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Noodle,

I hope you are kidding right?
A person can say no but some people are not strong enough to do that.

David Koresh(sp), Charles Manson, and others had some control over other Adults they could have said no. In most cases when people speak of these people they talk about the Control they had over others.

I can control my FWW's spending by not depositing our money into a joint bank account and giving her ten dollars a week.

I can control what she watches when I am not home by not having cable.

I can disconnect our home phone because I control the finances.

My FWW doesn't have much family support so they couldn't or wouldn't help her.

I wouldn't but I am sure some people do.

Not to mention the people that control their spouses with threats of violence.


BS 38
FWW 35
D Day 10/03
Recovery started 11/06
3 boys 12, 8 and a new baby


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Ah, grasshopper learning..


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In all seriousness though...

The issue isn't the computor...it's the affair.

As a BS [nonaffairee] you can't actually make their choices for them.

Unhooking the connection will not end the affair.

That is how people get lost in power struggles.

This is where ~consequences~ come into discussion...and they are nearly endless.

A likely consequence of an affairee refusing to stop either the affair or blatantly dismissing the request of their spouse is further loss of love.

The BS not ready to enforce a "no triangle" boundary will likely be more ready than they were before.

You are so right on this.

How can you help a fearful BS to get to the point where they will enforce that no triangle boundary?

It is so distressing to watch a BS struggle w/ this.

~ Marsh


[b]Knowledge is power.

A BS who is unwilling to become knowledgeable and skilled is one who is unwilling to defend themselves.

People who fail to defend themselves get slaughtered...they are at the mery of the merciless.

A BS who becomes knowledgeable and skilled becomes prepared for the battle and does not NEED other people to *get* them anywhere.

A BS who does not become prepared in this way will toss in the waves of emotional decisionmaking.

Even if you got them to that place it would be your new job to keep them there.

b]


Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once ~Shakespeare
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Frog,

You can do all of those things, but you don't actually CONTROL any of it.

Your wife can get a credit card without you knowing, she can spend what she wants, she can go to a friends house to watch TV, she can sign up for her own cell phone...

People who follow Jim Jones, David Koresh, they have choice in it. They choose to do it with their own knowledge base.


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Noodle,

I hope you are kidding right?

Nope.
A person can say no but some people are not strong enough to do that.

Everyone can say no. Whether they chose to or not is irrelevent.

David Koresh(sp), Charles Manson, and others had some control over other Adults they could have said no. In most cases when people speak of these people they talk about the Control they had over others.

It's an ignorant statement. They did not *take* control...these people surrendered control. They allowed their *leaders* to do their thinking for them...it was a mutual agreement.

I can control my FWW's spending by not depositing our money into a joint bank account and giving her ten dollars a week.

I think you will find that your wife has slightly more right to marital assets than you are suggesting.

You can only enforce something like this with her consent. One trip to the courthouse would secure her ability to utilize marital assets.


I can control what she watches when I am not home by not having cable.

And she can pick up a phone and order cable without your agreement.

I can disconnect our home phone because I control the finances.

Again...you only ~think~ you control the finances. it is an assumption on your part.

Legally those finances belong to her as much as to you...you are able to do this with her consent and not without it.


My FWW doesn't have much family support so they couldn't or wouldn't help her.

Navigating the waters of specualtion. There are plenty of places for women to seek shelter and legal aid.

I wouldn't but I am sure some people do.

Not to mention the people that control their spouses with threats of violence.

Threats of violence are adequate to secure your removal from the home, and possibly assault charges, very surely a restraining order.



Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once ~Shakespeare
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Just like I choose not to be in a M of three. Really, my choice, not H's; he would have preferred the threesome. I, however, don't do three...


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Noodle,

I hope you are kidding right?
A person can say no but some people are not strong enough to do that.

Some people make a choice to hand over their power to another person. That in itself is a choice.

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David Koresh(sp), Charles Manson, and others had some control over other Adults they could have said no. In most cases when people speak of these people they talk about the Control they had over others.

Again, these people willingly chose to hand over their personal power to someone else. Koresh et al had control only because these people decided, of their own free will and control to give up their power to these psychopaths.

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I can control my FWW's spending by not depositing our money into a joint bank account and giving her ten dollars a week.

I can control what she watches when I am not home by not having cable.

I can disconnect our home phone because I control the finances.

My FWW doesn't have much family support so they couldn't or wouldn't help her.

I wouldn't but I am sure some people do.

Not to mention the people that control their spouses with threats of violence.

And you or 'other people' could only do that as long as she chooses to let you.

That control is imaginary.

Boundaries are about self-love, self protection, self control, self respect....boundaries are about how you care for yourself, and have nothing to do about controlling others.

Think of it this way:

I can not control the weather. I don't like to get wet and I don't like getting cold.

When it rains or snows, I do not stand outside threatening the sky with ultimatums about what I'll do if it doesn't produce the warm sunny day that I want.

Instead, I protect myself - defend my boundary - I get a raincoat, or stay indoors.


~ Pain is a given, misery is optional ~
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Noodle,

Of course she could do any of those things.

I think you are we are arguing an issue with two exteme's. Do I beleive most people can be controlled, in a sense.

I think SL said it the best, people chose to give up their control.

At any point someone can slowly give up control to the point, In that persons mind they don't have control nor can they say no to the person in control, in their mind. In reality they could.

Not to mention people who are phsically abused by their S. Starts out small then escalates where a person is in fear of their life. Do their spouses not control them through fear?

Yes you are right there are shelters and jails etc. But last time I checked it happens all over.


BS 38
FWW 35
D Day 10/03
Recovery started 11/06
3 boys 12, 8 and a new baby


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People choose to not enforce boundaries every day Frog.

Usually..it does start out small.

Over time the boundaries have been moved and dismissed to such an extend that the person has lost all sense of direction.

They don't recognise abuse because it doesn't stand out in stark contrast...there is nothing to compare it with.

This is frequently the case with WSs.

Grasping boundaries removes the possibility for resentment...no one compels me to do anything...I choose and live with the outcomes of my choices.

It is dumbfounding...honestly to realize you have been pouring your effort into the wrong vessel.

Like realizing you just ran tweny miles in the wrong direction.

You are tired but you didn't get where you wanted to go.


Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once ~Shakespeare
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Interestingly enough, I had a boundary YEARS ago, prior to being with my H, that if anyone cheated on me I would turn my back and leave.

Clearly I moved that boundary, once I was faced with the action...or did I, I am, in a way, turning my back and leaving. My WH is not leaving me, I am leaving him...

edited to add...

I was wrong in stating that I moved that boundary, clearly that boundary still existed, I do believe that I elaborated on what conditions I would need to enforce.

Last edited by silentlucidity; 01/30/07 08:46 PM.

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People choose to not enforce boundaries every day Frog.

Usually..it does start out small.

Over time the boundaries have been moved and dismissed to such an extend that the person has lost all sense of direction.

Not only that but there is a posibility this leads to an A. The moving of boundreis and dismissal really means there are no boundries.

I read here I think that boundaries are the way you teach people how you want to be treated.

What you do when someone crosses that is up to you as an individual.

Hey before my FWW's A I thought I had the boundry if that happened I would get a D.

Pushed that one back.


BS 38
FWW 35
D Day 10/03
Recovery started 11/06
3 boys 12, 8 and a new baby


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Interestingly enough, I had a boundary YEARS ago, prior to being with my H, that if anyone cheated on me I would turn my back and leave.

Most people feel this way before they are faced with adultery. What a boundary like this fails to take into account is the level of investment a person has in marriage.

It's not a dating situation...if you walk away you will necessarily take a loss.

Some people are hard and fast about this nonetheless.

However I am curious about the boundaries surrounding the relationship BEFORE it combusts.

Affairs don't just fall out of a tree after all.

If a person is willing to take the loss of divorcing over adultery SURELY they would also be willing to set up and enforce boundaries around OTHER behaviors that create a fertile environment for affairs?

Wouldn't you think?

Not too often has been my observation. Usually due to an unwillingness to erect these boundaries a person picks one that seems both extreme and safely distant.

In my observation the marriages that firmly enforce these protective boundaries do not struggle with affairs.



Clearly I moved that boundary, once I was faced with the action...or did I, I am, in a way, turning my back and leaving. My WH is not leaving me, I am leaving him...


Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once ~Shakespeare
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Usually..it does start out small.

Over time the boundaries have been moved and dismissed to such an extend that the person has lost all sense of direction.

They don't recognise abuse because it doesn't stand out in stark contrast...there is nothing to compare it with.

This is frequently the case with WSs.

Grasping boundaries removes the possibility for resentment...no one compels me to do anything...I choose and live with the outcomes of my choices.

It is dumbfounding...honestly to realize you have been pouring your effort into the wrong vessel.

Like realizing you just ran tweny miles in the wrong direction.

You are tired but you didn't get where you wanted to go.


I see.

Suppose one of these people who had lost all sense of direction wanted to run 20 (or 30 or 4000) miles in the RIGHT direction...where would they begin?

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By learning about boundaries of course! <img src="/ubbt/images/graemlins/tongue.gif" alt="" />


Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once ~Shakespeare
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Taking the object oriented approach to this, bondaries are fences. Nothing more. Yes?

The next object would be the enforcement of the boundary.

in some cases, the enforcement might reflect the fence, like if my boundary is I will not eat fish, then when fish is presented to me, I don't eat. Maybe I get up and leave. But still no fish.

In yet another case, the enforcement might show that the boundary was not so static. Present me with fish, of which I said I won't eat, and then I try it anyway. So maybe I used the boundary as a form of deterrent, which seems to imply that I have no true interest in enforcing it. Also, isn't a deterrent a control?

and what of consequences?

I gather that punishment, as most people I know understand it, is not appropriate boundary enforcement, yes? Like taking away your husband's laptop because he lied to you?

maybe I understand some things... maybe I don't But I thought that breaking it down into objects could help me define the pieces and get them working together.

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Taking the object oriented approach to this, bondaries are fences. Nothing more. Yes?

Yes.

The next object would be the enforcement of the boundary.

OK.

in some cases, the enforcement might reflect the fence, like if my boundary is I will not eat fish, then when fish is presented to me, I don't eat. Maybe I get up and leave. But still no fish.

I like that one. Very simple. And no fish.

In yet another case, the enforcement might show that the boundary was not so static.

A nonstatic boundary may be a false boundary..a preference if you will.

Present me with fish, of which I said I won't eat, and then I try it anyway. So maybe I used the boundary as a form of deterrent, which seems to imply that I have no true interest in enforcing it. Also, isn't a deterrent a control?

Or misstated the boundary. Misrepresentation. I said I won't eat fish but what I meant was I'd prefer not to eat fish.


and what of consequences?

OK...what of them?

I gather that punishment, as most people I know understand it, is not appropriate boundary enforcement, yes?

Punishing is about the other person...not yourself. Wrong side of the fence, no? Punishment is not a boundary issue with the exception of needing to enforce a "no punishment" boundary.

Like taking away your husband's laptop because he lied to you?

Again...to do this would require the consent of the other person.

maybe I understand some things... maybe I don't But I thought that breaking it down into objects could help me define the pieces and get them working together.

Well..I'm game. Sounds good to me. <img src="/ubbt/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" />


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Enforcing boundaries starts with a decision about what you're going to do about it. Boundary enforcement is not about getting the other person to participate, it's about making decisions about what you plan to do and executing those steps.

For example:

I decide that I'm not willing to be yelled at. If someone starts yelling, I remove myself from the situation. The other person is perfectly welcome to continue yelling after I am gone -- or stop -- or whatever.

Or, I decide I'm no longer going to discuss something. The other person can continue to talk about it (I might get up and walk away if it becomes tiresome) but I'm not going to try to get the other person to stop talking. S/he can continue to discuss the issue, without my participation, for as long as s/he wants.

Boundaries aren't about rehabilitating others -- but they do have an effect on how you're treated. As Dr. Phil likes to say: People do what works. Having a monologue when you really want a conversation doesn't work for most people. Having an argument by yourself is no fun, either.

I think that people who really get boundaries can state them pretty matter of factly as:

This is what I'm going to do in <this> situation.

Then, they leave the other person's reaction up to them. The other person isn't required to DO anything. They might decide that they WANT to, if whatever you stop doing is important enough for them. Or, not. If the other person gets mad or feels sorry or feels abused/abandoned, it's really not my problem. I've made a decision about what I'm going to do. The other person has to figure out what s/he's going to do.

Plan B is designed to be boundary enforcement. It states what the person is going to do (remove themselves), why (loosing love, too painful) and what the WS can do about it if they don't really like that option. Then, a good Plan B, means withdrawing to a respectful distance and refusing to engage any more.

In essence, it's saying: I acknowledge that you have the ability to choose an affair/continue to damage the marriage. I care enough about myself to choose not to be part of that toxic environment. Here's some information. Do what you think you have to do.

A good Plan B, leaves the choices entirely up to the WS. It tends to work best when the BS isn't chomping at the bit for some sign of rehabilitation -- but rather, when the BS stays neutral to whatever "problems" the WS finds with the return conditions.

For example, if the (hypothetical - this is made up and is not aimed at any poster) BS would say something like: I understand you feel that changing jobs and establishing NC for life is going to be hard on you. I'm not willing to re-engage (stay married) to you unless you're willing to do that. Rather than trying to argue or 'prove' why it's so important. If the WS retorts with "You're being unreasonable." then the BS can say "I understand you feel this is unreasonable. This is what I'm willing to do." Too often, people get drawn into "verbally defending" the properness of their boundaries. The WS wants to negotiate the boundary. True boundaries are NON-NEGOTIABLE -- there's really no point arguing about them. Validate that you heard the other person speak and then just state the fact: "THIS is what I'm willing to do."

People know what to expect from people with good boundaries. They are able to accurately predict what will happen in certain situations. The more predictable you are (in a good way) the more likely people are going to treat you accordingly. If you know that every time you yell at me, I exit the conversation (regardless of whining, pleading, apologies, or whatever) then if the conversation is important enough to you, you'll figure out how not to yell. If the WS (or, I should say when) realizes that the BS is going to do whatever their stated boundary action is each and every time they get caught in a lie or contact or <whatever>, then they're going to have GOOD information to base future decisions on.

People learn.

Someone asked what enforcement looks like. It looks like confidence -- it looks like decisiveness. It happens when someone is able to step back and say "You can behave however you choose and I'm willing to acknowledge that -- I'm just going to acknowledge it from way over there where ti no longer affects me."


Just my $.02,

Mys

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Taking the object oriented approach to this, bondaries are fences. Nothing more. Yes?

Yes.

ok... so I have that part right

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The next object would be the enforcement of the boundary.

OK.

so a boundary enforcement is what? something about me I gather, but how do you keep it from being about someone else? How do you enforce something without it LOOKING like a punishment?

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A nonstatic boundary may be a false boundary..a preference if you will.

so then if you state a boundary and then you bend on it, be honest with yourself and call it what it really is? A preference?


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Present me with fish, of which I said I won't eat, and then I try it anyway. So maybe I used the boundary as a form of deterrent, which seems to imply that I have no true interest in enforcing it. Also, isn't a deterrent a control?

Or misstated the boundary. Misrepresentation. I said I won't eat fish but what I meant was I'd prefer not to eat fish.

so is a deterrent a control? what right do you have to get something done? in making this all about the me of the situation, I guess you have to accept that you might nave to leave a marriage in order to enforce a boundary



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and what of consequences?

OK...what of them?

is the consequence simply I am hungry because I didn't eat the fish? or is it something else?

I gather that punishment, as mst people I know understand it, is not appropriate boundary enforcement, yes?

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Punishing is about the other person...not yourself. Wrong side of the fence, no? Punishment is not a boundary issue with the exception of needing to enforce a "no punishment" boundary.

yes... punishment is your desire to make the other person pay. How do you stop someone from doing it to you? Let me guess. A boundary. It seems really simple to say boundary but if you are not getting what you want, I guess you are left with not getting what you want.

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so a boundary enforcement is what? something about me I gather, but how do you keep it from being about someone else? How do you enforce something without it LOOKING like a punishment?

You stop watching the other person for some sign of a reaction.

You stop making your choices based on how you think you can get the other person to make a different choice and, instead, make choices based on how you can best cope with the situation.

For example:

If my boundary is that I won't wash socks unless they are in the hamper then I simply state that. "I am not willing to launder socks unless they are in the hamper." Enforcement means simply ignoring all socks that don't make it into the hamper. If the other person runs out of socks -- you express sympathy "It sucks to be out of socks." and leave them to solve their own problems. You don't start washing socks because you're afraid the other person will wear dirty socks twice (or three times or until they fall off their feet).

You learn to LET GO of the outcomes for other people. Pretty soon, people catch on that it's not all about them.

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so then if you state a boundary and then you bend on it, be honest with yourself and call it what it really is? A preference?

You are always free to change your mind. Why not say you've reconsidered and decided something different? I don't know why people seem to be so leery of acknowleding that they had a decision in the past that they no longer like. People change -- decisions change.

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so is a deterrent a control? what right do you have to get something done? in making this all about the me of the situation, I guess you have to accept that you might nave to leave a marriage in order to enforce a boundary

I think boundaries work best because they manage people's expectaitons about your behavior. We learn a lot about each other by living with each other. I bet you know the first 5 things your wife does every morning when she wakes up or every evening before she goes to bed. Part of the 'comfortableness' of having family around is knowing everyone's little quirks. You know so-and-so tends to forget to put the lid tighly on the coffee jar so you pick it up by the bottom. You know so-and-so forgets his gloves so you stuff them in his pocket.

Think abou this: If you've ever lost someone you've loved -- what do you talk about most when remembering? You talk about those funny little quirks that you never quite understood but now really miss since that person's not around anymore.

Guess what? You have quirks, too.

People will learn what to expect from you and their behavior adapts. It's just what happens.

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yes... punishment is your desire to make the other person pay. How do you stop someone from doing it to you? Let me guess. A boundary. It seems really simple to say boundary but if you are not getting what you want, I guess you are left with not getting what you want.

Punishment is about making the other person's behavior the focus of your efforts rather than figuring out how to nurture and protect yourself. If the successful enforcement of your boundary (protection ) only happens when the other person changes -- then you're missing the point.

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Taking the object oriented approach to this, bondaries are fences. Nothing more. Yes?

Yes.

ok... so I have that part right

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The next object would be the enforcement of the boundary.

OK.

so a boundary enforcement is what?

A boundary enforcement is anything that does not allow the boundary to be crossed.

something about me I gather, but how do you keep it from being about someone else?

By keeping it about you. The only thing you control anyway right?

How do you enforce something without it LOOKING like a punishment?

I doubt you can. A person may FEEL punished, angry, furious, whatever. If you are making decisions based around their feelings then your choices are necessarily reaction based..right?

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A nonstatic boundary may be a false boundary..a preference if you will.

so then if you state a boundary and then you bend on it, be honest with yourself and call it what it really is? A preference?

Possibly. I'd at least examine it more closely. Maybe you didn't value it as much as you would expect compared to what enforcing it was gonna cost you.


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Present me with fish, of which I said I won't eat, and then I try it anyway. So maybe I used the boundary as a form of deterrent, which seems to imply that I have no true interest in enforcing it. Also, isn't a deterrent a control?

Or misstated the boundary. Misrepresentation. I said I won't eat fish but what I meant was I'd prefer not to eat fish.

so is a deterrent a control?

No. It is an attempt to manipulate..it has no actual power to control.

what right do you have to get something done?

When something is about you and your choices..I guess I'd say you have every right. Unless I am misunderstanding you?

in making this all about the me of the situation, I guess you have to accept that you might nave to leave a marriage in order to enforce a boundary

Yes..you might. If your boundary is firm and the other spouse is not willing to accomodate it..you might have to remove yourself in order to enforce that boundary.

What did you think about my earlier suggestion about the mutual nature of boundary issues in most relationships?

Do you agree? Disagree?




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and what of consequences?

OK...what of them?

is the consequence simply I am hungry because I didn't eat the fish? or is it something else?

I don't think consequences are necessarily finite or predictable. There can be all sorts of consequences and they can be long term. Some good some bad.

I gather that punishment, as mst people I know understand it, is not appropriate boundary enforcement, yes?

I don't know if it's a matter of appropriate as much as a matter of impossible. You don't have the power to punish me. If you find you are able to punish another adult..chances are good that you are in each others territory.

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Punishing is about the other person...not yourself. Wrong side of the fence, no? Punishment is not a boundary issue with the exception of needing to enforce a "no punishment" boundary.

yes... punishment is your desire to make the other person pay. How do you stop someone from doing it to you? Let me guess. A boundary. It seems really simple to say boundary but if you are not getting what you want, I guess you are left with not getting what you want.

No one is guaranteed to get what they want.

I think I see what you are saying though...so let's look at a smaller, less broad example.

So..someone is angry at you..they want to punish you.

Now what?

From a boundary perspective...what are you looking for..feeling? Or behaviors?

AOs?
DJs?
What?

When you find a ~behavior~ intolerable you must enforce a boundary around that behavior and you must do it consistently.

I think it's MORE likely to be a situation in which the only solution is divorce when two people find themselves unable to defend successfully.

So let's go with DJ or AO...these are some of the more common ones right?

How about if you remove yourself from the conversation..the immediate area..or being reachable at ALL [whatever it takes] and you do it every time.

Will the person me angry?

Probably so.

Did you defend the boundary?

I would say yes.

The person who decides the terms with regard to what you will accept interaction wise from another person is you.

You can not take away the DESIRE to punish..but you can take away the ability to abuse.

Then the onus is on the other person.

Do they want to interact with you enough to respect that boundary? Their choice will make itself clear will it not?


Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once ~Shakespeare
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