What I learn on the orange couch: how to create boundaries for the first time

stitching messy alisaburke

Stitching by Alisa Burke

His shoes are almost always brown. Sometimes, like last week, his socks match his bright green jacket, which I think is worn on days with rain. But I can’t be sure; my evidence is sketchy, inconsistent, and random. I sit across from him, on a nubby burnt orange sofa that feels sturdy and new-ish and is so dark it is almost red; it is long enough for a family of four, depending on the capacity of that family for closeness. Which, perhaps, is the point in his line of work.

In May of last year, I started seeing a psychiatrist. I’ve mentioned this before and will mention it again, because it is time for us to shed the stigma that rides alongside mental health interventions, like a puppy in a sidecar, but not as cute. Too many people suffer and die for not stepping into the sunshine to say, “Help me, I’m not waving but drowning,” like my mother, and I won’t be a party to that for myself after spending more than 40 years trying to bring sunshine to her or at the very least, trying to give her the information she needed to know that there was sunshine, somewhere. Note to self, Step One: Stop caring about what others will say. It doesn’t matter and they don’t care anyway. And if they do care? Then they are caring about themselves and not you. Step Two: Stop believing you can bring sunshine to anyone.

My visit on that day in May 2015 wasn’t exactly by accident but by proximity instead, an appointment of convenience, you might say. We needed to find a new psychiatrist for Felix (formerly known as Tess) to get a form completed for a possible service dog placement (it didn’t work out) and a friend had suggested a doctor in Asheville. As I talked to the office manager about making an appointment for Felix, I said, “You know what, I’d like to make an appointment for myself, too.”

Why? Because I was convinced I was clinically depressed, because getting dressed had become almost impossible, because hiding was the story of most days, and because my family doctor had no solutions, seemingly, except to cut short the conversations when I said the word, “depressed,” and double the prescription of Celexa, which wasn’t helping, and still wouldn’t help at twice the dose.

And so, in mid-May, I found myself in an office with a psychiatrist across the room from me in those brown shoes and green socks, a mantle slightly above and to the left of his head, covered in knick-knacks with great meaning, I’m sure, that sturdy burnt orange couch my perch, constant traffic outside the window as an aside.

90 minutes later, after a flood of talk that overflowed the banks of that particular river and into the next person’s appointment, I emerged without Celexa, with a merry high-ho to my useless family doctor, and with a diagnosis not of depression but of PTSD.

I laughed when he said those four letters, adding after the laugh, “Well, that’s ridiculous.” I thought he was joking.

“PTSD? That’s for soldiers and survivors of violence,” I added, trying to cover up my laugh when I realized he was serious.

And then he cocked his head to one side and recounted the events of the last four years back to me:

Significant betrayal and slander by one of your closest friends and business partners after 8 years (and rejection by all those who believed his slander)

Brother’s heart attack and 5-bypass surgery

Autism diagnosis for your child

Cancer diagnosis for your husband

Transgender transition for your child, because Autism evidently just wasn’t difficult enough alone (you know what? that’s the truth of what I thought in the moment. As supportive as I am, that’s the truth of what I thought.)

Daughter leaving for college, traveling the world alone, getting a job, finding an apartment, adulting and all that comes with that

A friend’s attempted suicide, and then her completed one

Significant financial losses because of a new business partner who lied about his capabilities and was an asshole, to boot

A move to a new town, in part because of those losses

Mother’s decline, dementia (and now death, I must add, 7 months later).

The list went on from there, even. It went on.

I listened, and then deflected: “Yeah, but that’s just life,” I said. “Everybody deals with things like that all the time. That’s what life is.”

Slowly he reiterated his diagnosis, and outlined his proposed treatment plan.

I thought to myself:

When you are the person who endures, it comes as a shock when you simply cannot any longer, when showering and dressing and thinking have become too much. When cooking is out of the question. Or even eating.

When you are the person who holds it together for everyone else, it comes as a shock when you start unraveling, unable to help even yourself.

What would I tell a friend who recounted that list to me?

I would say, “Dear sweet little baby jesus, take a break. Rest, catch your breath, do some serious self care, get some help, you are home to a life.”

What had I been telling myself?

“Buck up, this is life. Everybody is dealing with the same kinds of things, many a lot worse than this. You’ve got work to do. Don’t ask for help, just put your head down and run at it. That has always worked.”

I wrote four books in that four years. I honestly have no idea how I did that. I traveled, I spoke, I saw my husband and children through illness and transitions of many kinds, I survived two business partners who shattered my sense of who I am, I carried on.

We carry on.

We carry on, don’t we?

We carry on with things significant and insignificant.

We are the competent ones. We are the ones who carry on, who become stoic instead of hysterical, the ones who shoulder a weight like it is nothing, nothing at all. We are the ones who make it right for everyone, who don’t say no if you need help, but almost always say no to ourselves.

When I was a child, my father used to involve us in the chores, one of which was scrubbing the white wall tires on our car with bleach and a toothbrush every week. He would say to me and my brother, “If you want something done right, do it yourself.” And evidently I believed him, taking everything on, even things no one had asked me to take on.

“Is it possible that by helping other people so much, you are actually insulting them?” my psychiatrist asked in that first conversation.

“That’s ridiculous! No! I am H-E-L-P-I-N-G them!”

He looked at me.

And we talked.

“Okay, well, I never thought of it that way.”

And we talked.

“Yes, I can see the truth in that. Yes, that is what I have been doing.”

Afterward, as I investigated this new diagnosis (god bless Dr. Google), I saw that the incidence of PTSD among mothers whose children have Autism is very high, higher than combat soldiers. And I understand that now, the days are full of old and new mines that will explode at a time I cannot know. I cannot know where to step to avoid the explosions. Add everything else on my list, and I now have no trouble at all believing that diagnosis.

I sit on that couch once a month. And truths are revealed to me, most often in my own processing, as words fall from my mouth onto a lovely Persian rug that clashes, but beautifully, with his chair. What I thought, I can no longer think. What I did to help people, I can no longer do. Because now I can see boundaries being crafted from what felt like alka-seltzer outlines before, dissolving or non-existent, and now being crafted like one stitches a beloved doll’s head back on her old body after too much love and wear. Stitches to hold me together, to not let me ooze into the other.

Boundaries:

  • Stopping myself from saying “yes” by saying either “no” or “I’ll get back to you in a few days after I’ve had time to think about it.” And focusing on the “no” most often.
  • Letting people know when their actions are not okay with me, in the moment, not three months or three years later. Letting them choose what fully informed action to take. My job is to inform; their job is to choose.
  • Divorcing myself from my love of ambiguity in matters of interpersonal relationships: clarity is my friend.
  • Setting up clear expectations from the beginning. “No, you may not call me at 10pm to tell me you won’t be in class tomorrow. Here are my office hours” or “I really prefer that you not give me advice unless I ask for it” or “Its important that you not stop by my house without calling first because it will startle Felix and cause hours of anxiety and despair, and screaming.”
  • Articulating for myself what “I have to” means. Hint: It really means, “I am choosing to,” but we let victim language (“have to”) sneak in.

I’m not that person without boundaries now. I will say no to you, even if my first impulse is to say yes. I won’t enable you (or me) any longer. I won’t solve your problems for you, even though I might think I can. (I always think I can. I know. I’m working on that). I will stop being a people pleaser. I will extend compassion and love and listening and better questions, but no fixes. I will stop myself from making statements and will only offer questions instead. Why? Because you are the expert in your own life, not me. And if you don’t like my questions, you have the right and responsibility to tell me to step back from even that.

You can’t afford to come to my Camp? I’m sorry to hear that, but I won’t offer you a discount or a free registration any longer. You get to choose what you invest in, and what you don’t.

You want me to read your 400 page manuscript and give you some thoughts on it? Here’s my coaching page. When there’s an opening, feel free to sign up for the package you can afford.

You’re angry because I’m not offering any scholarships to my retreats? Is your anger at me, or at yourself for not managing your money in a responsible way or not being able to prioritize?

Eight months into those conversations in that room, I also know now that I can set boundaries with great love, not anger. That’s the next stage of my evolution. Stay tuned, and consider this:

When you believe you are helping, you might not be. Help yourself instead. Consider it likely you’re the one who needs help, not others. 

When you are giving, your gift might be an expression of power over someone instead of an expression of generosity. Open space to receive instead (hint: receiving is much harder because it is a place of such greater vulnerability).

When you believe you are helping, consider that you might be insulting that person instead. Let them manage their own life. Have faith that they can, in fact, do so. You manage yours. That’s enough to keep your hands full.

As in all things, these things are true not always, but sometimes and often.

I sit, and I talk, I recognize, and I stitch myself back together again.

For more comments, see this post.

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

80 comments to " What I learn on the orange couch: how to create boundaries for the first time "
  • Kim Mailhot

    “When you believe you are helping, you might not be. Help yourself instead. Consider it likely you’re the one who needs help, not others.”
    This is a big feast for thought for me.
    Onward in love, Brave One.

    • Barrie Barton

      Your storytelling – even the difficult subject matter in this story lands gently in me. It rallies me to love and feel compassion for you and for all who are faced with these kinds of things. You have an uncanny way of telling your story where I hear your voice and the echoes of many others. Thank you.

  • Thank you Patti. Your words are a part of what is needed to reduce the stigma around mental illness and mental health treatment. In service of that, I would humbly invite you to consider changing one word above – from “successful” [suicide] to “completed.”
    Warmly,
    James

  • Pam Matchie

    You must do this for yourself. You are not alone. You have the unseen love of many who send you energy every day. You are surely loved.

    And, as always, thank you for sharing.

  • Marian

    This is stunningly and achingly important. I hope you are finding rest, one breath at a time, one boundary at a time. So glad you found that orange couch and the wise being that goes with it.

  • Jodi Yaver

    I love your ability to be so open, raw and honest. Immensely helpful as I embark on my own journey.
    I love u, Patti!

  • Dan

    I have a lot to learn about boundaries. Thanks for an illustration in boundaries-with-love.

  • This is such an important awareness for each of us. Gifted girls, well able thinkers, women from the South in general often take on additional caretaking roles that are too often voiding their own lives of self care. Thank you for the clarity of which you write. Well able and creative minds seem to think that there is this unlimited need to endure, to try harder, to align faster to everyone’s needs but their own. You are loved Patti

  • Gene

    Thoroughly enjoyed every sentence! It was an eye opener, a dose of reality, a full course meal that included a cocktail of boundaries, a salad dressed with honesty, a nicely cooked chicken without denial as the stuffing, and desert was a cake iced with recognition that fixing things starts with me. Thank you for making a difference!

  • whitney

    Thank you.

  • Kelly

    Thank you. Simply thank you- for your words that spoke to me dearly this morning.

  • Paddy Lynch

    Thank you, Patti, for such a bold and beautiful posting. I saw much of myself in what you wrote. It’s so easy to fall into helping mode, which for me often transitions to martyrdom. I am learning that helping is a conscious decision I make, not the result of someone else’s expectations. Knowing that I choose what I do- or don’t do- helps me create healthy boundaries for myself.

  • this is fabulous. and i can’t wait to share it on my bone sigh arts page. there are so many of us that need to read this. THANK YOU, patti!

  • Pure Jade

    I hear you.

  • Patti,

    Thank you for this post. It made me cry. Because no one has ever put it out there so pure and simply. I also suffer from PTSD and though we have different circumstances, you have nailed it, dead on. Yes, we carry on through thick and thin, always trying to please, and doing anything we can to prove that we’re up to the task … While we make ourselves more and more miserable.

    These daysI am better at setting boundaries, understand that helping can be extremely insulting, and that you don’t have to be a survivor of war or a tsunami to have PTSD. There are many who don’t even know what their problem is and continue to go on without help.

    Again, thank you. My thoughts and healing prayers go with you.

    Joan Rough

  • Kim

    I do love learning from your experiences. It always amazes me how many of these we have in common.

    Carry on!

  • Michelle

    What a beautiful gift. Thank You.

  • I see your tender open heart, your courageous heart. Thank you for this.

  • You are in a class of your own! Period. x

  • The cadence in this writing truly entranced me. Full disclosure: I’m a victim of short-form content and usually don’t get past three paragraphs but here, out of the shadows, a light shined that kept getting brighter and brighter, and I kept following it. Inspired and inspiring! Warm Smiles, Caren

  • Thank you so much. I do so much comparison. Like, you are publishing books must mean you have it all together. I am not must mean I’m a mess. When reality says you are publishing books and acknowledging your mess and working through it. Life is messy. We all have our mess pools to swim through. Thank you again for your clarity and willingness to be open so we can learn and grow along with you.

  • Jan Carleno

    Sending you my love and understanding. I have had much the same journey and struggles. Your books have inspired me as does your life. Thank you and continue to become whole again.

  • Sharon Martinelli

    Oh dear one, I cannot wait for Tybee. You have provided me the place to start. I will have to print this one out – it will become a precious resource for me.

  • Maggie

    I honour you for acknowledging and sharing your struggle – for writing your truth. I also extend deep gratitude to you for that.
    I send love, too…the kind that puts an arm around you and encourages and cheers you on.

  • Stephanie Marks-Ryan

    Whew! This is one big magnifying glass for me. Thank you for opening wide your life and allowing us to see ourselves reflected there. Much to think about in this piece.

  • What a gift for yourself and others who have travelled. Thank you for your presence in this space. I created my best work in recent years, in part to survive a similar period. However, it was a fine line at times, which set of forces in motion would win out. While some have it worse than others, I have this sense there is an undercurrent of PTSD that runs through our collective psyche these days. I see it in many of my students, my clients, my bathroom mirror at times, and the news. My heart stands with yours… Onward to new narratives….

  • Shannon

    Thank you for this. So much bravery.

  • Julie

    Boundaries. Self-care. PTSD. We are all just walking one another home. Thank you. For all of your caring and sharing. And carrying on. Your work and art and life are so very helpful in my work and my art and my life. I am grateful. If I cannot return the favor, perhaps I can pass it on. Deep bow to you, dear sister.

  • This is such important writing and learning in a world that assumes that we’re processing and learning from our lives as we go through them.

    We really need times, places and support to step back and observe the reality so we can navigate that far more effectively – your practitioner’s label is helpful but what I loved more was the chance he gave you to review and map what had been happening for you.

    Beautiful.

  • Susan

    Removing all those buttons installed and overly pushed by others during childhood. Such an unlearning/learning process. I’m grateful for this opportunity to install my own buttons. Most difficult one to remove is the People Pleaser I’m Your DoorMat Yes button. I may still have the volume a little loud on the No replacement button.

    Trauma can really take hold while we’re trying to reason it all away.
    Thank you for sharing your insights, Patti.

  • Gail Overstreet

    Brava. Beautiful wisdom. Thank you.

  • Tina Tierson

    Oh Patti. Yes and yes. Thank you. You are loved.

  • Mari

    Wow! Great! And, thank you.

  • Gorgeous. And resonant. Thank you. And sending you much light.

  • Wow. Just. Wow. Exactly right.

  • Thank you, Patti. This is great for someone like me who falls in love whenever someone tells me their story. Such a life journey you are living! What a great life skill to find that boundary line and honor it and truly find yourself able to love with boundaries. God bless you.

  • Patti, I love you. WE love you. YOU love you. Yes, always.

  • Frenchie

    Patti, I have read this 3 x and shared it directly with a friend that I did not want to tag on FB. The last 3 + years have been one thing to deal with/shoulder after another. I made my list – and parralled her’s as well – and it scared me and enlightened me…maybe we’re suffering from PTSD as well and not a case of ‘this to shall pass….’ Thank you again for your candor, openness and willingness to be vulnerable so that others may learn and take action.

  • JJ

    “When you are the person who endures, it comes as a shock when you simply cannot any longer, when showering and dressing and thinking have become too much. When cooking is out of the question. Or even eating.
    When you are the person who holds it together for everyone else, it comes as a shock when you start unraveling, unable to help even yourself.”

    This made me cry and took me right back to staring at my newborn and needing to pack her diaper bag for day care so I could do my Huge Job and Make The Money to Support Our Family and having NO ability to pack that diaper bag, never mind change her diaper or dress myself like someone who leaves the house. All the confusion, overwhelm, and paralysis followed by the grim pep talk of the depressed: you WILL do it. Who do you think you are not to do it? Get it done.

    My love to you. And having worked inside many many many families who have children and adults with Autism, my love to you.

    • um. this is genius. pure fucking beautiful geniuns. yes. thank you!

      my favorite nuggets:

      “Step One: Stop caring about what others will say. It doesn’t matter and they don’t care anyway. And if they do care? Then they are caring about themselves and not you. Step Two: Stop believing you can bring sunshine to anyone.”

      “I also know now that I can set boundaries with great love, not anger.”

      um …. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! YAS.

  • Terri Belford

    Thank you, Patti, for sharing your wisdom and journey so eloquently and generously. I may print this out and re-read whenever I feel my own seawalls eroding.

  • Susan

    Oh Patti! “You is smart. You is kind. You is important.” And…You is courageous!

  • Thank you for being such an example of taking responsibility for your life and your needs. Your books have helped me so much. I thank you for sharing yourself so vulnerably and openly.

  • Such powerful words and so true.
    I can relate to what you say, wanting to help, to please, and wondering why I was the one taken for granted and overlooked by those who said no and had boundaries. Thank you for this Patti.
    It also made me consider this is why my aunt is struggling with life at the moment. She has had YEARS of caring for my uncle who frequently needs emergency hospital treatment. Depressed, yes, she has nothing to look forward to and feels a sense of hopeless and loss of control, but the endless stress and responsibility of caring for my uncle takes it toll. Just in the same way you spoke of your own situation. I hope this insight and new way of coping makes a difference Patti. Sending positive thoughts and thanks x

  • Wilma

    Welcome to the sisterhood of awareness, now we begin to heal and recover. Some days better than others. I stand with you.

  • Patti–this is beautiful and so spot-on. I have been working to practice much of what you outline in this tender piece. My mantra is “stay out of other people’s business until mine 100% spotless.”” Which, of course, will never be the case :)

    Thank you for your presence in this world and your beautiful words. xo

  • Alison Miyake

    I am taking deep, meditative breaths after reading this. I felt something release. Thank you for your clarity and your compassion for yourself and all of us. It’s amazing what a really good listener and questionner can do to open up our view of our lives. I have had this experience, too.

  • So beautiful, Patti. Your words inspire, and warm my heart, as always. Thank you.

  • Amanda

    Thank you for your endless courage.

  • Just love this. I was nodding along and soon found myself saying, Hey! That’s me! Thank you for this gorgeously open, vulnerable and generous writing. What a gift.

  • Fantastic. Absolutely, fantastic! I want to jump up and down screaming, “Yes! Yes! Yes!”

    And truth reigns.

  • Kimberly Hanson

    Holy cow.

    I loved what I read. My heart aches for your challenges. I am glad you are setting boundaries. Your comments terrify me, when I think about those I am helping. I feel like I just got shot with an arrow.

    Thank you so much for sharing this. All of it.

  • Kat

    Thank you. On a day of complete hell, many people demanding 800,000 things of me, I about hit my limit. Ok, I did hit my limit. Your piece here is very welcome. Boundaries. Yes. I need more. I say no a lot more than I ever said yes (and that was a hell of a lot). PTSD. Makes me wonder. I’m going to do more digging. Possibly some more art – this weekend!
    Anyway, thanks.

  • Cynthia

    In all my life, in all the things I’ve accomplished, going through and benefiting from counseling is what I am proudest of. It has positively impacted my quality of life the most! Sending you love and deep healing my sweet dear friend.

  • Kelli K

    Thanks for a great article, I am also in the process of creating stronger boundaries in my life after years of abuse (and experiencing PTSD in regards to my relationship with my ex). Your insight is valuable and gives context to what boundaries look like.

  • Raeven Lenser

    Bringing mental health out in the open, in an astounding piece of work where everyone sees a bit of themselves, brings us a little closer to erasing the stigma. I had to stop reading twice because of the tears. For me, they were the tears that happen when an absolute truth of the universe is so profoundly stated that it’s an arrow to the heart, always known somehow, yet so new that I can’t fathom it all at once. The tears for you, and what you’ve endured/ experienced(?) in the 4 short years in which these events took place. I want to reach out into space and just hug you tightly. Which I realise is partly because I see myself, in a way I can’t easily forget, dismiss, or censor in the upcoming hours. Because I was just reading a little Patti on my phone when pwoomp, I got hit so hard and unexpectedly that my coping mechanisms for ignoring what’s behind my chronic “can’t cook, or think, move, or eat thing” weren’t doing their coping thing! They were unprepared and you slipped through before I could shut my eyes and ears. After reading this honest, brave sharing of yours, my tears were gone, yet I felt this soft little pain in my tummy that seldom shows itself. It quietly said that I have so much to tell my new therapist, and it’s really big stuff, because she needs to know I’m not waving. Thank you for the courage and insight I feel, and for the fact that some people who read your story might understand me better, just as I’ve realised from you some issues I need to be more mindful of with others. Angel wings to you if you are still actually reading this long winded response. Actually, wings no matter what.

  • Nancy

    Oh Patti, you have helped so many people learn how to stitch themselves back together over the years — through your postings and books and classes and book clubs and Project 137s and so many more of your offerings. More than you could possibly know. Selfishly,- thank you for taking the time to help yourself. Thank you for being so open in sharing your own experience — much to the surprise of many of us who had no clue. You set a healthy and loving example for all of us.

  • Patti, you had me with this, in tears sobbing into my cereal. Because I, too, am struggling with PTSD brought on also by a whole cavalcade of life crap that I, too, think other people are just dealing with.

    And then I got to this:
    “You’re angry because I’m not offering any scholarships to my retreats? Is your anger at me, or at yourself for not managing your money in a responsible way or not being able to prioritize?”

    And I stopped, because I couldn’t read the rest of your essay with the words “managing your money […] responsible” echoing in my head like a deep tunnel. I was going to share your post, maybe even write a response and link back; because of the judgement and shame in that one line, I cannot. What you are telling me with that line is that you are willing to shame people like me, people who have not grown up upper middle class, people who struggle with life problems such as the unstable economy and the cost of mental illness treatment. And that’s my boundary; I cannot share your post with my friends while you are insulting them in it.

    • Thanks for your thoughtful comment. If you can step back from feeling insulted, perhaps you will see that I am writing my truth, not yours, and that the line you reference is in response to being asked a lot for free things, when I don’t have the capacity to provide them – and doesn’t have to do with others’ financial or class status. I am not willing, nor intending, to shame you, and your taking it as shameful is a part of your story, not mine. I am well aware of the costs of mental illness treatment, as I have a child with Autism who will require lifelong care, and my own ongoing treatment. We all have things we can afford, and not; I am simply noting my inability to respond positively to the many requests I receive, and acknowledging my own financial constraints for many of the reasons you have mentioned. To tell me I am “willing to shame” people like you is rather insulting to me, and while I appreciate and respect your boundary, I would ask that you not assign intention to me in such a way.

      • Jo

        I, too, am a “work in progress”; in fact, my life is just that. I’ve struggled with a family member who is intolerant of “rich people” who “have privileges that people with little money have.” She has embarrassed me in public with comments (loud) about her opinions and I try very hard not to react, since my husband and I have worked hard for many years to be “comfortable”…not “rich”, but comfortable. After years of helping her out ($$ and labor and parts for things) and helping her with a LOT of money for 3 years to go to school, she still has this attitude and it is HER problem, NOT MINE. Many of us who have worked hard and long for our lives are generously giving to those with less. I will no longer be put on the spot about me being able to afford to live differently than her. It’s taken me years to get to this point, but Boundaries I must make and I am feeling empowered by this. We all have our opinions and interpretations to others’ words and I am glad that you, Poppy, put forth your words for Patti and that you, Patti, explained your words to her. This is called communicating and not leaving anyone with assumptions about what was said. Let’s all try to do this without anger and shame; respecting that each of us present our ideas and opinions differently.

  • Judi

    This article hit me where I live. Boundaries. Not helping everyone. Being true to yourself. One of my counsellors always tells me to treat myself the way I would treat my 5 year old grandson. (Would you admonish him for wanting to have a nap? ) self-care and self-love are what I am concentrating on this year. This article is a perfect starting off point. Thank you.

  • Jo

    Powerful words by everyone. Thank you for some thought-provoking stories and words that seem to have come at a good time in my life (I recently started seeing a grief counselor) when I am doing a lot of reflecting and redefining my self. Thank you.

  • The power of saying no is beyond measure.
    NO.
    No, and I’m not sorry for saying it.
    No, no NO NO no no no no no.
    NO.
    Thank you for reminding me that I am the keeper of my words and that no is not a bad word. No is a word that takes courage and implies self care.
    Thank you for reminding us, Patti, to keep stitching our heads back on … and to do it with grace, style …and unapologetically.
    With love, Missy

  • Jenni

    Patti,
    Having raised a child with TS, anxiety, OCD, and sensory defensiveness, that alone, is enough to put a person over the edge. (And I think a child with autism is even more difficult). That one thing is enough for a PTSD diagnosis (without all of the other things you listed), especially when it involves not sleeping for days on end. It is amazing how strong we are. It is also amazing that we feel we have to be that strong. I am learning alongside you how to set boundaries, how to say no (which sometimes comes out pretty loud because it is a new behavior), how to give myself the kind of care I deserve (and give everyone else). Thank you for continuing to model this excellent behavior for us. I was very happy when you postponed the writing class to take care of your concussion. I would say that perhaps some new office hours are in order, “Compassionate Patti is out of the office taking care of herself. You do the same.” LOVE LOVE LOVE to you.

  • Paula

    thanks for the theme of boundaries. It comes to me as a reminder – reiteration – that I am in control of who i accept into my life… best wishes

  • […] waiting for my time and attention: An interview with Vivian Gornick in The Paris Review,  a long and important essay by Patti Digh about creating boundaries, and pages by women who’ve entrusted me with […]

  • Cigdem Kobu

    Thank you for this, Patti. I needed to read this.

    “Yeah, but that’s just life,” I said. “Everybody deals with things like that all the time. That’s what life is.”

    Wow! That was startling as that was what I’ve told myself so many times in the last seven years.

    Having experienced two very disappointing business partnerships in the past, one of which included a bitter betrayal, I know how it feels in that department. I trust that the newer and cherished partnerships will determine their own fates and that history doesn’t always repeat.

    Better boundaries, stopping myself from saying “yes” by saying “no” and stopping overdoing, overexerting myself and overgiving at the expense of myself will be my anthem this week.

  • Beautiful. Thank you for sharing and in such a compelling way. I loved how you already put into place your boundaries lessons within your replies inside this blog post. Your clarity is inspiring and earth shaking. Many blessings your way.

  • Emmy van Swaaij

    Thank you Patti!

  • Thank you for this powerful post. When one of us shares our story of struggle and hope, it encourages others to know that they are not alone, and it sometimes opens a window to hope. In this sense of shared humanity is where self-compassion begins to grow and shame begins to transform. Stories heal. Thanks for sharing yours so beautifully.

  • Uninhibited truth-telling liberates the soul.
    Your words continue to move me.
    Thank you for sharing what is real and true for you, Patti.
    In doing so, you speak to what is real and true for many of us.

  • Sarah

    Patti,
    You may have saved me. I have been plodding along taking care of others for so long, that I have not even raised my head. I must learn to say No, and I hope that I can think of your article and find the strength to do so.
    Thank you!

  • Davielle Huffman

    Holy mackerel, holy WOW. I feel like I myself just had a session on that orange couch, alongside you. Thank you, thank you, Patti. You’ve just bared your soul AGAIN and you’ve just reminded me of several things I’ve heard over the years (the bit about ‘helping someone might be insulting them’ {paraphrased} – YES, THAT!). Thank you, thank you.

  • […] recently read an article that touched me so deeply, I was inspired to write a post about what it brought up for me. My […]

  • Crystal Friday

    Thank you, very much.

  • Nicole D.

    Yes, it is very hard to think that any of our circumstances are truly unique, yet here you are writing about them, eloquently. I too, feel that I have let life “happen” to me, let the chips fall where they might, plod along until the next crisis rears its ugly head. PTSD, hmm, after years of helping my husband through health crisis after crisis (waiting for the other shoe to drop after each one), it is very hard to understand that I need to take care of myself; even though I wrote down a note that this my year of self care. I can’t seem to find help- I scare them all, not sure why. Maybe because they feel I should fall into their subscribed (prescribed?) categories…..which I do not. No meds, please, life is hard enough, I do not want to zone out even though I feel that is what I’ve done for the past, holy shit- 18 years?! :( Now to find out that my father is deceased (estranged) with no notification of next of kin…… Anyway; your post hit home, you did not shame me with your honesty- I don’t think I would have ever had the nerve to ask for a discount for one of your camps; hmmm, maybe I am farther along than I thought. I am currently reading Childhood Disrupted (Adverse Childhood Experiences)- might even be an explanation for the way I’ve lived my life in regards to relationships, financial issues, everything; it also offers solutions. Kudos for saying what some us know yet feel we can’t relate….. Sending you healing prayers <3

  • […] If you give, give, and give, have trouble setting boundaries, and it might be trauma instead of something else, read this > What I learn on the Orange Couch, Setting Boundaries for the First Time […]

  • Jylene

    Oh my… I think I needed to read this, as tears sprung instantly to my eyes when I read these two lines: “When you are the person who endures, it comes as a shock when you simply cannot any longer” and “When you are the person who holds it together for everyone else, it comes as a shock when you start unraveling, unable to help even yourself.” Thank you for your honest (as usual!) revelations about your experience. This line touched me as well: “We are the competent ones. We are the ones who carry on, who become stoic instead of hysterical, the ones who shoulder a weight like it is nothing, nothing at all. We are the ones who make it right for everyone, who don’t say no if you need help, but almost always say no to ourselves.” I don’t know how I got disconnected but I can say that I have truly missed you and 37days! Hugs…

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