Boundaries aren’t walls that keep love out. They’re bridges to the kind of relationships I actually want – built on respect instead of obligation, truth instead of resentment.
The Pattern I Couldn’t See
For decades, I believed that being a good mother, a good daughter, a good woman meant saying yes. To everything. Always.
Host every holiday? Yes. Drop everything to help? Yes. Absorb everyone’s emotions while suppressing my own? Yes.
I was so busy being accommodating that I forgot to ask: Am I okay with this?
The answer, it turned out, was no. I wasn’t okay. I was exhausted, resentful, and completely disconnected from my own life. I was performing a role I’d never auditioned for, in a play that never ended.
At 60, after a particularly brutal holiday season left me depleted for months, I realized something: I had never once asked myself what I wanted. Not really.
What Changed?
I wish I could tell you there was one lightning-bolt moment of clarity. But the truth is messier than that.
It was small things accumulating. A therapist who kept asking, “What do you want?” and refusing to accept “I don’t know” as an answer. A book about trauma recovery that explained how I’d learned to abandon myself to keep others comfortable. A conversation with one of my daughters where I realized I was teaching her, by example, that women don’t get to have needs.
That last one broke something open in me.
The Marriage and Motherhood Survivor Method work I started doing taught me something radical: You can set boundaries without shame. You can be both loving and boundaried. You can disappoint people and still be a good person.
These weren’t just nice ideas. They were practices I had to learn, like a new language.
The Guilt Is Not Your Compass
Here’s what nobody tells you about setting boundaries in your 60s: The guilt is intense.
You’ve spent decades building relationships on a foundation of unlimited availability. When you start changing the rules, people notice. Some people protest. Some people get angry.
And you feel terrible. Like you’re failing. Like you’re selfish. Like you’re doing something wrong.
But I learned to ask a different question: Is this guilt, or is it just unfamiliar?
Turns out, much of what I’d labeled “guilt” was actually just discomfort with being myself. With prioritizing my own wellbeing. With telling the truth.
What Boundaries Actually Look Like
Setting boundaries at 60 doesn’t mean becoming harsh or cold; it means getting honest.
It looks like: “I’m not hosting this year, but I’d love to come for dinner.”
It sounds like: “I can visit for two hours on Saturday. What time works for you?”
It feels like: Peace. Space. Energy for the things I actually want to do.
Some people adapted beautifully.
And yes, some people didn’t adapt. A few relationships that I thought were deep turned out to be transactional. They existed because I was useful, not because I was loved.
Losing those hurt. But keeping them would have cost me myself.
The Gift of Starting Now
If you’re reading this thinking “I’m too old to change” or “I’ve already set the pattern” – stop.
You’re not too old. The pattern can change. I’m living proof.
Every day you have left is a day you can choose differently. Every interaction is a chance to tell the truth instead of telling people what they want to hear.
Is it comfortable? No. Is it worth it? Absolutely.
Because boundaries aren’t walls that keep people out. They’re bridges to respect – for yourself and from others.
And building them? That’s not unloving. It’s the most loving thing you’ll ever do.
Learn about setting boundaries with your adult children with my Marriage and Motherhood Survival Method.
Let’s Discuss:
Have there been times in your life when not setting a boundary with someone was harmful to you?