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Blog: Pathway for Survivors

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Healthy Relationship Boundaries as a Survivor of an Abusive Relationship

1/20/2026

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By Christine Murray

Healthy relationship boundaries are essential to emotional well-being, safety, and the overall health of our connections with others. Yet many survivors of abusive or abusive relationships find that boundaries are a very challenging areas of their relational lives. This is understandable. Abusive partners often ignore, violate, or punish boundaries, leaving survivors feeling confused, guilty, or unsafe for asserting what they need.

If past relationships taught you that your boundaries didn’t matter, it makes sense that navigating boundaries today may feel confusing or even intimidating. But setting and maintaining healthy boundaries is a skill that can be developed. And strengthening this skill can become a powerful part of the healing process.

Today’s blog post explores what healthy boundaries look like, why they matter so much, and how you can begin defining and honoring your own boundaries moving forward.

Why Boundaries Are Hard After Abuse

People who are abusive within relationships often disregard others’ boundaries entirely. They may react with anger, manipulation, guilt trips, or punishments when their partner sets limits. Over time, this can leave survivors feeling:
  • afraid to speak up for their needs
  • confused about whether they “deserve” boundaries
  • guilty for wanting space, rest, or respect
  • unsure what healthy boundaries even look like

If this resonates with you, please know this: struggling with boundaries does not mean you are flawed or weak. It means you’ve learned (understandably) to survive in an environment where your safety depended on reading someone else’s moods instead of honoring your own needs.
Healing allows you to begin rewriting those patterns.
 
A Simple Formula for Healthy Boundaries

One helpful way to conceptualize healthy boundaries is through a simple equation:

                                   Clarity + Flexibility = Healthy Boundaries

Clarity involves:
  • naming what you need
  • expressing expectations clearly
  • communicating your limits calmly and directly

Flexibility involves:
  • adjusting boundaries as relationships grow
  • allowing space for context
  • being open to healthy negotiation

Healthy boundaries are clear, adaptable structures that protect your well-being and support mutual respect in relationships. As a survivor, you may find it helpful to reflect on what “clarity” and “flexibility” look like for you. This might include statements such as:
  • “I speak up directly about what I’m comfortable with.”
  • “I check in with myself regularly about whether my boundaries still feel right.”
  • “I give myself permission to change a boundary if something no longer feels safe.”

Keep in mind that different relationships require different levels of closeness and distance. For example, emotional closeness makes sense with a trusted partner or best friend, but not with a coworker or distant relative. Boundaries also change over the course of a relationship and across the lifespan.

As you continue healing, it may be helpful to ask yourself reflective questions such as the following:
  • Which relationships in my life feel the hardest for setting or maintaining boundaries?
  • What emotions come up when I think about asserting myself, such as fear, guilt, worry, uncertainty?
  • Where did I learn my earliest messages about boundaries?
  • What does “healthy boundaries” personally mean to me today?
     
You Deserve Healthy, Respectful Boundaries

Healthy boundaries are acts of self-respect and cornerstones of healthy relationships. They protect your emotional safety, support your healing, and help you build relationships where you can thrive. As you move forward, remind yourself often:
  • I have the right to communicate my needs clearly.
  • I have the right to protect my peace.
  • I have the right to relationships where respect is mutual.

You are worthy of boundaries that honor your healing, your safety, and your dignity. With practice and support, you can continue strengthening this skill as you build relationships that reflect the respect and compassion you deserve.

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Opportunities for Healing: Identifying Your Priorities Along the Recovery Journey

1/13/2026

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By Christine Murray

Healing from an abusive relationship is a deeply personal process. While every survivor’s journey is unique, many people find that taking time to reflect intentionally on their priorities along the healing journey can bring clarity, direction, and renewed hope. When life has been filled with chaos, fear, or emotional upheaval, pausing to consider what you need most moving forward can be an empowering step.

Survivors often carry the heavy impacts of trauma, emotionally, mentally, spiritually, and even physically. Amid all of this, it’s easy for your own needs to become buried under the stress of coping, staying safe, and rebuilding. That’s why intentionally naming your healing priorities can be a powerful act of self-care. It reminds you that your well-being matters and that your healing deserves space, time, and attention.

Below, you’ll find a simple reflection exercise adapted for the Source for Survivors community. Take your time with each statement. There are no right or wrong answers. Keep in mind that healing is not linear, and your priorities may evolve as you gain strength, safety, and clarity.

Reflection Exercise: Exploring Your Healing Priorities

Consider these prompts as a starting point for deeper reflection. You may want to write in a journal, talk through your thoughts with a counselor, or simply reflect quietly on each one.

  • My top priority for healing regarding my abusive relationship is:
  • Another priority for my healing is:
  • The biggest challenge for this healing will be:
  • I’m most excited about working toward healing because:
  • Something I look forward to being different in my life once I have moved forward with my healing is:

Final Thoughts

As you reflect on your responses, try to notice what themes, feelings, or hopes rise to the surface. Are you longing for more peace? More confidence? Stronger boundaries? A deeper connection with yourself? Greater joy? Healing is about taking small, intentional steps toward the life you deserve.

Remember, naming your priorities is not meant to add pressure. Instead, it’s an invitation to be gentle and honest with yourself. Your healing belongs to you, and you get to decide where your energy goes.

Above all, keep reminding yourself that healing is possible. The fact that you’re exploring what you need and envisioning a healthier future is a powerful sign of strength. Step by step, you are reclaiming your voice, your worth, and your path forward.

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Examining the Impacts of Abuse on Your Thoughts and Feelings

1/6/2026

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By Christine Murray

Healing from an abusive or abusive relationship involves unpacking many layers of impact, including physical, emotional, social, and practical effects of the abuse. One of the most significant, yet often overlooked, effects of abuse is how it can alter the way survivors think and feel about themselves. 

Abusive people often use criticism, gaslighting, and manipulation as tools of control, and over time, these tactics can deeply influence survivors’ self-concept and worldview. If you’ve noticed shifts in how you see yourself, your relationships, or your beliefs about life because of what you experienced, please know this is a normal response to harmful behavior. The good news is that with time, support, and intentional healing, these impacts can be understood, softened, and healed.

In today’s post, we’ll explore two major areas commonly affected by abuse: your self-concept and your underlying beliefs about life. You’ll also find self-reflection exercises to help you gently explore your own experiences in these areas.

How Abuse Can Shape Your Self-Concept

Your self-concept includes your sense of worth, confidence, identity, and trust in your own perceptions. Abusive relationships often chip away at these foundations, sometimes slowly and subtly, other times abruptly and painfully.

If you have ever questioned your judgment, doubted your worth, or felt worn down by interactions with a harmful person, you are not alone. These responses are common because abusive people frequently use tactics such as:
  • Constant criticism
  • Victim-blaming
  • Gaslighting 
  • Emotional manipulation
  • Withholding kindness or approval

Over time, these experiences can affect your inner voice and self-image. To help you reflect on this, consider the following statements. You might mark them as true or false for your own experiences as a way to notice the patterns that may have shaped your current healing journey.

Self-Reflection Exercise: Self-Concept Impacts (True/False)
  • I have questioned my perceptions or interpretations of a situation.
  • I have blamed myself for the other person’s behavior.
  • I felt down about myself after interacting with the other person.
  • I berated myself for not being able to respond better or faster to something they said.
  • My experiences with this relationship have made me feel worse about myself.
  • I feel less confident in my ability to have healthy relationships because of this relationship.
  • Dealing with this relationship has made me feel worn down.
  • I know the other person’s hurtful words are not true, but sometimes I find myself questioning whether to believe them.
  • I’ve wondered if something is wrong with me that caused the other person to act this way.
  • My overall self-confidence has decreased because of what happened in this relationship.

If many of these resonate with you, it does not mean the harm was your fault. What it means is that you have likely been deeply affected by someone else’s destructive, abusive choices. The impacts you notice today can be healed over time through self-compassion, supportive relationships, and therapeutic work.

How Abuse Can Shift Your Core Beliefs

Beyond impacting how you think about yourself, abusive relationships often lead survivors to question fundamental beliefs about relationships, the future, spirituality, and even the goodness of helping others. These shifts make sense, as abuse can shake the ground beneath survivors in profound ways.

When someone you trusted harms you, it’s only natural that your beliefs about safety, hope, or trust may change. Below is a another self-reflection exercise designed to help you identify areas where your fundamental beliefs may have been affected. You can write down your responses privately, discuss them with a trained professional, or simply use them as a starting point for deeper reflection.

Self-Reflection Exercise: Exploring Possible Shifts in Core Beliefs

Beliefs About Relationships: Example: “Other people can’t easily be trusted.”
What beliefs about relationships (e.g., trust, intimacy, boundaries, connection) have been shaped by your experiences?
(Pause to consider and/or journal about your reflections.)

Beliefs About Your Hope for the Future: Example: “Life will always be so difficult.”
Have recent challenges influenced how you view your future, your goals, or your sense of possibility?
(Pause to consider and/or journal about your reflections.)

Beliefs About Your Spiritual or Religious Views: Example: “Why doesn’t my Higher Power help me more?”
Have your faith, spirituality, or sense of meaning been affected by what you experienced?
(Pause to consider and/or journal about your reflections.)

Beliefs About the Value of Helping Others: Example: “People will hurt you even when you try to help them.”
Have the actions of an abusive person affected your belief in kindness, compassion, or reciprocity?
(Pause to consider and/or journal about your reflections.)

Concluding Thoughts

Exploring these impacts may bring up difficult feelings, and that’s understandable. Sometimes gaining insight means revisiting wounds we’ve been carrying for a long time. As you reflect, please remember:
  • The abuse you experienced is not your fault.
  • These impacts are responses to harm; they are not reflections of your character or your worth.
  • Your beliefs and self-concept can evolve as you heal.
  • You are allowed to grow beyond what someone else tried to make you believe about yourself.

If this reflection stirs up strong feelings, consider processing them with a trusted professional counselor, advocate, or other support person. You deserve support as you navigate these deeper layers of healing. Little by little, with care and intention, you can rebuild confidence, reconnect with your values, and nurture beliefs that reflect your resilience, worth, and hopes for the future. 

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  • Home
  • About the Pathways Model
  • Find Your Pathway
    • Pathway for Survivors >
      • Blog - Pathway for Survivors
      • The Pathway for Survivors Mini-Journal
    • Pathway for Community Supports >
      • Blog - Pathway for Community Supports
  • About Christine Murray
  • Source for Survivors "Free Store"
  • See the Triumph
  • Financial Abuse Recovery Book
  • Other Resources
  • Contact Form
    • Sign Up for Our E-Newsletter