I’m still pondering this.
Take “no unsolicited advice” for instance.
When someone says “I don’t act on your unsolicited advice” then they are setting a boundary for their own actions, which is what we should all do, control ourselves.
But when they say “You must not offer advice” they are setting a boundary for the other person to adhere to - so they are attempting to control another persons actions.
It changes then from a boundary of your own - I don’t accept that advice- to a boundary that you enforce on someone else. You cannot give that advice.
If you have the right to forbid others actions that you do not like, do they have an equal right to forbid your actions that they do not like!
Or is it more about seeking dominance over another? Why is it not enough to refuse the advice ie control your own action?
I think “setting my boundaries” is a carelessly tossed phrase, that often actually doesn’t men much more than I want things the way I like🤔
Gooseberry crop has disappeared
AIBU To Be So Annoyed at the Stupidity of This
Father's Day Sunday — nobody makes cards for this type of dad


