Ever caught yourself thinking, “I used to be so good at setting boundaries—what happened?”
You’re not alone.
The truth is: boundary-setting isn’t a one-time skill. It evolves with you.
Whether you’ve transitioned from corporate to entrepreneurship, started a family, taken on caregiving responsibilities, or entered a new season of life, your circumstances have shifted—and your inner playbook may need an update.
New Level, New Devil
Sometimes when we grow—personally or professionally—our old patterns sneak back in. Not because we’re “bad” at boundaries. But because growth stretches us, and the systems we once relied on may no longer serve the version of ourselves we’re becoming.
I’ve seen this time and again with clients—and I’ve lived it, too.
I had clear boundaries when I worked in corporate. But when I started my own business? Suddenly, I found myself working late, over-giving, and saying “yes” more often than I meant to. And it wasn’t just the actions that changed—old thoughts I thought I had outgrown came rushing back, too:
“I need to prove myself.”
“I don’t want to let anyone down.”
“I’ll just push through this one more time…”
Sound familiar?
These thoughts aren’t signs that you don’t know how to set boundaries.
They’re signs that you’re being invited to deepen your practice.
Take this as your sign:
You’re not starting over—you’re simply learning how to honor the boundary at this new level. And that’s what growth looks like.
You Didn’t Fail. You Evolved.
Boundary breakdowns are often signs of evolution—not failure. Instead of judgment, try asking:
- What’s shifted in my life or energy recently?
- Where am I honoring my needs—and where am I overriding them?
- What do I need now that I didn’t before?
Resetting Boundaries with Grace
Here are three soulful steps to help you reset with compassion:
- Notice the leak.
Are you exhausted? Resentful? Rushing through everything? These are cues that a boundary needs strengthening. - Name your needs.
What support, space, or structure would serve you better right now? - Normalize the shift.
Remind yourself: just because something used to work, doesn’t mean it always will. And that’s okay. You’re growing.
Want a quick reminder of this truth?
Watch this 10-second reel —it captures it all.

