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How Letting Go of Others’ Opinions Helped Me Build Healthy Boundaries

Barb Nangle
5 min readSep 13, 2024

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Photo Credit: Andrej Lisakov

The most important thing that enabled me to go from 50+ years of having no boundaries to having healthy boundaries was this: I made the shift from being super concerned with what others think of me to becoming more concerned with what I think of myself.

This doesn’t mean I don’t care at all what others think of me (of course I do, I’m human). What it means is that I used to be willing to throw my integrity out the window by lying and saying yes to things I didn’t want to do. I’d volunteer for things I didn’t really want to do. I wanted to be helpful for sure, but “wanting to be helpful” doesn’t explain why I over-gave to the point of being resentful and exhausted. It became over-giving because I cared so much about what other people thought of me. I didn’t want them to think I was a bad person, uncaring or unhelpful.

I wanted them to think good things of me, like that I’m helpful, giving, and dependable. I didn’t understand any of this at the time though. I thought I was “nice” and that was my motivation. I didn’t realize I was so invested in what other people thought of me.

This came to my awareness when I asked someone to help me understand how helpfulness turns into rescuing. I told her that I understood there’s a continuum of helpfulness that’s something like this:

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Barb Nangle
Barb Nangle

Written by Barb Nangle

I’m a boundaries coach who works with women who focus on what others think and neglect themselves. I've coached hundreds using my exclusive BUILD framework.

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