Thursday, May 25, 2017

Boundary Setting

I've described boundary setting in both ConCom and Scaling Force, but I was recently informed that I haven't written it down quite the way I teach it. So here goes.

Setting a boundary is not a negotiation or a conversation. It is a very different communication mode than most people ever use. This is why most people find it so hard, and why most people can safely ignore your boundaries. It is not enough to know the pattern, you have to practice. And the real practice is not in learning the pattern, it is in sticking to the pattern.

The pattern is simple:

  1. State boundary
  2. Repeat boundary (Louder)
  3. State penalty
  4. Apply penalty

That's it.
"Back off!" "I said back off!" "One step closer and I will knock you on your ass!" Knock on ass.

"Go to bed." "I said, go to bed!" "If you do not go to bed right now, you will get a spanking and I will put you in bed." Spank and carry.

The example in Scaling Force:
“I’ve told you to leave the door open when you come into my office.”
“What’s your problem? Are you afraid to be alone with me?” Trying to joke, trying to make the boundary setter defensive. Do you see the predator dynamic here?
“Open the door.” Simple, direct statement. No argument, no reasoning, nothing in the voice that could turn it into a question. One of the worst phrases is “I need you to do X for me” as it places all the power on the threat and sounds like a plea on two levels, “need” and “for me.” Do not use this tactic when dealing with potential predators. It’ll backfire.
“Whatever. I wanted to talk to you about…” Disregarding “no” or pretending to ignore boundaries is a huge red flag that you are dealing with a predator.
“Open the door.” Staying on message.
“Geeze, can’t you stay on the subject?” Again, trying to shift blame/responsibility, implying that the predator is the one who wants to get the job done and the potential victim is hung up on something minor.

“Open the door or I will file that complaint. Now!” The only thing added to the statement of boundaries is the penalty. “Now” acts as an ultimatum. Once you take this verbal step you must be ready to act on your threat. If the threat ignores you (some will, most won’t) and you fail to follow through, you will have marked yourself as easy meat.
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I normally avoid the words always and never, but this one comes close. Deviation from this pattern turns the boundary setting into something that is not boundary setting. If you need to set a boundary, doing something else rarely works.

It's hard to stick with the pattern because we aren't used to it. If you explain the reasons behind your boundary, it's now a conversation, not boundary setting. The conversation may work, but what comes out is an agreement, not a boundary. Agreements require the consent of all involved parties. You set your boundaries around the things that are more important than other people's consent.
Exception: You can make the reason (provided it is simple, not too personal, and doesn't invite follow up questions) the introduction to step 1, e.g. "You're too close. Back off." NOT "Back off, you're standing too close." NOT "I had a really bad childhood and when people with beards get within arms reach of me I sometimes have panic attacks so back off." You get the idea.

If you just keep repeating the boundary, it's a broken record and meaningless. No one respects it. Empty noise.

If you state the penalty but can't bring yourself to apply the penalty, it's just posturing, an empty threat. Not only does this erase the boundary, the person now knows you to be just an empty threat. All of your boundaries disappear.

If you skip the two middle steps, you aren't setting a boundary. The first statement was a warning. It's a different thing.

You can pretty accurately gauge the level of predation that you're dealing with by how they challenge the boundary.

"Back off." Most normal- and normal in this context means someone with no ill will towards you and no language barrier or mental issue that prevents them from grasping that this is a declarative statement-- will back off. They might be bewildered or upset, and will probably ask for an explanation, but they will respect the boundary. You can explain a respected boundary if you choose to, just be aware that damn near everyone assumes that knowing the reasons gives them the right to break the rule.

Socially awkward/language barrier/mental illness/drugs may just blow by step one, but step two stops them.

Predators however have three common responses to step 1, "Back off" One is to open their body language, soften their voice and gently violate the boundary while asking you a question, "Honey, why do you want to be like that? You aren't afraid of me, are you?" The second is to turn it back on you, try to trigger a common social guilt that makes you feel bad for setting your own boundaries, such as, "What, you got a problem with (ethnicity, gender, religion, any of the hot-button labels.)" Or, "You think you're so special you can tell me what to do?" The third is to trigger a monkey dance by demanding the third step, "Oh, yeah? What are you gonna do about it?"

Step two tends to stop the low level predators as well. All of the common predatory responses to the first step are trying to divert you into a predictable social script. If you fall for them, it shows you can be manipulated and more important, those scripts are predictable. Ignoring the hook and going for the second step means you are hard to control and unpredictable. Most predators will give it a pass.

Real world notice #1: Sometimes, you'll be setting boundaries say, at work, where there is a long term relationship. This guy might be a creep and you need to set boundaries, but you also have to work with him, maybe for years. Some of them will flirt with the edge of the boundary and try to turn it into a game to see if and when you will cave.

Some predators will push to step three, mostly to see if you have a step three or just go into broken record mode. Once you have stated the penalty, you have revealed that you do in fact have a plan to deliver consequences. Even the more serious predators back off here unless they are sure they can get away with it. And are willing to cross those lines. If the rapist knows he has to kill to keep you from reporting, he has to make a choice.

Real world notice #2. A lot of self-defense is taught as if the incident will happen in a sterile laboratory environment. The sexually aggressive creep at the office didn't back off until step three. That's pretty predatory. But he did back off, so win! Yay! But never forget that assholes are very good at punishing people for standing up to them, and this is a long game. The creep will tell everyone willing to listen how unreasonable you are and how petty and how you were going to write him up just for standing there... It's a long game, but you can play a long game, too.



7 comments:

Unknown said...

Thank you.

Charles James said...

This is just - Marvelous - and let me ask, "Is this also one way to explain/articulate self-defense by the ability to articulate their violation of the boundary rules? You have to state penalty and they test it and testing like a lot of things is some sort of posturing, etc., and you apply the penalty also explaining why and so on?" (Note: like using JAM as well, etc.)

Rory said...

Absolutely, Charles. A self-defense claim is always stronger if you can show that you attempted Preclusion and that failed. You will also have to articulate how you recognized the threat's intent. Violating boundaries can be a convincing show of intent.

barbara said...

thank you, very clear explanation!

But I was astonished about the idea, that "It is a very different communication mode than most people ever use." really? I use it, in not very critical situations, but more or less daily. It is one of the standard modes of communication. Getting an empty seat on a bus where someone put their bag, or a unhappy client on the phone who threatens to call a lawyer... such things surely happen all the time? for most people?

The motto "never an empty threat" I heard lots of times from my mother, a very peaceful lady. But then, she has lots of younger brothers, this might explain a thing or two. :-D

Josh Kruschke said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
HerbM said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
HerbM said...

Excellent -- one serious and crucial improvement to consider.

We've been doing something similar in pre-self-defense situations (practicing, teaching, role-playing with force one force) due to a system by Tom Sotis.

State the boundary: Back off.
State LOUDER, COMMAND VOICE: Back OFF!

It's critical that the second, louder "Back OFF!" does NOT have extra 'preamble' words like "I said..." or "Hey man..." -- it must be SIMPLY a COMMAND, a CLEAR COMMAND.

Adding the extra words only serves to soften the command. (No drill sergeant every says, "Hey guys, Right FACE!".

Put another way: "I said 'Back off'" is QUOTING YOURSELF, not giving a command.

"Back OFF!" is a COMMAND.

The next step is generally an 'emergency' is actually best kept to: "BACK THE F OFF!!!", followed by physical defensive action if not obeyed (Running, fighting, weapons, etc.)

Done correctly the "F" is unnecessary, but it servers to give the flavor of Step #3 -- I am going to repel the encroachment with the force of my LANGUAGE, WILL< and even the AIR from my voice -- pin back their ears at this point.

All this should best be done while circling from the very first to AT LEAST 90 degrees from the original position to avoid having another attacker behind you while the first occupies your attention -- and for about 10 other reasons.