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Setting Boundaries With Your Ex Without Losing Your Peace of Mind

August 14, 20253 min read

From the Podcast to the Page™
This post is inspired by Episode 21 of The Joy! A.A.C.T.™—where real conversations meet real healing.


The Awkward Dance of Staying in Touch

Let’s talk about something almost everyone faces after a breakup or divorce: that awkward, exhausting, sometimes straight-up confusing dance of staying in touch with an ex. Whether it’s because of co-parenting, shared bills, or that “just checking in” text that pops up out of nowhere. Really, dude? Boundaries with an ex are not just a good idea—they’re essential for your sanity.

Why Boundaries Matter

Boundaries aren’t about being mean. They’re not a punishment, and they’re definitely not about keeping a door open “just in case.” Boundaries are about creating a safe, healthy space for you to heal, breathe, and hear yourself again without all the leftover noise from a relationship that’s over. Staying connected to a person, a workplace or a habit—that wasn’t good for you—doesn’t help you move on. It keeps you tangled up in a mess you’re trying to escape. Boundaries let you detox from all that emotional residue. And yes, detox is the right word, because sometimes you need a hard reset to get your life back.

When Life Gets Complicated

Now, I know what you’re thinking: “Boundaries sound great, but my situation is complicated.” Maybe you’ve got kids together. Maybe you still share a mortgage. Maybe your families are intertwined like spaghetti on a fork. That’s real, and that’s why boundaries matter even more. You don’t owe your ex unlimited access to your emotional bandwidth, no matter what anyone says—not your ex, not your friends, not your well-meaning aunt telling you to “just be the bigger person.”

How to Communicate Your Boundaries

Boundaries are not about what other people think. They’re about what you need. Read that again, because it’s worth putting on a sticky note where you can see it every day. Clear communication is your best friend here. You don’t need to yell, you don’t need to explain every detail, and you definitely don’t need to apologize for protecting your peace. A simple, direct statement works wonders:
• “I’m not available for emotional conversations anymore.”
• “Let’s keep our communication focused on co-parenting logistics only.”
• “I’m choosing not to engage in personal check-ins right now.”

Will your ex push back? Probably. Especially if they were used to you having zero boundaries before. Hear this: the world can only respect the boundaries you honor for yourself. If you say you’re not answering calls after 9 p.m. but keep picking up, you’re training people to ignore your limits. Start honoring your own boundaries first, and watch how others start to fall in line.

Healthy, Not Heartless

Setting boundaries doesn’t make you heartless. It makes you healthy. It’s the ultimate self-respect move—a way of saying, “I care about me enough to create space where I can heal.” And yes, it might sting at first. It might make other people uncomfortable. But every time you protect your peace, you’re practicing joy in real time. You can care about your ex and still create space. You can wish them well and still walk away. You can love who you were in that last chapter and still close the book. That’s not mean—that’s mature. This is where turn the page and start living your drama-free next act—the one I call The Joy! A.A.C.T.™.”

Dr. Lisa Summerour, The Professional Woman's Divorce Coach, has worked in classrooms, coached executives in boardrooms, and now guides accomplished women through one of life’s hardest rooms—the one you enter when love ends. Her mission: to help women make room for themselves again—personally and professionally—so they can navigate what’s next with strength and strategy.

Dr. Lisa Summerour

Dr. Lisa Summerour, The Professional Woman's Divorce Coach, has worked in classrooms, coached executives in boardrooms, and now guides accomplished women through one of life’s hardest rooms—the one you enter when love ends. Her mission: to help women make room for themselves again—personally and professionally—so they can navigate what’s next with strength and strategy.

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