How Healthy Are Your Boundaries? Take the Boundaries Quiz to Find Out

How Healthy Are Your Boundaries? Take the Boundaries Quiz to Find Out

Sheila Burns - Refreshing Waters


If you feel guilty saying no, or anxious after you finally do, that’s not a moral failure — it’s often a signal.
Many people carry family rules, spiritual beliefs, or survival habits that make clear limits feel risky. This post is a short, practical place to notice those patterns and choose one small change.

boundaries quiz

Quick take

  • Boundaries protect your time, energy, and relationships — and they can be an expression of care, not selfishness.
  • This quiz is a mirror: it helps you notice patterns (physical, emotional, time/energy, relationships) so you can act on one small change.
  • Healing boundary patterns often connects with family histories and deeper beliefs — that’s normal and useful to name.

Why boundaries feel so hard (and why that matters)

In my twenty-plus years of practice I often see the same thread: people inherit rules about pleasing, protecting connection at all costs, or staying “nice” to avoid conflict.
Those patterns can come from family dynamics, past trauma, or spiritual messages that were meant for formation but became burdens.

Boundaries are not walls. They’re clarity-carrying structures that let relationships be honest without burning you out. When we treat boundary work as spiritual and practical — as stewardship of our energy — change becomes less shameful and more sustainable.

Take the short boundaries quiz

The quiz below is designed as a quick reflection across four domains. It’s not a test — it’s a place to notice where you give too much, avoid conflict, or protect yourself well.


What the quiz looks at

  • Physical: comfort with proximity and touch.
  • Emotional: whether you carry others’ feelings as your responsibility.
  • Time & Energy: how often you overcommit or protect focus.
  • Relationships: patterns across family, romance, friends, and work.

Scoring guide (use this to interpret results)

The quiz totals responses by category so you can spot where to start. Look at the lowest category and pick one small, specific behavior to practice this week.

Category What a low score signals
Physical Difficulty asserting personal space or saying no to touch/proximity
Emotional Tendency to take on others’ emotions or over-responsibilize
Time & Energy Chronic over-commitment or poor protection of focus and rest
Relationships Recurring dynamics where roles are unclear or resented
Try this this week

  • Choose one micro-boundary: e.g., reply with “I’ll check my schedule” instead of an instant yes.
  • Protect a 30-minute focus block and treat it like a meeting.
  • When you feel guilt, name it: “I notice I feel guilty — what does that feeling want me to do?”

Signs your boundaries need care

Look for patterns rather than single moments. Common signals include:

  • Automatic “yes” even when you want to decline.
  • Frequent resentment after favors or conversations.
  • Feeling responsible for others’ moods or choices.
  • Avoiding saying what you need to keep peace.

How to begin—tiny, practical moves

1. Name what’s happening

Tracking moments when you feel drained gives you data. Write one line after a difficult interaction: what happened, how you felt, what you wished you’d said.

2. Use short, clear language

“I need” statements work: “I need evenings free this week” or “I can’t take that on right now”. No long explanations required.

3. Treat boundary-setting as practice

Start small. Each time you protect a limit, you strengthen a muscle. Healing is rarely linear; repetition matters more than perfection.

Quick checklist (one-minute self-scan)

  • I can say “no” without a long apology.
  • I protect at least one predictable quiet window daily.
  • I notice when I take on others’ emotions and can name it.
  • I ask for clarification about requests that feel urgent or unclear.

Relationship patterns: where to look first

Boundaries show up differently across contexts. Notice where your score dips — that’s where work will feel most meaningful.

  • Family: Old roles and survival strategies often live here.
  • Romantic: Clarity supports trust and honest repair.
  • Work & Friends: Clear expectations keep roles manageable and respectful.
Optional video: Signs your boundaries need a tune-up

A short companion to help you notice recurring patterns.

Next steps if the quiz stirs something

Awareness is the first step; working with someone can help you trace patterns back to their roots and practice new responses.
If your results landed on recurring family rules, trauma responses, or spiritual questions about care and duty, those are useful places to explore with support.

Walk it through with Sheila Renae Burns, LPC, CAADC

Sheila Renae Burns is the founder of Refreshing Waters Counseling & Consulting in Ann Arbor, MI. With over 20 years of clinical experience she blends trauma-focused work, faith-informed insight, and practical skills training. Sheila offers both in-person and telehealth sessions across Michigan.

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FAQ

What are personal boundaries, and why are they important?

Boundaries are limits that protect your well-being and relationships. Clear limits reduce resentment and help you show up with integrity and care.

How do I know if my boundaries are weak?

Common signs: guilt when you decline, chronic over-commitment, or feeling drained after interactions. The quiz highlights these patterns so you can choose a small change to practice.

How can I start improving emotional boundaries?

Notice your triggers, use brief “I” statements, and set limits on emotional labor. Practice small experiments — like offering a timed listening window — and notice how it lands.

Can faith shape boundary work?

Yes. Some people find boundary-setting aligns with spiritual values of stewardship and love. If spiritual beliefs complicate boundary work, that’s a helpful conversation to have in therapy.

Sheila Renae Burns, LPC, CAADC — Founder, Refreshing Waters Counseling & Consulting.

Specialties: Trauma & PTSD, Anxiety & Depression, Relationships & Boundaries, Substance Abuse, Grief & Loss.

Therapeutic approaches include Christian Therapy, CBT, DBT, EMDR, EFT, Trauma-Focused work, Somatic Processing, and Motivational Interviewing.

Provides telehealth and in-person sessions — serving people in Michigan. Office: 2309 Shelby Ave Ste 105, Ann Arbor, MI 48103.

Top Rated • 4.7/5 on Google (50+ Reviews)

You might meet Reno, Sheila’s friendly French bulldog, around the office sometimes.

author
Sheila Burns

I hold a Masters in Counseling, am a Licensed Professional Counselor, a Certified Advanced Alcohol and Drug Counselor, a Licensed Social Worker, and a Master Addiction Counselor. I have over 20 years of extensive experience with mental health and substance abuse issues such as trauma, anxiety, depression and relationship issues.
I rely particularly on Evidence Based Treatments and Promising Practices, including Cognitive Behavioral Approaches (CBT), Dialectic Behavior Therapy (DBT), Eye Movement Desensitization Reprocessing (EMDR), Motivational Interviewing (MI), Mindfulness, Multi-systemic treatments, Insight Oriented and Solution Focused treatment modalities.
I believe we are resilient beings that have the power to overcome many adversities, leading to a clearer, positive sense of self. I am deeply compassionate, non-judgmental, insightful, versatile, and have a solid sense of humor.

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