Boundaries, Love, And Why I Blocked My Ex On Facebook

Toku McCree
7 min readMay 18, 2020

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“Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.”

– Prentis Hemphi

Earlier this year I decided to block my ex on Facebook.

She didn’t do anything wrong, she didn’t start dating someone else (or if she did I don’t know about it), and I’m not mad at her.

I blocked her because I love her, and I love myself as well.

I’m going to my best to explain why I did it, what I learned about myself, and hopefully, you’ll learn something about how to love yourself and others in the process.

BOUNDARIES KEEP BAD THINGS OUT

We’re mostly used to having boundaries with people we don’t care for.

- You tell the woman who won’t shut up about her DND group that you only have five minutes to talk.

- You block the creepy dude who keeps messaging you on Instagram.

- You unfollow the friend you like but can’t stand their political opinions.

But this isn’t the only or best way to practice boundaries, which is a lesson I slowly learned through the process of being with and then separating with my ex.

This lesson on boundaries cropped up about a year into our relationship. We were fighting, we were bugging each other constantly, until a friend suggested we try spending one night a week apart.

It seemed like an odd suggestion and a hard one to pull off while living in a one-bedroom apartment in Queens. But we gave it a shot, and it helped.

One night a week, I gave her a little totem, told her I’d miss her, and went into the other room and slept on the couch.

It was great, I could breathe, I got to watch zombie movies. And it was easy to do when we were getting on each other’s nerves. What was harder was doing it when we were happy and in love. But in some ways, that’s when it was the most important.

You see, before this, I only went to sleep on the couch when we were fighting. Us being separated, us taking space was tied in with us being mad at one another. This ritual changed all of that.

We separated out of love. And so we learned how to have boundaries even when we didn’t really ‘need’ them.

And it was the first lesson I learned about boundaries:

LESSON 1 — “YOU DON’T JUST CREATE BOUNDARIES TO KEEP BAD THINGS AWAY FROM YOU, YOU CAN ALSO CREATE THEM TO KEEP THINGS YOU LOVE CLOSE TO YOU.”

Boundaries allow you to take space to honor yourself so that you can return to love. It’s not about building a fence because you don’t like your neighbors. It’s because sometimes building a fence or taking a night apart creates the space to return, to reengage, to choose to love someone even more.

BOUNDARIES ARE FOR WHEN YOU DON’T TRUST PEOPLE

Eventually, as you know, my ex and I decided to separate.

When we first decided to go our own way, my former partner and I decided to keep things open. We agreed to a 9 month no contact rule, but agreed to share access to google drive and even a hosting service as she had a few sites that neither of us wanted to try to move while breaking up (though they did get moved after). My ex even asked me to write a short manual on stroking hair, which I wrote and sent to her after we broke up.

For all of these reasons and more, I remained friends with her on Facebook.

I still cared about her. I didn’t want her to think I was mad at her or didn’t want her to do well. We had such a lovely mature breakup surely we could remain friends on Facebook after our separation.

But then recently posted a new profile picture. In it, she looked radiant, happy, and joyful. And it hurt. (The funny thing is that the picture was actually taken when we were together, though I didn’t realize that at the time)

Part of me was happy she was happy. I mean, we chose to end our relationship because it hurt both of us. Even through the love and the joy, our relationship had begun to be the heavy weight we were both carrying around. It was time to put it down.

But another part of me was mad. How dare she be happy without me? How dare she be radiant? Maybe I was the one making her miserable? Perhaps if I had left her sooner, she would have been happy this whole time?

It’s not a part of me I’m proud of, but it’s there. The subtle jealousy, the resentment.

I had noticed both of these sides bubble up each time I stumbled across her on social media. Her picture in the mutual friend’s grid, her little icon as a suggested message recipient, the green circle by her face when we were both on messenger at the same time.

Each time it happened, I got a little jolt of energy, a desire to know more about what she was up to, fear that she had already ‘replaced’ me, memories of all the good times. Each time I felt myself get dragged a little bit back into an old way of thinking, an old dynamic.

Normally I’d hold onto the pain, or try to push it away. I thought if I just made it through this pain I would be better and stronger, even though it felt like a hook that pulled at our old relationship.

But for some reason, this time was different.

I paused for a moment and asked myself, why am I doing this? I feel like I keep walking around this thing in my space, like a tiny crocodile is living in the center of my apartment, and I’m constantly trying not to get bit?

I slowed down, took a deep breath, and looked.

I wasn’t really mad she was happy. I still love her in many ways. I want her to be happy. I wasn’t upset that she was radiant. Yes, a part of me misses her radiance her joy. It was one of my favorite things about her, and there’s a space in my life where it used to be.

I was scared. Scared that if I drew a boundary, she would be mad at me, she would pity me for ‘not getting over it,’ or that she would be hurt and take it personally.

I realized I wasn’t trusting her. While our breakup wasn’t perfect, she always did her best to be kind to me, to treat me fairly, to understand what was hard for me.

She sat with me near the end when I was full of grief and loved me.

Why didn’t I trust her? Sure there were moments where I thought she wasn’t fair to me. Sure, I worry about how she’ll paint our relationship when she talks about it, but generally, I experienced her as a kind and loving person.

She cherished me and let me go.

I wanted to cherish her and let her go as well.

I realized that if I trusted her to take care of herself and to feel the love I had as I set my boundaries, there really wasn’t anything to be scared of. I could block her on Facebook, and she would figure out I did it because I loved her and myself. Because I trusted her to be at peace with my choice and what was right with me.

And this is the 2nd lesson I learned about boundaries:

LESSON #2 — YOU DON’T JUST SET BOUNDARIES WHEN YOU DON’T TRUST SOMEONE ELSE. YOU SET BOUNDARIES WHEN YOU CHOOSE TO TRUST SOMEONE FULLY, IMPLICITLY, AND WITH LOVE

When you trust someone, to take care of themselves, to be with your no, to find peace inside themselves, to be complete, to love you, setting boundaries is easy. For most of my life, I didn’t’ set boundaries because I was afraid I’d be rejected and abandoned.

I thought the fewer boundaries, the better. And when I did set boundaries, they often had a flavor of anger, push back, or spite. But this process has slowly taught me that offering a boundary to someone you care about, perhaps even without explanation, is one of the most powerful gestures of trust you can offer.

In truth, I have no idea how my former partner will take me blocking her. It’s at least 6 months before we can connect again. She may have or be thinking all of the things I was scared of. She may not even notice I blocked her at all.

But the choice felt right to me.

I want to get back to where I can be truly happy for her. Where I can see her radiant on Facebook and be so grateful she shared that radiance with me. Where I can see her with someone else and know that she’s created new love in part from the lessons of love we learned from one another.

I know my next partner will have a lot to thank her for.

And I know that blocking her now. Allowing that little jolt to fade, giving myself the space to be alone, to find joy in solitude and singleness, will help me get there.

I trust her. To walk her own path. And to find a way to honor the path we walked together. And I trust myself. To set boundaries and discover what those boundaries are here to teach me.

FINAL THOUGHTS

My wish for you as you read this, is that you find a way to practice with your own sacred boundaries. To offer them as a gift to those you love, even when they don’t totally understand, even when you don’t ‘think you need them.’

The practice of boundaries can be like this, not aggressive or aversive, but loving and kind in so many ways.

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Toku McCree
Toku McCree

Written by Toku McCree

Executive coach and writer. I’ve toured with rock bands, trained as a zen monk, and taught preschool. My hope is that my writing makes you think.