How do I set boundaries with family in India?
Answered by Dr. Nitnem Singh Sodhi · Mental Health Counsellor, Neuropsychologist & Psychotherapist · Updated 2026-06-03
Short answer
A boundary is a decision about your own behaviour, not a demand for someone else's. In Indian families it works best when framed as respect, delivered warmly, repeated calmly, and paired with connection — not withdrawal.
Reframe what a boundary actually is
A boundary is not 'you must stop doing X'. It is 'if X happens, this is what I will do'. This distinction matters in the Indian family context because it removes the confrontation the imported self-help version assumes, and returns agency to you.
How to deliver it
Say it once, warmly, in your own voice, without an apology and without a lecture. 'Ma, I love you, and I'm not going to discuss my weight at dinner.' Then, if the topic returns, do not re-argue. Change the subject, or leave the room briefly, or end the call. Consistency, not volume, is what teaches a system.
Pair the boundary with connection
This is the piece most Western frameworks miss. In collectivist family systems, a boundary without ongoing warmth reads as rejection and escalates. Call the next day about something unrelated. Show up for the festival. The boundary is on one topic; the relationship continues on every other.
Take the next step
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