A personal story of blurred boundaries, responsibility, and the difference between taking accountability and carrying shame.
I have always had a hard time differentiating between what is mine to carry and what belongs to others. This likely stems from childhood. My mother’s nervous disposition often felt like something I needed to manage. Where I finished and she began was never clearly defined, and no adult in my world stepped in to draw that line for me.
I was also expected to look after my younger brother from a very early age. “Make sure you take care of him,” was something I heard often. Over time, that sense of responsibility became deeply ingrained, to the point where not fulfilling it felt like it might lead to rejection or abandonment.
As a result, I became adept at protecting myself emotionally. I learned to keep people at a distance, and yet, over time, loneliness would inevitably creep in. When I did let people in, I often found myself taking on more than was mine to hold—absorbing emotions, trying to fix things, and confusing someone else’s guilt with my own sense of shame.
But I digress.
As an adult, I found myself in a relationship dynamic that, in hindsight, echoed familiar patterns. There were differences in emotional needs and expectations, and at times, a sense of imbalance in how responsibility was shared. I often responded in the only way I knew how—by overcompensating, trying to stabilise things, and taking on more than was mine to carry.
Over time, this pattern became difficult to sustain.
Later, when I began to confront my own unmet needs, I struggled to do so with clarity or honesty. Instead of fully owning my feelings, I approached the situation in a way that blurred responsibility. At the time, I told myself I was trying to find a solution, but looking back, I can see that I was not taking full accountability for my part.
There were emotional and relational complexities that I did not handle well. I was seeking connection and intimacy, but I was also avoiding the discomfort of facing things directly. In doing so, I created confusion not only for myself, but within the relationship as well.
What I understand now is this: responsibility and shame are not the same.
Taking responsibility means recognising your part with clarity and ownership.
Shame, on the other hand, is heavier. It absorbs everything—yours and everyone else’s—and turns it into something personal, something to carry alone.
For a long time, I confused the two.
And in that confusion, I made choices that I would approach very differently today.
(Part 2 to continue)



