If you are overly, inappropriately, involved in someone else’s personal life, you are enmeshed. Often, this happens between parents and children. I have a friend who texts her grown children dozens of times a day, every day. She knows minute details of her kids’ thoughts and activities. They share their feelings with her and she shares with them. One wonders how they have time to do anything other than text.
You may think, “Isn’t that nice that they have close relationships?” And it is nice to have close relationships, but not when her children cannot develop independent, healthy identities on their own. It’s not nice when there are no boundaries. It’s not nice when her children’s emotional well-being is negatively affected.
How Close Is Too Close?
Parent-child relationships are not the only relationships that can suffer from enmeshment. Friendships or romantic relationships can be affected, too. Maybe your partner expects you to spend unfair amounts of time with him. Or demands loyalty above and beyond the call of duty. Maybe your friend resents time you spend with other people. Or perhaps expects a transactional quid pro quo and will only do something for you if you do something for him. If you are entangled in each other’s lives to the point where you lose your independence, then you may be suffering from enmeshment.
Relationships without boundaries are bad for both sides. Children who grow up in enmeshed homes often act out with temper tantrums or other hostile behavior. They also operate under high stress and can be moody and unhappy. They sometimes suffer from eating disorders or depression and anxiety. Parents are often unhappy, too.
How Do You Create Healthy Boundaries?
When you establish clear boundaries and stick to them, you can begin to defeat enmeshment, and that’s good for all parties involved.
Nancy Travers is an Orange County Counseling professional. If you need safe, effective counseling services, please get in touch. You can reach her here: https://www.nancyscounselingcorner.com/comtact
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