abby Wambach:
Yes.
Glennon Doyle:
She looks less dead inside than the rest of us.
Abby Wambach:
Yes, that’s a good point.
Glennon Doyle:
I would like to start, I feel like you are someone who can handle starting with some hard things, so we’re going to do that because I want to explain to our Pod Squad why it is that you are the exact person to talk to us about boundaries, a feel that you are the right person to talk to us about boundaries after reading more of your story in your book, The Book of Boundaries. You describe your childhood as idyllic and then when you were 16 years old, you were abused, sexually abused, by an extended family member.
Melissa Urban:
Yes. I grew up with two parents. My mom stayed home. My dad worked sometimes two jobs to support us. We had this large Catholic Portuguese family. Everyone was very close. There were always lots of kids running around. I was a really good student. I got straight As. I was really smart. I read a lot. I didn’t cause trouble. I was a really good kid until 16 when I was manipulated by an older family member and sexually abused and my entire life just took a sharp turn from that point on.
Glennon Doyle:
First of all, I’m so sorry about that. In the aftermath of that, your parents decided not to tell anyone that that had happened, as you say, for fear that it would shatter the family peace. You had to sit next to this man at gatherings for your entire teenage life.
Melissa Urban:
Yeah, I did.
Glennon Doyle:
Tell me about what the effect of that is when a boundary is so broken and then the people who are responsible for restoring that boundary for you don’t do it?
Melissa Urban:
Yeah. I didn’t grow up with boundaries being modeled for me. In my family the sort of unspoken rule and often spoken was if we don’t look at it didn’t happen. When people would get divorced, when someone would get cancer, when things would happen, we just wouldn’t talk about it and if we didn’t talk about it was almost like it didn’t existed and that was how I grew up. So of course when this happened, I didn’t want to talk about it and I didn’t want to tell anyone. Because there was such a large manipulation factor to it, he told me if I told people, no one would believe me and it was clear that I was acting out and it was my first sexual experience, so there was a ton of manipulation and that I was told that this was just what happens when two people love each other this much. It was super gross.
Melissa Urban:
I didn’t want to tell anyone and then out of like desperation, I finally told my parents because I couldn’t stand to see him anymore and they chose to handle it by also not talking about it. They did the best they could with the information they had. I absolutely believe that. I’m still navigating what that looks like, but at the time, I felt completely abandoned. I felt completely just left to my own devices to figure out how to handle this thing that is so big that nobody knows how to handle on their own, nevermind a 16 year old child to navigate it by myself. Because the message was don’t disturb the family piece, I had to keep showing up at Easter and Christmas and birthday parties and I worked really hard to pretend like everything was better because everyone needed me to be fine. I tried really hard to be fine and then it just ate me up from the inside out. I ate all of it. I swallowed all of it. You can imagine what that did.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. I wrote in my first memoir, “I had a magical childhood, I was born broken,” and I remember sitting in one of my first interviews with Oprah and her reading that line to me on the camera, “I was born broken, I had a magical childhood.” She looked at me and goes, “Really?” It’s taken me to be 45 years old to look back and say, “Oh, that’s an interesting thing we do to protect our family, to protect ourselves.” We say everything was magical. I was messed up. I was messed up and then you get to a certain age and you think, wait a minute.
Melissa Urban:
Yeah.
Glennon Doyle:
Have you had that? Because before we get into things, I want to talk about what does idyllic mean? If you’re in a family who’s choosing to bury things all the time, who’s choosing not to look at hard things, who’s choosing false peace of a family over the peace of the child, how is that idyllic? What do we mean when we say that?
Melissa Urban:
I know. I’m still wrestling with that myself. It’s hard to look back through adult eyes and not also be so deeply entrenched in how I saw it as a kid. I’m doing a lot of reparenting right now to really be able to comfort that side of myself who needed to see it that way in order to keep herself safe. I had to see it that way. Looking back now, of course I can see the cracks. No family grows up perfect. But had this incident of abuse not taken place, I probably could have got through my entire childhood. My ACE score is virtually nothing without that. I did have a pretty good and lucky and privileged childhood, but when you add that factor on top of it and then you see everything that came as a result and now even the repairing that I’m still doing with those relationships, it’s hard not to have that dichotomy, I think. It’s hard to bring those two pieces together in a healthy way.
Glennon Doyle:
Tell the Pod Squad what the ACE score is just for people who don’t know.
Melissa Urban:
Oh, it’s a test that you can take that sort of tracks your various degrees of childhood trauma and the higher the score you get, the more things you check off and say yes to, the more you had a difficult and traumatized childhood. I’ve done the test before and I think my score is like a one. I didn’t have neglect, I didn’t have abuse, I didn’t have drug or alcohol use in the family. I don’t tick most of those boxes and also my life took a careening tacked off into absolute self-destruction for a very long time because of what happened.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. We need more nuance tests also because it really makes you feel like if you don’t have those things, then you are just messed up when actually there’s so many various ways that differently constituted people can be traumatized.
Melissa Urban:
Yeah.
Glennon Doyle:
Right?
Melissa Urban:
Yeah.
Glennon Doyle:
Melissa, after you say that this all happened, I mean it’s fascinating because to have such a sacred boundary just crossed over and not explained and then not restored, you in reaction to that turn to drugs, alcohol, all the things. I love the part where you say you just started doing drugs and then as they say, that escalated quickly, I get that very much, to cocaine, heroin, meth, prescription drugs, all the things. Then you’re 26, addicted to all the things, you’re sitting next to a keg of Natty Light. In that moment-
Melissa Urban:
College.
Glennon Doyle:
… you set your first boundary. Can you tell us that story?
Melissa Urban:
Yeah. I spent five years doing drugs as a means to escape from what had happened and not be in my own body and not have to process or deal with the trauma and then the drugs became a problem all into itself and now I just have layers and layers of problems. I went to rehab once. I maintained my recovery for a year and then I relapsed. It was really because I hadn’t set any boundaries with myself in my recovery other than one shaky boundary that I would try not to use. I was relying on nothing but willpower and circumstance and convenience to hold onto my recovery, which as we know is a completely tenuous and unsustainable place to be. The second time I went to rehab and pulled myself out of it, I knew things needed to be different and I didn’t know how. My life had become so small at that point. I was so scared to talk to anyone about how I felt, to advocate for my needs. I felt like any sort of expression of my feelings or even letting people know that I wasn’t okay would just push everyone away and I would become isolated again. I said yes to a party that I should not have said yes to with people I didn’t know, doing God knows what in the bathroom, sitting next to a keg of Natty Light with a red plastic Solo cup drinking water.
Glennon Doyle:
Awesome. Awesome, way to stay sober.
Melissa Urban:
Right?
Glennon Doyle:
Yes. Ideal, idyllic, really.
Melissa Urban:
Yeah. There’s that word again. Realizing that if I didn’t say something right now, I don’t know if I was going to make it back a third time. This felt like a life or death situation. We are talking about my recovery again. Nobody knew that I had relapsed. Nobody knew anything because I was fine. In a moment of just sheer panic, I’ve vomited all over my best friend, word vomited, what was to become the first honest to God boundary I ever set with anyone, which was I’m not okay, I can’t be here, I need to go home. I thought he would laugh at me. I thought he would scoff. I thought he would blow me off and go party. He said, “Oh,” and he asked me a few questions and then he said, “Okay,” and we went home. That was the boundary that saved my life, but that was where it all changed for me. That was where I realized that boundaries were the key to expanding my life beyond my wildest imagination. That was the moment.
Amanda Doyle:
You said something else to him about a boundary of how you could maintain your friendship.
Melissa Urban:
Oh, yeah.
Amanda Doyle:
What else did you say to him in that way?
Melissa Urban:
I did not intend to have the most important conversation of my life next to the beer pong table at a college dorm room, but I said, “I can’t be here. I have to go home.” He said, “Okay.” I was like I got to say it all. I’m here, we’re in it, let me just say it all and he said-
Glennon Doyle:
And the first one went well, so you were like, let’s try again.
Melissa Urban:
Yeah. I think after I said the first one he just said, “Oh,” and then I just spurt off the rest of them. I didn’t even wait for a reaction. I was like, “You cannot offer me drugs ever again. Ever. Even if I tell you it’s okay, even if I ask you for them, you cannot. If I can’t trust you with that, we can’t be friends. You can’t do drugs around me ever. If we go someplace and you know there’s going to be people doing drugs, I can’t be there, so don’t invite me or tell me to stay home or that you’ll see me some other time. I need to know that I can trust you with these or we can’t be friends.” That was my boundary. These are my limits and if you can’t meet those needs for my own survival, I will no longer be able to be friends with you. That was the point where he was like okay, shell shocked, and then we left.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s the there she is moment. Oh, there you are. It’s so interesting how when we quit the booze or the drinking or whatever we’re addicted to, it’s like good news, bad news. You think for so long that that’s your problem. The booze is my problem. The drugs is my problem. I’m going to quit that. But actually the booze and the drugs is just the thing you started doing to avoid the problem, so when you stop doing the booze and the drugs, what is left? The problem.
Abby Wambach:
The problem.
Melissa Urban:
All of the problem.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s like-
Melissa Urban:
Oh, yes.
Glennon Doyle:
Right? It’s like a little depressing because you think, oh, if I do this one thing, but then there comes the progress. Right?
Melissa Urban:
It’s like you have this whole closet that you just shove everything into and then you close the door and the minute you open the door, it just all comes tumbling out at you and now you’ve got to sort through it all. Yes, that was exactly it.
Glennon Doyle:
We were talking recent, Abby and I, about this and it’s just, it’s beautiful, it’s brutiful, it’s brutiful. It’s like this little girl whose boundaries were violated, whose family was unable, for whatever reason, to help her restore those boundaries, who learned to protect herself, who became her own damn hero. You talk about there’s three real steps to boundary setting and keeping and the first one is identify. How do we know that we need a boundary?
Melissa Urban:
Yes. Identifying the need for a boundary. The easiest way to identify is where are there areas in my life or in my relationships that just make me feel like hmm, I don’t want to? It’s a sense of dread before an encounter or around a person. A sense of anxiety, if you notice resentment around a certain person, and this can also include around a conversation topic. If you feel like you can’t show up as your fullest self with that person, like you have to hide pieces of yourself in that relationship, a boundary is needed. If you leave thinking, I don’t like how I feel when I spend time with that person, that’s a really good sign. If you leave the conversation and you run through all of these things in your head, I should have said this, I should have done that, why did I do that, and you’re beating yourself up for all of the things that you could have or should have done, that’s a sign that a boundary is needed. If you’re always wondering where you stand with this person, you never quite know, that’s another fantastic sign.
Amanda Doyle:
What about the energy leakage? Can you talk about that?
Melissa Urban:
Yeah. This is where I get a little woo and I love it and I’m into it. I know you’re into, too.
Amanda Doyle:
Glennon will appreciate it.
Abby Wambach:
Yeah.
Amanda Doyle:
… shout out.
Melissa Urban:
The concept of energy leak is essentially that any kind of interaction with you and someone else, whether we’re talking in person, whether it’s a podcast episode like this, whether I’m just scrolling social media and engaging with comments or looking at old pictures of my ex, that is an energetic exchange. Energy leakage happens when you are expending more energy than you are getting back from those interactions and very often it happens invisibly. Social media is one of the biggest areas of energy leakage because it feels so effortless. I’m just going to scroll, I’ll hit a like, I’ll engage with a com… Oh, I don’t like that comment. What is that person doing? What is their profile about? What are their… All of a sudden, your energy is now being poured into this phone in a way that feels innocuous, but is not innocuous. If it means that you have less energy for your spouse or your family or your job, that is energy leakage. Being attentive to where your energy is going and engagements that feel like you are giving more than you are getting back is a huge sign, a huge red flag for a boundary.
Abby Wambach:
That’s really interesting.
Amanda Doyle:
I love that one so much because it doesn’t have anything to do with whether another person or an event or whoever’s on the other side of that equation is doing. It could be a wonderful time with wonderful friends who are all doing the right thing and supporting you. Nonetheless, you may have energy leakage that allows you to only do that once every three weeks, whereas the rest of your friends can do it once a week. It has nothing to do with their behavior.
Melissa Urban:
Yes. Again, this is so important for the conversation because boundaries are never about telling the other person what to do. Boundaries are not controlling other people. They are about telling people what you will do to keep yourself safe and healthy.
Abby Wambach:
That’s good.
Melissa Urban:
That’s the perfect kind of framework for boundaries, which is it’s not about them, it’s about me.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. We need to get into this-
Abby Wambach:
Yeah, this is good.
Glennon Doyle:
… because this was one of the most important parts for me and Abby with the way you talk about boundaries. We’ve decided we need a boundary. We’ve identified that we are bitter or anxious or avoidant about something or someone.
Abby Wambach:
There’s energy leakage.
Glennon Doyle:
There’s energy leakage, so much leakage, so we have decided we need a boundary. Great, step one. The setting is hard, but it’s the right kind of hard, hard either way. It’s hard to feel bitter and anxious and avoidant all the time, right?
Melissa Urban:
Yes.
Glennon Doyle:
So it’s hard either way.
Melissa Urban:
Both things are uncomfortable. The setting of the boundary, it’s uncomfortable. I get it. It’s hard to express our needs. It’s hard to advocate for ourselves. It’s hard to feel like we’re disappointing someone else. I understand that. Also, what you are doing now, swallowing your feelings, putting everyone’s comfort ahead of your own, not advocating for yourself, taking on more than you are capable of handling, that’s uncomfortable, too, and that path doesn’t lead you anywhere.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s right.
Melissa Urban:
This path improves your relationships or at least has the potential to.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. It’s just that idea of being bold enough to cause an outer conflict instead of always choosing inner conflict.
Melissa Urban:
Yes. I know a very smart person once said, “Be willing to disappoint other people before you are willing to disappoint yourself,” and I think about that a lot in my boundary practice.
Glennon Doyle:
Cool, cool. What I want to really get to with the Pod Squad here, so Abby and I are going for a walk yesterday-
Abby Wambach:
Mm-hmm, and a friend.
Glennon Doyle:
… and she says, she’s talking about a friend who’s dealing with a relationship thing, and we’re deciding how to coach her friend and Abby says, “I’m going to tell her to say to her partner, ‘You are not allowed to talk to me like that.’ That’s the boundary.” I said to Abby, “No, Melissa would say that that is not a boundary that’s controlling because that’s saying you are not allowed to talk to me like that. What your friend has to say is, ‘You are not allowed to talk to me like that and if you talk to me like that again, I will leave.'” Am I right?
Melissa Urban:
Yes.
Glennon Doyle:
Is that what you’re saying? That it has to be what I will do?
Melissa Urban:
Correct, yes.
Glennon Doyle:
Because that’s all I can control.
Abby Wambach:
What would be the best way to do it?
Melissa Urban:
Everything that you’re saying is kind of essentially the same thing, right? What you are saying is I will not participate in a conversation that does not feel safe to me. When you speak to me, when you call me names, or when you get overly angry, or when you make it personal, that does not feel safe to me and I will not participate in that conversation. What I would say in that moment is the green level boundary, the kind of entry level, is I need our conversations to feel safe and productive and healthy. Can we agree on some rules of engagement around conflict? This is something that you kind of talk about ahead of time and then in the moment if you need to, it is, I’m noticing that your tone is escalating, I’m noticing that you just called me a name. This does not feel like it is appropriate or healthy. I’m going to take a five minute break. When I come back, let’s reengage.
Melissa Urban:
It is always from the self, you are always talking about this is the action I am going to take. Now, sometimes you do frame that boundary in the form of a request because your partner’s not a mind reader and they don’t know that you have a limit. So your initial request might be can we agree on these terms of engagement so that when we do have conflict, we both feel like we’re approaching it from a productive and healthy standpoint? That is a request and you are asking them to buy in, but the boundary itself is I will not participate in conversations in which I don’t feel safe or that don’t feel healthy for me.
Abby Wambach:
You mentioned green system, can you explain the green, yellow, red systems that you wrote about in your book?
Melissa Urban:
Yes. I believe in minimum effort, maximum effect, you want to go in with the gentlest, kindest language possible and still have your boundary be respected. You don’t need to go in kicking the doors down if you could just make a simple, kind request.
Glennon Doyle:
Sister, this is for us, listen up.
Amanda Doyle:
Why is Melissa looking directly at me when she says this?
Melissa Urban:
I’m actually talking to myself because I’m very East Coast and I’m very direct and I’m very blunt, so I-
Glennon Doyle:
Minimum dose-
Melissa Urban:
… sometimes [inaudible 00:21:05]-
Glennon Doyle:
… maximum effect, you call it. Minimum dose, maximum effect.
Melissa Urban:
Yeah. It’s a fitness principle, it’s an Archimedes physics principle that was a.
Amanda Doyle:
Oh, that’s why we’ve never heard it Glennon.
Melissa Urban:
Do as little as possible to have the maximum effect. I kind of color code my boundaries green, yellow, red. Green is the gentlest, kindest language. You are assuming that the person didn’t know you had a limit and wants to be respectful and healthy in your relationship. You’ll share this green language and see where it goes. Yellow is okay, this person is either forgetting or unwilling or reluctant to respect my boundary, now my language needs to be a bit more direct. It’s still kind, but it’s more direct and impactful. I may share a consequence here, like if we can’t change the tone of this discussion, then I’ll be leaving the room for five minutes so we can take a break. The red level boundary is if the behavior continues to escalate, this is the boundary, this is the consequence, this is the action that I am going to take to keep myself safe and healthy, which is I’m going to interrupt you. The way you are speaking to me right now does not feel okay to me. I’m going to leave for an hour and when I come back we can resume. That’s your red. Occasionally I throw a fuchsia in there for the people that really deserve it, but we go green, yellow, red.
Glennon Doyle:
Oh, fuchsia, love it, love it. Pod Squadders, this is an example from Melissa’s work, but controlling is you’re pissed that your Uncle Joe still smokes and you say to your Uncle Joe, “You must stop smoking. You need to stop smoking.” Controlling, that’s not a boundary. Boundary is, “Uncle Joe, we don’t allow smoke in our home.”
Melissa Urban:
Yes, exactly.
Glennon Doyle:
Right?
Melissa Urban:
That’s exactly right.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s what we are doing. We don’t allow smoke. Smoke away, Joe, not the boss of Joe. I’m the boss of my home.
Melissa Urban:
Yes. Because the boundary is designed to keep us safe and healthy and improve our relationships. If Uncle Joe keeps coming in my house and lighting up, I’m not going to be that pleased with him and I’m probably not going to continue to invite him over and it’s going to hurt our relationship. This one simple boundary, I don’t allow smoking in the house, would you either put it out or go outside? Yes, it requires Uncle Joe’s cooperation. Yes, it is a request. But the ultimate boundary is I will not be inviting you into my home if you cannot respect this healthy limit that I have. Exactly.
Amanda Doyle:
I just thought of something as you were saying this, the whole idea of boundaries, it really does save us from being judge and jury. It allows the other person to participate in the conversation. Instead of saying, “Ah, Joe, it’s making me crazy, I’m never inviting him over,” You get to invite Joe in and say, “Joe, this is where I am with it.” Then if Joe stops coming over, it’s because Joe has decided he will not go outside and smoke that he needs to be inside and smoke.
Melissa Urban:
Absolutely. Yes, that’s exactly right. You set the boundary that you need for your own healthy limit and this boundary is going to help the relationship. It’s not helpful or really kind for you to just swallow it, not say anything because you don’t want to be impolite, but then be resentful and mad the rest of the day because your house smells like smoke and be angry with him and he doesn’t know why. That’s not particularly fair. The kindest thing is to set the boundary and then how that person reacts to your clear, kind, healthy boundary is not your business and it’s not your responsibility. If Uncle Joe says, “Okay, I just won’t be visiting anymore.” All right. That is your responsibility. That is your business. I cannot and will not try to control it. They’re allowed to be mad about your boundary. They’re allowed to have feelings about it, absolutely, and you can acknowledge those and you will disappoint some people with your boundary. I often say that setting a boundary often means revoking a privilege that that person was never meant to have in the first place.
Abby Wambach:
Damn.
Melissa Urban:
It can feel like you’re taking something away from them and that can make people mad and I understand that. They’re allowed to be mad and also, this is my healthy limit.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. It’s like over and over again it’s this idea of this is actually the way that we can love each other. That’s what a boundary is. This is the way that we can love each other. This is the way that we can be friends.
Abby Wambach:
I just love the fact that there’s a-
Glennon Doyle:
It’s a bridge, really.
Abby Wambach:
… separation between control and personal safety in this approach because the truth is as you are a very boundaried person, babe.
Glennon Doyle:
Correct.
Abby Wambach:
It’s something that I love about you, but sometimes it does feel like why does she get to control the whole situation here? I think that this kind of method in terms of Glennon, you being able to personalize it, this is what will make me feel safe using green language-
Glennon Doyle:
So it’s like-
Abby Wambach:
… using the green system.
Glennon Doyle:
I’m not going to say to you, “Turn down the TV, you can’t listen to the TV that loud.” I’m just going to say, “If you keep listening to the TV that loud, I’m going to leave.” But also I think that’s not going to upset you.
Abby Wambach:
No, that would upset me.
Glennon Doyle:
I’m just going to have to keep leaving. But Melissa, don’t you think that when someone has gone through life boundary-less or maybe you don’t, I think sometimes when someone has gone through life boundary-less and figured out that boundaries save them, for a couple decades, they can be on red, even with the sweetest people, always on red. Is that a thing?
Melissa Urban:
Yeah, it’s totally a thing. Gretchen Rubin calls it obliger rebellion, which is like people pleaser rebellion where you eat it and eat it and eat it and then you explode. I think that can absolutely happen with boundaries where you have held it in for such a long time that now instead of a healthy boundary, maybe you start throwing up some walls, maybe you start making them too rigid. They’re not flexible, they’re not contextual. If the boundary is I can never handle the TV at this volume, then I would gently invite you to talk about why, why is that? Does it always hurt your ears? Do you always find that the sensory input is too much or is it just that if the TV is this loud and the kids have their TikTok going and somebody’s making dinner in the kitchen and I’m feeling a little bit overwhelmed, it becomes too much? Then you can kind of narrow in on where your boundary needs to be.
Melissa Urban:
We don’t want to just go out there and start throwing up brick walls as far and as wide as we can because that in insulates us and keeps us in as much as it keeps people out. We want to evaluate the context and how I’m feeling. Honestly, almost the first pre-step to boundaries is looking inward, taking a pause, and looking in and saying, “What do I need in this moment to feel safe, to feel healthy, to restore my energy?” That’s a piece that we’re often missing when we have trauma, when we have addiction, when we have abuse from religious culture, from diet culture, we have been so disconnected from our bodies and so conditioned to look outside of ourselves to tell us what we need or for validation or for worth that we don’t take those moments to pause and say, “But what do I need?” What we do is react to external stimulus instead of looking at us and saying, “What do I need and how can I set a boundary from that place?”
Abby Wambach:
This is going to be life changing for us.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah, mm-hmm. Okay, gotcha.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s like The Untethered Soul when he says, “It’s not to say what about that thing happening is bothering me, it’s what inside me is being bothered by that thing.”
Melissa Urban:
Yeah, exactly. It’s just a reframe, but the more often we check in with ourselves and set boundaries from the self, the more natural it becomes, the easier it becomes, the more comfortable it becomes, and honestly, the more authority or weight it carries. Because when I set a boundary that looks like it’s coming out of nowhere, turn the TV down, don’t light that cigarette, if it looks like it’s coming out of nowhere, it’s going to be harder for the other person to respect it. It might even make our relationship a bit more challenging because I’m not offering any sort of context or using the boundary to deepen the connection.
Abby Wambach:
Then you have relationships that are real, that people are opting in to you and your safety at the center of you.
Glennon Doyle:
You, specifically you, yep.
Melissa Urban:
Yes.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s good.
Melissa Urban:
Boundaries make people feel safe. Someone sent me a DM just the other day and said, “I now know why I like following you so much, you make me feel safe. I know when you say something you mean it and I know you mean what you say. I feel like you are reliable and trustworthy in that I know I can rely on you to be responsible for your own feelings and caretake your own needs, and to me, that feels safe.” I think that’s very true.
Glennon Doyle:
Because people pleasers aren’t safe. They’re like chameleons and you actually don’t ever know them and that doesn’t feel safe even if they’re meeting all of your needs, even if they’re caretaking you.
Melissa Urban:
Are they meeting your needs resentfully or are they meeting them begrudgingly? Is they’re going to be an explosion or a rebellion? Are they holding or seething on the inside? That’s a much more difficult relationship to really get to know someone through.
Amanda Doyle:
When you talked about your first boundary that you set with your friend and you said from then on because he understood and he accepted and embraced my boundary, I knew that I could trust him to be around me. Don’t you think it’s also true with boundaries that when we set them and they’re accepted, that we can then trust ourselves around those people? Because in some ways I feel like that’s when I often get the resentment and the avoidance, it’s like I can’t trust the version of me that shows up in the absence of this boundary.
Melissa Urban:
Yes, that is exactly it. Again, that’s a result of looking externally to tell me what I should be doing. This person’s needs, this person’s comfort, this influence is going to dictate my experience and what I need and instead and that doesn’t feel trustworthy because I’m not checking in with myself and I’m not restoring that connection to myself. When I go in first and I restore that connection with my body, I ask myself what I need, I advocate for myself based on my own needs, not based on what this other person is doing, it does feel more trusting and more trustworthy. Boundaries improve relationships across every single metric. They let you show up more freely and more openly, more trustingly, more vulnerably. They eliminate the dread and anxiety that might have come along before you have boundaries. They are so incredibly strengthening for relationships. I think we don’t set them because we think somehow that they’re just the opposite. That’s part of what I want to get across in this book.
Glennon Doyle:
It’s like the underneath the foundation of it is so interesting because it’s like if what we’re really trying to do is just get to know ourselves down here, be known, know ourselves, be known and not be ashamed, that’s the original plan, like go back to who we were before the world told us who to be, go back to who we were before we decided to be ashamed of every single need that we had. Setting boundaries is actually not even about the other person. It’s about figuring out who you are, what you need, and falling in love with and accepting that. If I’m like I have sensory overload all the time and I know it’s so weird, but I just need everyone to talk quieter or I can’t, like that’s a weird thing about me, but it’s true. My family knows that now. It’s kind of a cool thing to be like, oh this is a weird thing about me and if you love me, this is how to treat each other. It’s me falling in love with myself a little bit and being okay.
Melissa Urban:
Yeah. You know what else your family really appreciates because I am the same way with my concussion and ongoing symptoms, I am also there are times where sensory input is way too much. The other thing that your family and my family loves about us is that if, even though they know that we have a hard time handling this input, they can trust us to navigate our own feelings and remove ourselves from the situation if we need to. We’re not going to blow up at them, we’re not going to blame them. We are going to take charge of our own comfort and our own safety and that feels safe to the people in our lives.
Glennon Doyle:
God, that’s so true because that’s what they think when they’re like, oh, mom’s on the deck again because the truth is that you live in a loud world. You can tell people that and they still don’t have to change all of their behavior, but if they trust you to take care of yourself.
Melissa Urban:
Exactly.
Abby Wambach:
That’s good.
Glennon Doyle:
Can you talk to us about the holding of the boundary because-
Abby Wambach:
Yeah, because we’ve identified-
Glennon Doyle:
… we’ve set-
Abby Wambach:
… set, and now we’re onto the hold.
Glennon Doyle:
… the holding is the thing you describe and I love so much as dealing with the inner ickiness, it’s the ickiness that comes after when someone is disappointed in us.
Melissa Urban:
We feel this sense of guilt even sometimes before the boundary is out. We feel guilty for advocating for ourselves. There are so many reasons, particularly with women, particularly with moms, why we feel this guilt, societal factors, the patriarchy, and sexism, and stereotypically rigid gender roles have all told us, I grew up believing that I shouldn’t have needs, that my needs weren’t worthy, that everyone else’s comfort takes priority and needs take priority over mine and I should not be expressing. If I did express, I would be called selfish or cold or controlling. We didn’t grow up learning how to set these boundaries and even just thinking about it makes us feel really guilty, but it’s important to note that it’s not earned guilt. It is not guilt because I did something bad and now biology and nature is going to help me remember that it didn’t feel good and it wasn’t right and it was harmful and I’m not going to do it again.
Melissa Urban:
This is unearned guilt. We did not earn this guilt. There’s nothing about this that says we have done something wrong or we harmed another person. We are simply advocating for our needs. Yes, holding the boundary is like one half of the battle. The thing is, in order to hold the boundary, you have to actually hold it. I really encourage people to think about, okay, I’m going to set this boundary, is this something I can follow through with? Because I think what happens sometimes is people immediately they go to the red and they think the boundary has to be I’m cutting off all communication. My mom won’t stop talking about diet or my body or weight loss, I need to cut off all communication. Or this friend continues to emotionally dump on me, I need to break up with my friend. But I encourage people to say, “Okay, maybe that isn’t the only limit. Maybe you can just limit the way you communicate, how often you communicate.” If this tends to happen over meals, maybe you socialize outside of meals. If it tends to happen on the phone, maybe you try email and text message for a little while.
Melissa Urban:
There are some in between ways to hold the boundary, but you have to be willing to hold it because if you don’t, a couple things happen. Number one, if you set the boundary and then don’t hold it in the face of pushback and pressure, that person is just going to be even more convinced that their needs are valid and they’re going to double down the next time you try to say it. But most important, you have just taught yourself that you can’t trust yourself to advocate for yourself. You have just taught yourself that maybe my needs don’t matter as much as somebody else and that is such a profound message to absorb in your body, this idea that I set this healthy limit and I did not hold it. I need you to keep that promise for yourself because your needs are worthy, your needs are valid, they matter just as much as anybody else’s. You deserve this perfectly reasonable healthy limit and I want to help you hold it.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s good, but we can prep for the hold long ahead of time by when we’re doing the set, only setting something that we play out and we know we can hold if it doesn’t work out.
Melissa Urban:
Yes. First rule of parenting is never to set a consequence that you’re not willing to enforce.
Glennon Doyle:
Exactly.
Melissa Urban:
So like no iPad for a week hurts me as much as it hurts my kid-
Glennon Doyle:
Exactly.
Melissa Urban:
… and he knows it, so we don’t do that. When you are thinking about the boundary, you have to think about is this enforceable? Is it something I am willing to do? If I’m not willing to go quite that far, are there other ways that I can advocate for my own needs and set this limit in a way that works for both of us, but isn’t perhaps going beyond what I’m willing to hold?
Abby Wambach:
This is why sobriety has completely revolutionized my ability to hold boundaries because I use it as the template of all boundaries that I try to set. I’m like, well my sobriety is dependent on not giving you money. My sobriety is dependent on maintaining a friendship that is not based in transaction. Because the truth is is I’m a people pleaser and I just never knew what the word boundary was. I never had them. I just let people do whatever they wanted and I let people be who they are and it didn’t matter what kind of impact it had on me for my whole life. Of course, that leads to all the shame and drugs and alcohol and whatever. I just think it’s really interesting how your sobriety has led you on this path and it has helped me actually start doing boundaries and hold them, too.
Glennon Doyle:
Because when you think about sobriety, what you’re really saying is integrity, too. My integrity doesn’t allow this, integrity meaning I need to be the same on the outside as I am on the inside. Isn’t a boundary what we do so we can maintain sameness on the inside and the outside, that the needs and emotions and feelings I’m having on the inside are going to match what I say to you on the outside, so that we can have an actual real relationship where I’m not acting?
Melissa Urban:
Absolutely, that’s exactly right. I think people are nervous or scared about boundaries because they feel like they might be selfish, they might be advocating for your own needs. But really, you’re not saying only me, you’re just saying me too. You’re saying me too and what I’m experiencing on the inside will be communicated to you clearly and kindly so that you don’t have to guess, you don’t have to wonder, you don’t have to worry that you’re going to show up and I’m going to be quiet or weird and you don’t know what’s going on and I’m not going to tell you.
I’m going to be super upfront about it and transparent, which means I’m getting in touch with my own needs first and sharing them with you. I am prepared to navigate your discomfort, your displeasure, your anger or your pushback in this moment because I know that this is the right thing to do not only for me, but for the health of our relationship. I think it’s so important to remember that how other people choose to respond is not your responsibility. It is not your job to fix your mother-in-law’s feelings when she’s mad that you said you have to call before you come over. You can’t just show up on the doorstep. That does not work for my family, for our family. She might be mad about it and you might have to navigate that, but it is not your responsibility to fix that.
Glennon Doyle:
I want to move on to some examples. I want to talk to you first about in-laws and parents because I thought why not just do worst thing first thing. Eat the frog, hardest first. So you cannot just come over unannounced, what’s the boundary though? Because that’s controlling, you cannot come over unannounced or I will not answer the door, like how-
Melissa Urban:
You’re laughing except that that is the boundary. The boundary is, essentially, I will not feel obligation to rearrange our entire family’s life to accommodate your needs and that’s kind of the ultimate boundary. I wouldn’t say it like that, of course. We’re going to go in green, but I have so many stories from people whose parents and in-laws do feel entitled to their time and their space whenever they want. I have a new mom who just wrote to me saying, “I’ve got one boob out, milk everywhere, new baby. I barely have any clothes on. I’ve been wearing the same sweatpants for three days and here’s my mother-in-law knocking on my door because she wants to hold the baby and she just happened to be in the neighborhood. That does not work for me and my family.” In-laws are complicated. The first step in setting a boundary with in-laws is always that you and your romantic partner have to be on the same page because if you are not, you don’t stand a chance of holding that boundary. What’s going to happen is you’re going to advocate, your in-laws are going to say, “Bob, is this how you feel?” Then Bob is going to feel torn between you and his mom and you know who’s going to win that battle?
Glennon Doyle:
Come on, Bob.
Melissa Urban:
Because the in-laws… Yeah.
Glennon Doyle:
Come on, Bob.
Melissa Urban:
Because the in-laws have been conditioning your spouse for decades that this is just how they are and they can’t be changed. You and your spouse have to get on the same page. You have to set the boundary as a team. My in-law rule says that you handle your own parents, so if Bob’s talking to his parents, he sets the boundary on both of your behalves and you would do the same. If Bob’s not comfortable, then at the very least he needs to back you up in this boundary. You need to know that when you say, “This is what we need as a family,” and mom goes, “Hey Bob, is this what you want?” He says, “Yes, we need this boundary for the health of our family and for our relationship.” In this case, the green would be, “Hey Barbara, we need you to call and ask if it’s a good time to come over and please give us at least an hour’s notice. It’s too chaotic for us and the kids to accommodate drop in visitors without notice.”
Melissa Urban:
That is a request, but I find if you go in with your consequence in the green, it can feel very off putting. If it is, we will not be answering the door anymore if you come over unannounced, that’s like going in with kicking the door down. We’re not going to do that. We’re going to share a request that shares our limit and hopefully your mother-in-law says, “Oh, okay,” and starts giving you an hour’s notice on the phone. Excellent. Then you no longer have to dread the visits and if it’s a good time, you can let her know, and if it’s not, you can let her know. If she shows up at the door unannounced a second time after the boundary has been spoken very clearly, then you can answer the door and feel free to say, “Oh, hi Barbara, you didn’t call first and this isn’t a good time. We’re not able to visit right now. We’ll call you later.” You can do that and that is not rude. What is rude is your expressed request and this person saying, “Yes, I will honor that,” and then failing to follow through. That’s the rude part. If it’s not convenient for you, you can hold that boundary and say, “This isn’t a good time. So come back again.”
Glennon Doyle:
Melissa, we’re just leaving Barbara’s ass on the front step. You don’t have to be like a black belt boundary person to do that, like people just leave their mother-in-law on the front step.
Melissa Urban:
It is going to be hard, but that is not your first step. Your first step is saying, “Barbara, as a family, it is too disruptive for you to come by and expect to be greeted and entertained. We’ve got kids, we’ve got work, I’ve got a new baby,” whatever that looks like, “we just need you to call first. Give us at least an hour’s notice.” That’s not hard.
Abby Wambach:
No.
Melissa Urban:
That’s not hard. We’re not asking for anything unreasonable.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Melissa Urban:
So yeah, I’m going to leave Barbara’s ass on the front porch.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Glennon Doyle:
I love it.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Amanda Doyle:
And guess what? If you don’t leave Barbara’s ass on the door when you got a three month old, what do you think Barbara’s going to do in 4 years, 6 years, 10 years-
Glennon Doyle:
That’s right.
Amanda Doyle:
Barbara is living in your bedroom, that’s what she’s doing.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Amanda Doyle:
I mean, she’s got her sleeping bag, you’re going to see her ass every morning when you get up.
Abby Wambach:
It’s a reasonable request and for her to then show up unannounced is an unreasonable action.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s right. Everyone is so pissed at Barbara on this podcast.
Abby Wambach:
Fucking… Is this actually your mother-in-law’s name?
Melissa Urban:
I know. No, my husband and I hit the in-law jackpot, I will say.
Abby Wambach:
Oh, cool
Melissa Urban:
They are all very good with boundaries-
Abby Wambach:
Oh, cool.
Melissa Urban:
… and very good at respecting, thank goodness. But I’ve heard in-law stories that you would not believe, I did not believe when I heard them. Yes, the red boundary, if Barbara keeps coming back and will not call, now this is just disrespectful.
Amanda Doyle:
Stop it.
Melissa Urban:
This is deliberate disrespect because your phone is on you all the time and you could easily pick it up and you are choosing not to make a point and I’m not going to answer the door.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s right.
Melissa Urban:
I’m just not and that is my boundary. Remember that this boundary can be flexible, too. If at some point in your life Barbara becomes more helpful around the house or more helpful with the kids or you just find that life isn’t as hectic, feel free to relax that rule. If Barbara is pounding on your door saying, “Oh, we’ve had an accident in the family,” yeah, you’re going to want to let her in. The best boundaries, all the boundaries, healthy boundaries should be flexible and not rigid.
Amanda Doyle:
Yeah. Again, that’s only when you are because as you just said, if you’re not resentful for that visit, if you’re not avoiding that visit, if you’re not feeling nervous in the presence of that visit, there’s no need to set that limit-
Melissa Urban:
Correct.
Amanda Doyle:
… just because somebody else might feel that way and you think it’s defacto rude. It’s only rude if it is disturbing to your mental health that that thing is occurring.
Melissa Urban:
Yes, absolutely, absolutely. You can do it any way you want. Maybe you love that your in-laws just walk in, they don’t even knock, they don’t even announce themselves because they’re so helpful with the kids, they’re so helpful around the house. The first thing they do is come in and say, “What can I do? Dishes or laundry?” That kind of in-law, you can come in anytime you want, absolutely. You don’t need to call. But if you find that your relationship is starting to be resentful, you’re starting to be anxious about it, every Saturday you’re like drawing the blinds and hiding thinking, oh my gosh, is Barbara going to go to Target and then stop by again? That is not a healthy place for either of you to be. Once your mother-in-law sees that just by picking up the phone, that small action, now visits are more relaxed. You are so much more pleasant to be around, you’re not a jerk trying to rush her out the door, you can actually sit and visit, it is a win-win for everybody. Maybe it just takes one visit of Barbara calling first for her to realize, okay, this is actually going to work for both of us.
Abby Wambach:
That’s right.
Glennon Doyle:
Okay. Give us an example like that about friendship. What’s the most common question you get from people about handling an uncomfortable boundary that needs to be set between friends?
Melissa Urban:
Yeah. One of the most common issues I hear with friendships is friends who offer unsolicited, helpful feedback without being asked. Caroline sent me a story about her and her best friend. They go back a long time. They’re both on the East Coast and I say that because East Coast people like me are known for our directness and our bluntness, but this friend would say helpful things or offer unsolicited advice that really just was hurtful and she didn’t really know how to address it. In that situation, you want to stay friends with the person, but you just want these hurtful little comments to go away. Caroline kind of suspected they were coming from insecurity, but again, that’s not your business. The point is the conversation is now harmful for me. If I set this one limit in our friendship, I can now show up in our friendship far more openly and like myself.
Melissa Urban:
The green boundary I said is, “Hey, for the health of our friendship, I’d like to ask that we don’t offer each other unsolicited feedback. If I want your opinion on something, I’ll ask. Can you agree to that?” Simple request, very clear, very kind. Unless I ask you what you think of my hair or my outfit or my relationship or my job or my parenting, please do not offer an unsolicited opinion. If that one limit could be respected, all of a sudden their friendship expands and becomes far more open and honest. If in the moment your friend forgets or throws a little dig in, then you can go to a yellow boundary, which is interrupting them. Oh, no, no, no, we agreed no unsolicited comments, so please don’t say anything else and then you change the subject. Oh, we agreed that you wouldn’t provide input on my parenting unless I asked, so let’s just not, please, but tell me how your vacation went.
Melissa Urban:
You’ll see change the subject quite a lot in my boundary conversations because it makes it clear that you’re not going to continue the conversation, you’re in charge and you will not participate further, and it kind of lets the other person off the hook so that if they feel bad about forgetting or disrespecting, you’re kind of giving them a nice graceful out there. I think that’s a kind way to handle it. If this person is proving incapable or unwilling to just meet this very simple, please don’t offer unsolicited feedback unless I ask and you’ve reminded and reminded to the point where you now feel like this is a really unhealthy pattern, then you might have to set a limit with the relationship and maybe it’s ending the friendship altogether. Maybe it’s just something like, “You know, Jenna, you continue to say things that are hurtful even after I’ve asked you not to and I can’t continue in our relationship this way, so I need to take a little break from the friendship. I’ll reach back out to you when I’m ready.” I think that is a perfectly acceptable way to say, “I need some space from this friendship to think about how to move forward and I’m going to give myself the time I need to do that.”
Glennon Doyle:
I love it. Oh, what about in romantic relationships what do you get the most, marriage or partnerships?
Melissa Urban:
I think one of the things I get the most in marriages that is an actual boundary that you can set because some of the things that we talk about in terms of relationships, romantic relationships, like equitable distribution of household labor, can’t be solved with a simple boundary. I cannot say to my husband, “I am never doing dishes again, dishes are on you from now on,” because that requires his cooperation in order for my entire household to run smoothly. If the next day I wake up and the dishes are still piled in the sink and I’m going to eat breakfast and I don’t have a clean plate or fork or knife in the house, that hurts me, that hurts our kids. Those conversations are not as simple as a simple boundary and I’ve got resources for that, for sure. But one of the most common boundaries that can be so emotionally draining in a partnership, a romantic partnership because you spend all day with this person or most of your time with them, is when one partner comes home from work and constantly emotionally dumps or vents about their day.
Melissa Urban:
You want to be there, you want to hear about how hard your day was and if work is hard, it’s a stressful period or if they’re in a really difficult job right now, obviously you want to be there for them. Also, you need to be careful about your own energetic expenditure. You just got home from work, maybe you had a hard day, you’ve got to navigate the kids and your other things. How can you offer or provide support within boundaries? The green level conversation would be something like, “Hey babe, I definitely want to hear about your day, but could I get 20 minutes to decompress before we get into it? I’m going to go for a quick walk. I’m going to read a book for 20 minutes. I’m going to do some meal prep with a podcast for 20 minutes. Let’s do a 20 minute timeout. We’ll both kind of decompress and then we’ll come back and talk about it.” Perfectly healthy, you’re buying yourself the space and capacity to do so.
Melissa Urban:
If it continues or it becomes a pattern or if they insist like I really just need to get this off of my chest, then you can say, “Honestly, we need to pause for a minute. I am not going to be able to be there to support you in the way that I want to right now. I’m feeling really overwhelmed myself. I’m feeling at my limit. I will be a better partner to you if I take this 20 minutes for myself, I’m going to take a quick shower.” This is the point where you physically remove yourself from the situation so that you buy yourself that space and capacity. It’s perfectly okay to say, at a red level, “I am over capacity today.” Someone with a chronic illness, someone with a chronic injury, whatever that looks like, there are some days where I don’t have enough spoons and I just say, “Babe, I am over capacity and I can’t handle event session today. Can we take a night off from work talk?” Then what I expect my partner to do is take responsibility for his own feelings. What I expect him to do and what he says to me is, “Okay, I totally get it. Go do what you need to do to make yourself feel better. I really need to talk to someone, so I’m going to call my mom. I’m going to call my therapist-“
Glennon Doyle:
Barbara.
Melissa Urban:
… “I’m going to go journal,” yes, “I’m going to go do some form of self-care because I recognize that I have these needs that need to be met and I cannot rely on you to meet them and you have told me that you cannot meet them in this morning. So I’m going to respect that and take care of that myself.” That is the ideal healthy communication pattern and boundary to set in the situation.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s so good. So Melissa, I have some personal boundary questions for you. What is the hardest boundary for you to hold?
Melissa Urban:
That’s a good one. Okay. I know this because it’s happening right now in fact. The hardest boundary for me to hold is against my energetic capacity around work projects or invitations that I find exciting that I just know I don’t have capacity for and I will give you an example. I was invited by my Canadian publisher to do a keynote presentation as part of this book tour for Boundaries. Prestigious invitation, incredible invitation, would’ve been a great opportunity. Of course I was like, “Okay, yes, if you sign me up for this, of course I will do it.” Then I started thinking about it. First of all, I know better than to say yes automatically and I said yes automatically. That was my first mistake. Then I thought about it and I thought, I don’t have capacity to put together an entire keynote presentation. I’m already in the middle of doing so many different tasks and I want to do it. It would be so fun. But if I do this, something’s going to suffer, my mental health, my sleep, my health, my other tasks. So I had to go back-
Abby Wambach:
How did you identify that? You say yes and then you go through the process. What are-
Glennon Doyle:
You feel panicky?
Abby Wambach:
… what are ways that you realize like, uh-oh, I overextended here?
Melissa Urban:
The dread.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah, dread.
Melissa Urban:
I said yes and then I immediately thought, oh, shit, now I have to do this. I spent the next two weeks trying to talk myself into why it would be okay, how I could actually do this. I’m like, why? I know better, but I’m not perfect and I still struggle. It took a conversation with my sister on a hike where I was like, “I said yes to this thing and I’m super stressed about it,” and she goes, “You can just tell them you can’t do it.” I was like, “What? I don’t think I can. I already committed and I really want to and it’s such a good opportunity.” She was like, “I can’t believe I have to have this conversation with you, but yes, you can. You can go tell them I can’t do this.” I was like sometimes you just need permission from someone. You just need permission to do the thing that you know need to do.
Glennon Doyle:
Yeah. My sister gives me permission. I always think whenever I get an opportunity like that, I always think, what if it were tomorrow, would I want to do it? Because I am always making commitments based on some hopeful future version of myself-
Melissa Urban:
I know.
Glennon Doyle:
… that doesn’t freaking exist, like oh, I’m going to be a person who really is awesome about traveling and presenting. No, I’m still going to be this person always. If I don’t want to do it tomorrow, I don’t want to do it in six months.
Melissa Urban:
I know. That’s so smart. I definitely was not considering future me in this situation and I should have. I ended up going back to my publisher and I said, “Hey, this is making me feel super stressed out and I don’t think I’m going to be able to put together the kind of presentation that I want to put together. This is my first keynote on boundaries. I want to make it amazing and I’m not going to be able to do that during this time period. Here’s what I could do for you.” I thought about what could I do with my energetic capacity and I offered them that package and they were like, “Oh yeah, cool. That’s fine. We’ll switch it.”
Glennon Doyle:
That’s great.
Melissa Urban:
All of that stress, all of that anxiety for nothing. That’s a huge lesson in terms of boundaries, first of all. Nobody’s going to get it right all the time and that’s okay. You just keep showing up, that’s why they call it a practice. Number two, I think we build up these conversations in our head where we’re like, oh, I’m going to say this thing and it’s going to go so poorly and everyone’s going to be so mad at me. Then we say it and they go, okay.
Glennon Doyle:
Yes, exactly. That is what happens most of the time.
Melissa Urban:
Yeah, it does. I always say, go into these conversations just assuming the best. You’re making a story up either way. You’re either telling yourself a story that it’s not going to go well and it’s going to go horribly and everything’s going to go terrible and that makes you so stressed. Or you tell yourself a story that it’s going to go well, that you deserve this healthy limit, and it’s going to go very, very well. More often than not, it does.
Amanda Doyle:
That’s why I love your reframe of boundaries because when people think need to set boundaries, they think, ooh, somebody’s behaving badly, mm-mmm. You think about bad behavior, but the way that you say it, you say, “I am someone who sets and holds boundaries because I am someone who takes her mental health, energetic capacity, and worth seriously.” That is how-
Glennon Doyle:
That’s good.
Amanda Doyle:
… I think everyone can change their thinking about boundaries because it isn’t about calling out someone else’s bad behavior. There might be no bad behavior happening anywhere around you. It’s about taking your mental health, your energetic capacity, and you’re worth seriously enough to give it a voice in your own damn life.
Abby Wambach:
That’s good.
Melissa Urban:
Absolutely. That was exactly it. Nobody was behaving badly when they asked me to present a keynote. That was brilliant. Thank you. That PR person did an amazing job securing me that, right. How dare you? But I have to advocate for myself. It goes back to what Abby was saying and what Glennon was saying, which is it’s integrity. In my integrity, I want to show up. If I say yes to a task, I want to show up as my best self. If I can’t, it is in everyone’s best interest that I say no.
Glennon Doyle:
That’s right. That’s right.
Abby Wambach:
That’s good.
Glennon Doyle:
All right, loves, we can do hard things.
Abby Wambach:
I fucking love this podcast.
Glennon Doyle:
Like Live with integrity, like take our own selves and energetic whatever the hell Melissa and sister just said seriously.
Abby Wambach:
Melissa, you’re helping us in our daily life presently with these beautiful ideas in this book, so thank you for I know how much time and effort it took you to create it and think of it and live it. It’s just making such a difference for us, so thank you.
Melissa Urban:
I’m so happy to hear it. Thank you.
Glennon Doyle:
We love you, Pod Squad. You can do hard things. Tell Barbara to get the hell off your front porch in a bunch of different ways and we’ll-
Abby Wambach:
Go home, Barbara.
Glennon Doyle:
… see you back here next time. We Can Do Hard Things as produced in partnership with Cadence13 studios. Be sure to rate, review, and follow the show on Apple Podcasts, Odyssey, or wherever you get your podcasts. Especially be sure to rate and review the podcast if you really liked it. If you didn’t, don’t worry about it, it’s fine.