The Joy of Boundaries

May brings the joy of boundaries, the kind that paves the path of dignity with the scars carried by a head held high.

Boundaries carry a complicated joy. Boundaries are not clean or easy. They begin in discomfort. In the quiet understanding that something has crossed too far into the space where dignity once stood untouched.

A thoughtless moment. A car door swung open. A split lip. Blood flowed freely. Stitches were needed. The wound healed; the scar and memory remain. A small scar, unnoticed unless pointed out.

A child’s appendectomy. No memory of the illness, pain, or fear. The scar remains.

There is something honest about scars.

They do not mean healing failed.
They mean healing was necessary.

Scars and boundaries often speak the same language.

Some arrive after disappointment. Some after exhaustion. Some after too much time spent trying to preserve peace by remaining silent inside moments that slowly diminish us.

Even when a boundary is necessary, even when it protects us from further harm, there are times they still leaves scars.

Not an open wound.
Not destruction.
But evidence.

Evidence of being asked to endure.

Survival is often celebrated as if survival does not leave a residue. But many forms of survival leave marks. Not always visible to others, but visible to us. We carry them in the way we move through conversations, relationships, rooms, memories, and even ourselves.

Still, there is dignity in refusing to become every injury we survive.

There is dignity in choosing restraint when reaction would be easier. There is dignity in preserving self-respect without surrendering humanity. And there is dignity in understanding that healing does not always erase the reminder of what made healing necessary in the first place.

That is the quiet contradiction hidden inside joy.

Not all joy arrives as happiness.
Some joy arrives as clarity.
As recognition.
As permission.
As the understanding that protecting ourselves does not make us cruel, difficult, or hard to love.

It simply means we have finally acknowledged that dignity deserves protection too.

The scars we carry are not reminders that we were broken, but reminders that we chose healing and still held our heads high.

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