We have all been there, you are deep in a fascinating conversation at a party when someone buzzkills the whole vibe with a request that feels a lot more like a demand. It is awkward, it is confusing, and lately, it often involves the misuse of popular psychological terms.
A woman on Reddit found herself in this exact scenario. She was chatting with a guest about the rather niche topic of “sister wives” in Utah. Her friend, feeling left out or uncomfortable, tried to shut down the discussion by claiming it crossed her “boundary.”
The Original Poster’s response was blunt: your boundaries don’t dictate my conversations.
Now, read the full story:




![She Tried To Use 'Therapy Speak' To Shut Down A Party Chat, But It Backfired but there were a couple he would frequently cross paths with because of work. I was intrigued and asked what they were like. He said "massive [jerks] and total creeps."](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1764046781828-3.webp)









The phrase “weaponized therapy speak” comes to mind almost immediately here. It is one of the most frustrating trends in modern communication. We are seeing people take valid psychological concepts, like boundaries, gaslighting, or trauma, and twisting them into tools for control.
The OP’s friend wasn’t trying to protect her emotional space; she was trying to control the room. When she realized she wasn’t the main character of that specific interaction, she pulled the “boundary” card to force the attention back to her comfort level. The OP’s refusal to play along wasn’t cruel; it was a reality check.
You cannot force two other adults to stop talking about a topic just because you find it boring or weird, especially at a party where you are free to walk away.
Boundaries Are Walls You Build For Yourself, Not Others
This is a distinction that seems to get lost a lot lately. A boundary is a rule you set for your own engagement. It is saying, “I will not participate in conversations about X,” and then removing yourself if X comes up. It is not saying, “You are not allowed to talk about X in my presence.”
Psychotherapists have been trying to clear this up for years. As licensed counselor Nedra Glover Tawwab clarifies in her work, boundaries are about what you are willing to tolerate, not about dictating other people’s actions. When you try to use a boundary to silence someone else, that is just controlling behavior dressed up in self-care language.
It’s also worth noting the friend’s reaction after the fact. The accusation that the OP was only doing this to “sleep with” the cousin suggests this wasn’t about the topic of “sister wives” at all. It smells like jealousy. When the “boundary” tactic didn’t work to center her or stop the OP from bonding with the new guy, she lashed out with a personal attack. That pivot reveals that the “discomfort” was likely just insecurity.
Check out how the community responded:
The internet was unanimous: boundaries are for you, not for controlling the room.






Many users pointed out that standard party etiquette is simply to walk away if you don’t like a topic.






A few astute readers picked up on the jealousy angle.




How to Handle Someone Who Misuses “Boundaries”
If you find yourself in the OP’s shoes, where someone is using therapy language to shut you down, it helps to be firm but calm. You don’t need to debate the definition of the word.
Simply reiterate their agency. A phrase like, “I totally understand if this isn’t your thing, feel free to grab a drink and we can catch up in a bit,” works wonders. It validates their feeling (I hear you don’t like this) while upholding your freedom (I am going to keep talking).
If you are the one feeling uncomfortable? The rule is simple: vote with your feet. If a topic bothers you, say “I’m going to go mingle,” and walk away. That is a true boundary. Staying in the circle just to police the chat isn’t protecting your peace; it’s disturbing everyone else’s.
In The End…
The friend in this story tried to pull a power move and got shut down. The consensus is clear: you don’t get to dictate what other people talk about at a party just because you learned a new word on Instagram.
What do you think? Was the OP too harsh in her wording, or was it a necessary reality check for a controlling friend?










