Healthy boundaries protect your emotional energy. Test how well you maintain them in your relationships and daily life.
Emotional boundaries are the invisible lines that separate your feelings, needs, and responsibilities from those of others. They are what let you care about people without taking on their emotions as your own, and what let you say no without guilt. Healthy boundaries are not walls that keep people out; they are the clarity that lets you stay connected without losing yourself. When these lines are clear, you can be close to others while remaining a distinct person; when they blur, relationships can become draining and your own needs disappear from view.
Without clear emotional boundaries, the line between your inner world and others' grows porous. You may absorb the moods of those around you, feel responsible for others' feelings, take on problems that are not yours to solve, or let others' needs consistently override your own. This can look like compassion, and it often comes from a caring heart, but it leaves you depleted and resentful, carrying weight that was never yours. Recognising where your boundaries have become porous is the first step toward reclaiming a healthier separation between caring about people and carrying them.
Many people, especially natural caregivers and highly empathic people, resist boundaries because they confuse them with selfishness or coldness. In truth, boundaries make relationships healthier for everyone. They prevent the resentment and burnout that come from chronic over-giving, and they allow you to show up for others from a place of genuine choice rather than depletion. A person with good boundaries can care more sustainably, not less. Reframing boundaries as a form of self-respect that ultimately serves your relationships, rather than a barrier against them, makes them far easier to set.
Setting emotional boundaries is a learnable skill. It begins with noticing the signs that yours are too porous, the resentment, the depletion, the sense of being responsible for everyone, and recognising that these feelings are information. From there you can practise saying no without over-explaining, distinguishing others' emotions from your own responsibility, and starting with small, clear limits. Boundaries often feel uncomfortable at first, especially if you are used to over-giving, but the discomfort fades as the new pattern takes hold and you experience the relief of a more sustainable way of relating.
The aim of emotional boundaries is not distance but a healthier kind of closeness, connected without being merged. With clear boundaries, you can empathise deeply with someone's pain without drowning in it, support a friend without becoming responsible for fixing them, and stay open to others while protecting your own emotional space. This balance is what makes relationships sustainable and mutual rather than depleting. Far from cutting you off from people, good emotional boundaries are what allow you to stay genuinely present to them over the long term, with your own self intact.
Your result reflects how well you protect your emotional space. A higher score suggests healthy emotional boundaries: you stay connected to others while protecting your own emotional space, a balance that supports both intimacy and wellbeing. A lower score suggests your boundaries may be porous, leaving you absorbing others' feelings or neglecting your own needs. A moderate score indicates reasonable boundaries with areas to firm up. Wherever you fall, boundaries are a learnable skill that let you care for others without losing yourself.