In our second May meeting, we’ll shift from definition to practice: how boundaries are established, maintained, and repaired when they’re tested (by clients, systems, and sometimes our own countertransference). We’ll focus on language you can actually use—consent, transparency, and ongoing check-ins—so boundaries feel less like a wall and more like a steady, compassionate structure.
Bring a moment you’ve been thinking about: a boundary that got blurry, a place you froze, a time you over-explained, a client who pushed, a system that made it hard to do what felt right. This is the work.
Come with one question:
How do cultural, social, or systemic factors shape how boundaries are perceived or experienced?
How do you respond when a boundary is tested, blurred, or broken—by a client, a system, or your own countertransference?

