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How Consequences Enforce Your Boundaries

Sep 02, 2020

Wouldn’t it be nice if confrontation ended positively every time? Would it be nice if every time you confronted a hurtful person, he or she repented and you could go on? Of course it would. In fact, your Creator would like for that to be true also. Yet, that’s not the case. What then?

If the person doesn’t respond to the initial confrontation, we need to take a stronger stand by giving him or her some consequences. Consequences work at times when talking does not. For example, if your spouse gets argumentative when you bring up an issue, and continues to do so despite your requests otherwise, you can tell your spouse, “I would love to talk about this. But as I have told you, I don’t like the angry attacks. So I will talk to you about the issue only when a counselor is there. I will make an appointment, and if you want to talk to me about it, I will talk there.” Consequences should not be punitive, just something that naturally follows the behavior.

Here are some other examples of natural consequences.

- “ I value talking to people, not being yelled at. I will be in the other room when you stop yelling and want to talk.”

- “I have asked you to limit your drinking. When you drink, I will ride home with someone else.”

- “I do not associate with drugs. As long as you are not dealing with your problem, I won’t be seeing you.”

- “Honesty is one of the most important things in any relationship. What happened the other day was not honest. I cannot go forward until we solve that.”

- “Kindness is an important value to me. What you did was mean, and it hurt. I do not allow myself to be treated like that. When you can see that what you did was wrong, let me know.”

- “I desire feedback, not condemnation. What you gave me is not helpful. They were only put-downs. If you can be constructive in your criticism, I will be glad to listen. Do you understand?” If the person says, “yes,” great; but if the person says, “no,” say, “Then until you can say it nicely, please keep your thoughts to yourself.”

In addition, you might need to bring other people into the conflict, as in intervention. We bring in others who have some leverage in the person’s life in order to turn up the heat and to get the person to see the problem. It’s critical to remember that we cannot control another person’s response to confrontation and the truth. That lies within the other person. All we can do is confront in love and offer consequences. If that person does not respond to the light, and the issue is serious, the blueprint still applies: Stand on your values. Do not go forward to participate in evil. You remain in the light. If the person wants to remain in the darkness, so be it, but you are not to participate. You may need to separate yourself from this person until he or she faces the issue and is willing to change the harmful behavior.

 

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