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Brooklyn Beckham’s decision to speak publicly was read by many as dramatic. Yet stripped of celebrity context, it mirrors a question many adults wrestle with privately

Boundaries often become non-negotiable when a romantic partnership becomes central to a person’s emotional life. (Image: Getty)
The Beckham family dynamics is more of a situation than a problem, something Indian families are deeply familiar with. So when Brooklyn Beckham went out and shared his side of the story on social media, it caught global attention not just for what he said, but for how he said it. He wasn’t accusing, distancing himself in anger, or fuelling tabloid narratives, what he did was ‘draw a line’.
In speaking out his side of the story as an individual, separate from the weight and legacy of the Beckham name, Brooklyn was making a move that felt radical not because it was cruel, but because it was calm. It was boundary-setting without spectacle. And that, perhaps, is what made it so confronting.
“Creating boundaries with one’s own family is difficult because family is where our earliest emotional wiring is formed, long before we develop language, logic, or a sense of self,” relationship expert Dr. Chandni Tugnait told News18. Sadly, for many Indian families, this moment did not feel foreign. It felt familiar, only rarely spoken aloud.
What Boundary-Setting Means?
In popular culture, boundaries are often framed as something you set with difficult bosses, colleagues, demanding friends, or unhealthy partners. Family is meant to be different. Family, we are told, is unconditional, enduring, forever.
But what happens when closeness begins to feel crowded? When advice feels like control, concern feels like surveillance, and love comes with expectations that quietly erode one’s sense of self? Dr Chandni, Psychotherapist, Life Coach, Business Coach, and founder of Gateway of Healing shares, “For many people, family love is unconsciously equated with endurance, adjustment, and sacrifice, which means the moment you say no, pause, or step back, it can feel like betrayal rather than self-respect. There is also the deep fear of being misunderstood or labelled selfish, cold, or ungrateful, especially in cultures where loyalty to family is placed above individual emotional well-being.”
Brooklyn Beckham’s decision to speak publicly about needing distance from his parents was read by many as dramatic. Yet stripped of celebrity context, it mirrors a question many adults wrestle with privately, how do you honour where you come from without losing who you are?
This tension is not about rebellion. It is about differentiation, the psychological process of becoming a distinct adult while remaining emotionally connected.
The Invisible Boundary Barrier After Marriage
Brooklyn Beckham did not accuse his parents of harm in a sweeping sense, but he did reference a specific behaviour by his mother that many online agreed crossed a line. What stood out was not the allegation itself, but the restraint around it.
From a psychological perspective, this timing is not unusual. Boundaries often become non-negotiable when a romantic partnership becomes central to a person’s emotional life. Marriage or a long-term relationship reorganises loyalty, intimacy and identity. The primary emotional unit shifts from parent-child to partner-partner, and behaviours that were once tolerated can suddenly feel intrusive or destabilising.
Dr Chandni explains, “Family boundaries often begin to shift once romantic partners become central because the emotional centre of one’s life moves from the family of birth to the family you are choosing to build. This transition can often feel unsettling, both internally and externally, because it challenges long-held expectations around priority and emotional availability. Families that are used to being the primary decision-makers may struggle with this change, while the individual can feel torn between loyalty and individual autonomy, and love. It is not uncommon for old patterns of people-pleasing or over-explaining to resurface during this phase.”
In many ways, creating boundaries after marriage is the most uncomfortable kind of boundary because it cannot be easily dismissed as anger or rebellion. “As your romantic relationships evolve, boundaries shift from rejection to protection of your intimacy, shared values, and emotional safety. Healthy boundaries allow partnerships to grow without resentment, while still honouring family ties in a way that feels balanced. Over time, this teaches that maturity in relationships is not about choosing one bond over another, but about knowing where your primary emotional responsibility now lies, and standing by it with calm, grounded clarity,” says Psychotherapist Dr Chandni.
What Happens When You Draw Boundaries With Family?
People often equate drawing a line with withdrawing love. In reality, boundaries often emerge when love exists, but sustainability does not. If boundary-setting is difficult everywhere, it becomes especially traumatic in Indian households, where family identity is often collective rather than individual. In India, closeness is not merely emotional; it is logistical, financial, cultural and deeply moral.
Children grow up internalising obligation as love. Sacrifice is not framed as a choice but as duty. Parents give, and children are expected to absorb that giving as lifelong debt. In this context, saying “I need space” can feel like betrayal, even when the need is legitimate.
Guilt, then, is not incidental, it is conditioned. Dr Chandni emphasis, “This is why guilt can feel so intense and confusing, it is not rooted in the present moment, but in older emotional conditioning in which pleasing others was paramount and tied to your sense of belonging and safety.”
“But beneath this guilt, there is often a sense of disappointment at being unable to assert your own needs and having to set boundaries with your family for your own well-being. There is grief for giving up the family ideal you thought gave you the emotional space, and for the part of you that learned to stay silent to be loved. As boundaries are practised with consistency and without excessive explanation, guilt gradually gives way to clarity, where self-respect feels steadier than approval, and choosing yourself no longer feels like abandonment, but like growth.”
Sheetal Sharma, a Bengaluru based yoga instructor adds, “Indian kids are often taught to prioritise harmony over honesty, silence over discomfort, adjustment over articulation and all these boundaries disrupt the “taught” equation. For me creating boundaries with my mother required naming limits as to what area of my life she cannot interfere or sabotage with guilt or shame, and naming these limits almost felt like I’m naming ingratitude.”
Can Boundaries Exist Without Guilt?
The honest answer is that guilt rarely disappears overnight. It softens with practice, clarity and support. It lessens when boundaries are consistent rather than reactive. It diminishes when people see that relationships can survive limits.
Brooklyn Beckham’s moment resonated not because it offered a blueprint, but because it made something invisible visible. It showed that even in families built on affection, loyalty and public admiration, individuals may still need space to become themselves.
For Indian families navigating generational change, urbanisation and shifting emotional expectations, the question is not whether boundaries are necessary, but whether they can be reframed.
January 21, 2026, 20:05 IST

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