Anxiety is both a mental and physical state of negative expectation. Mentally it is characterized by increased arousal and apprehension tortured into distressing worry, and physically by unpleasant activation of multiple body systems—all to facilitate response to an unknown danger, whether real or imagined.
Why Anxiety Makes Boundaries Harder
Setting and maintaining boundaries is challenging even without mental health struggles. Anxiety adds specific layers of difficulty:
- Fear of rejection or abandonment makes saying no feel existentially threatening
- People-pleasing patterns developed as coping mechanisms
- Difficulty recognizing your own needs when anxiety clouds self-awareness
- Guilt and shame about having needs or limits at all
- Fatigue from anxiety reduces capacity to enforce boundaries consistently
What Healthy Boundaries Look Like
Boundaries are not walls or punishments — they are guidelines about what you need to function and feel safe.
Types of boundaries affected by Anxiety:
- Energy boundaries: Limiting draining interactions or commitments
- Time boundaries: Protecting rest and recovery time
- Emotional boundaries: Not taking responsibility for others' emotions
- Physical boundaries: Space and physical contact preferences
- Digital boundaries: Response times and availability expectations
Setting Boundaries When You Have Anxiety
Start Small
Choose one low-stakes boundary to practice. Success builds confidence for harder ones.
Scripts for Common Situations
- "I care about you, and I need some time to recharge. Let's connect on [specific time]."
- "I'm not able to take that on right now, but here's what I can do..."
- "I need to end this conversation now, but I'd like to continue another time."
Handling Pushback
People who benefit from your lack of boundaries will resist when you establish them. This resistance is not evidence you're wrong — it's evidence the boundary is needed.
When Anxiety Makes Boundaries Feel Impossible
If anxiety has severely compromised your ability to recognize or assert your needs, therapy — especially dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) or attachment-based approaches — can be transformative.