5 Ways to Protect Your Boundaries Despite Criticism – Marie Osmond

Setting healthy personal boundaries in relationships is one thing – and coping with people’s responses to your boundaries is another! Here are five ways to protect yourself when you’re criticized by friends, family, and coworkers who don’t respect your boundaries. These tips are based on inspiration from Marie Osmond (who, as a child superstar and busy mother who struggled with her emotional and mental health, knows a thing or two about boundaries!).
“I lost boundaries as a child and I didn’t even realize it,” said Marie Osmond. “It wasn’t talked about back then. You know, it was something you just buried and dealt with, and moved forward. What could you do about it?”
If only “See Jane Soar” existed when she was a child – she could’ve learned how to protect her personal boundaries! If you’re struggling to stick to your boundaries, you might find Where to Draw the Line: How to Set Healthy Boundaries Every Dayhelpful (pictured). And, here are five ways to maintain your boundaries even when people don’t like them…
5 Ways to Protect Your Boundaries Despite Criticism – Marie Osmond
When you set your personal boundaries, you’re protecting your time and energy for the things in life that mean the most to you. Setting boundaries is a piece of cake…it’s defending them that requires courage, stamina, and dedication!
1. Expect to be criticized for drawing the line. When I first started working from home – I’m a full-time freelance writer and blogger – I told my friends and family that I wouldn’t take personal phone calls during the day. It’s too disruptive, I love my job, and I don’t even talking on the phone! Most everybody was fine with it, except for a couple of friends who bristled (“Well, if you’re too busy to take ten minutes to catch up with an old friend who can’t talk in the evenings…”) and who are still irked, even after two years. Now when I set a personal boundary, I simply prepare myself for criticism or negative responses.
2. Let your loved ones be angry, disappointed, or frustrated. It’s okay if people are mad at you, disappointed in you, or frustrated by your behavior! No matter what you do or how nice you are, you won’t be liked by everyone all the time…so get used to getting under people’s skin. They’ll get over it. And, trust me, the more you let go of other people’s expecations, the easier it gets. It’s not your responsibility to make everyone happy all the time; your job is to figure out who your authentic self is, and be that woman. And don’t forget to look for the humor in the situation, because as Marie Osmond says, “If you’re going to be able to look back on something and laugh about it, you might as well laugh about it now.”
3. Stay in touch with who you are and what you need. As an introvert, I need to be alone a lot of the time. As a woman who likes to stay thin (and who gains weight just by thinking about chocolate), I need to eat less meat and potatoes – which my husband loves to eat for breakfast, lunch, and dinner (he’s one of those lucky ectomorphs who can eat whatever wants whenever he wants, and not gain an ounce). These are examples of two types of personal boundaries I’ve set at home, and they’re easy to protect because I am connected to who I am. It’s difficult to stand up against criticism when you don’t really know what you want or need!
4. Learn how to handle difficult people – especially at work. If you work full-time, you may spend more time at work than home…and who wants to be miserable for eight or nine hours a day? There are several ways to protect your boundaries even if you have critical coworkers, such as choosing the right time to talk to them, starting the conversation on a positive note, being specific, communicating directly, and figuring out your role in the problem. In How to Handle Bossy Coworkers – Sophia Loren, I describe those steps in more detail.
5. Detach from critical people a little…or a lot. Sometimes physical space is necessary – actually spending less time with people who don’t uplift or support you. If your mother or best friend from high school refuses to treat you the way you want to be treated (or if they’re toxic people), then it’s appropriate and healthy to spend less time with them, limit the lengths of your visits, or even let them go altogether.
“Life can be real tough,” said Marie Osmond. “You can either learn from your problems, or keep repeating them over and over.”
What about you – have you set healthy personal boundaries, and are you protecting them despite criticism from friends, family, or coworkers? I’d love to hear from you below!


I have a lot of problems with my in-laws constantly trying to control me and stepping on my boundaries. It seems I always have to say something to them to stay out of my personal business or sticking their nose into my private affairs that are none of their concern.Right now my father-in-law keeps telling me a (very toxic!) friend I used to have wants me to call her. He frequents a store that she works at. I got her out of my life for a reason!He constantly brings up the subject even though I ignore him or change the subject. I told him she is an alcoholic and very hard to deal with, but he will just not leave it alone.Here I go again!…I will have to be completely blunt with him next time and tell him in so many words to Butt out!Their lack of ability to pick up social cues is so aggravating!
Thanks, Meg, for sharing your story.
I love how you said that “you aren’t going to be love, or liked, for raising problems to those who are causing it” — but I totally agree that it’s SO worth it. Even if you don’t solve the problem, you have to live with yourself. And, it’s much better to live with the self-respect that comes with standing up for yourself and protecting your boundaries, than to cower and hide.
I’m glad you were here!
Laurie
.-= Laurie Pawlik-Kienlen´s last blog post..4 Ways to Reconnect With Who You Were – Shirley Valentine =-.
Good article, very timely. I am living next door to a building site and this morning at 6.15 the excavator and a truck load of materials turned up so they could start the foundations. I was expecting this, but what I didn’t expect was that the guys would unload their materials on my front lawn!!!
I went outside and asked them what they were doing, they rolled their eyes and groaned – here comes the cranky neighbour – and told me it would only be there for an hour. I asked them why they couldn’t have at least knocked on my door and ASKED if it was OK to use my front lawn as a materials depot, and they said they thought I would be asleep. Right, with all their noise, nobody could sleep.
One of the guys just walked off and said ‘whatever’, and I said yeah, it will be whatever when I ring your boss. Suddenly these men were willing to discuss the situation. It wasn’t until my husband (a building site foreman himself) rang their project manager and complained that they moved their materials off our front lawn. My husband was still attacked for being rude, but not before he was told that the builders ‘meant’ to tell us what was going to happpen a few days earlier, they just ‘didn’t get around to it’. It’s the usual case of shifting blame, minimising the problem, misdirection and projection when somebody steps up to the mark and says ‘no’. You aren’t going to be loved, or liked, for raising the problem to the ones who are causing it, and in the end, you may well feel it was not worth all the aggravation but its all really important for your self-respect to know that you said ‘no’ when it was necessary.
Doreen,
Thanks for taking the time to comment….working from home definitely has its perks (jammies!), but it really can be difficult to gain respect from friends and family. But, the longer a freelancer successfully runs her business, the more respect she’ll get…and the less people will push her personal and professional boundaries
See you in cyberspace,
Laurie
.-= Laurie Pawlik-Kienlen´s last blog post..7 People Skills That Help You Achieve Your Career Goals =-.
Good post!
I know what you mean about some people/friends not understanding that you’re really “working” when you are a freelance writer working from home. It took even my husband several years to realize that I was running a legitimate business and doing serious work. Even if times, I was doing it in my jammies!