Soar with MarySoar with Mary
Empowering the World...One Wonderful Human Being At a Time
  • FAQ
  • Blog
  • Coaching Options
  • Connect
  • Find Your Voice Course
  • Ownit! Powercast
  • Welcome!
  • Living Proof
  • Start Your Journey
Blurred Boundaries: When “Too Much, Too Soon” Feels Familiar but Isn’t Healthy
9 Sep 2025

Blurred Boundaries: When “Too Much, Too Soon” Feels Familiar but Isn’t Healthy

Mary Baker blogpost blurred boundaries, Emotional Boundaries, healthy relationship pace, over-involvement in relationships, protecting your space, relationship awareness, relationship red flags, relationship self-care, Self-Abandonment, too much too soon relationships, trust your gut, unhealthy relationship patterns, vulnerability vs fixing

Sometimes new relationships sweep in like a tidal wave. A new friend or partner seems excited about you, wants to spend all their time together, and quickly starts inserting themselves into your choices—what you do with your time, how you make decisions, even how you feel about things. On the surface, it can feel flattering. Finally, someone who really cares. But if you look closer, that’s not genuine care—it’s blurred boundaries.

Healthy relationships build slowly. They respect your individuality, your timing, and your existing commitments. But when someone rushes in and wants to take up all the space in your life, that’s not intimacy—it’s control disguised as closeness. And if you grew up in an environment where boundaries were ignored or inconsistent, this behavior might even feel familiar, which is why it’s so easy to miss.

Why We Avoid the Warning Signs

We often ignore the discomfort because:

  • It feels flattering. Someone paying that much attention can look like love or loyalty, when really it’s about control.

  • It feels familiar. If you were raised around blurred boundaries—parents who didn’t respect your privacy, family members who expected you to manage their emotions—you may not recognize over-involvement as unhealthy.

  • We fear conflict. It feels easier to go along than to risk saying no and being rejected.

  • We hope it’s different. We focus on their good qualities and push aside the nagging feeling that something is off.

The danger is that over time, this over-involvement erodes your sense of self. You start deferring to their opinions, adjusting your schedule to theirs, and doubting your own decisions. That’s how self-abandonment begins…quietly and gradually.

Why Merger Feels Easier Than Vulnerability

Here’s something we don’t often talk about: many people struggle to connect vulnerably, so instead they try merging or fixing as a shortcut. True vulnerability means showing your real feelings, your fears, your flaws—and trusting that the other person won’t reject you. That’s scary, especially if you grew up without emotional safety.

So instead of opening up, some people try to bond by taking over—by inserting themselves into your choices, “helping” with your problems before you ask, or attaching themselves quickly to your time and energy. On the surface, it looks like closeness, but underneath it’s about avoiding the risk of real intimacy. They don’t have to reveal themselves if they can distract you with fixing, merging, or caretaking.

The problem is, this dynamic doesn’t create true connection. It creates dependency, resentment, and blurred lines about where you end and the other person begins. Vulnerability takes more courage, but it’s the only way to build the kind of trust and emotional honesty that makes a relationship safe and sustainable.

How to Take Care of Yourself

The good news is, you can catch these patterns early and take steps to protect yourself:

  1. Notice the pace. Healthy connections grow with time. If someone pushes too fast, ask yourself why they need to move at that speed.

  2. Check in with your body. Do you feel relaxed and free around them, or tense and pressured? That’s your clue.

  3. Practice small boundaries. Say no to something minor—declining an invitation, choosing how to spend an evening—and watch how they respond. A safe person will respect it. An unsafe one will push back.

  4. Reality-check with safe people. Talk to a trusted friend, coach, or therapist about what’s happening. Outside perspective helps when you’re caught in the pull of “too much, too soon.”

  5. Give yourself permission to step back. You don’t owe anyone instant access to your time, your choices, or your heart.

Final Thought

When boundaries blur, it can feel familiar, but that doesn’t mean it’s healthy. Real care doesn’t rush you or claim ownership over your choices. It gives you space to breathe, to move at your own pace, and to stay true to yourself. The best relationships aren’t the ones that sweep you off your feet—they’re the ones that let you keep both feet on the ground.


 Reflection Questions

  1. Have you ever felt pressured to move faster in a friendship or relationship than felt natural?

  2. What parts of “too much, too soon” feel familiar to you—and where do you think that comes from?

  3. How do you usually try to connect with others—through vulnerability, or through caretaking and fixing?


✨ Affirmations

  • “I am allowed to take things slowly in new relationships.”

  • “I don’t have to give instant access to my choices or time.”

  • “True closeness comes from honesty, not over-involvement.”

Familiar Doesn’t Mean Healthy: When Old Patterns Masquerade as Love When the Questions Start Coming Up in the Work

Related Posts

What You’ve Been Tolerating Is Shaping Your Relationships

blogpost

What You’ve Been Tolerating Is Shaping Your Relationships

Think about this for a moment. Not the big, obvious relationship issues— but the small, everyday moments. The ones you brush off. The things you tell yourself aren’t a big deal. The subtle feelings of discomfort you move past without really stopping. Most people don’t realize this: It’s not just the big things that shape […]

This Didn’t Start Today… Why your reactions in relationships make more sense than you think

blogpost

This Didn’t Start Today… Why your reactions in relationships make more sense than you think

You’ve probably had moments where your reaction surprised you. You got more upset than the situation seemed to call for. You shut down when you wanted to speak up. You felt anxious, rejected, or overwhelmed…and couldn’t fully explain why. And then comes the second layer: frustration with yourself. Why am I like this? Why can’t […]

How Self-Abandonment Happens in Small, Everyday Moments

blogpost

How Self-Abandonment Happens in Small, Everyday Moments

There’s a version of losing yourself that isn’t obvious. It doesn’t look like a breakdown or a major life event.It doesn’t come with a clear moment where everything changes. It happens quietly. In the moments where you don’t say what you really think.Where you ignore what you feel.Where you adjust yourself to keep things smooth, […]

Recent Posts

  • How Your Childhood Still Shows Up in Your RelationshipsHow Your Childhood Still Shows Up in Your Relationships
    April 22, 2026
  • What You’ve Been Tolerating Is Shaping Your RelationshipsWhat You’ve Been Tolerating Is Shaping Your Relationships
    April 15, 2026
  • This Didn’t Start Today… Why your reactions in relationships make more sense than you thinkThis Didn’t Start Today… Why your reactions in relationships make more sense than you think
    April 8, 2026

Latest Tweets

→ Follow me
Soar with Mary
  • FAQ
  • Blog
  • Coaching Options
  • Connect
  • Find Your Voice Course
  • Ownit! Powercast
  • Welcome!
  • Living Proof
  • Start Your Journey
© Soar with Mary 2026
Powered by WordPress • Themify WordPress Themes

About

My passion has been to help others uncover who they truly are, lay claim to their gifts and passions, and ultimately, their purpose. Because, I believe, a sense of purpose is what brings life, gets us out of bed and helps us to make sense of an otherwise stressful and overwhelming world.