BPDFamily.com

Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) => Romantic Relationship | Conflicted About Continuing, Divorcing/Custody, Co-parenting => Topic started by: livednlearned on June 19, 2019, 05:04:59 PM



Title: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 19, 2019, 05:04:59 PM
Following from this thread (https://bpdfamily.com/message_board/index.php?topic=336702.msg13054052#msg13054052)

On father's day SD22 was expected to arrive at some point a day before her job interview in our town. This was discussed between H and SD22. It was presented to me as, "SD22 will need some time with me at night because of her anxiety, just a heads up."

S17 is recovering from surgery and that was on my mind. I let the SD22 thing slide. H is supposed to say, "Let me run things by LnL."

Didn't happen. SD22 getting a job is a top priority and what would I say, "No, SD22 can't stay here the night before her job interview." 

Around noon on the day she was expected to arrive, she texted H. "Can I call you?" He said yes. They talked. She asked if it would be ok that her BF comes to stay, that he had the day off. And by the way, he had already left. He would be there before her.

H came to me to repeat the conversation, "I guess SD22 is going to arrive at x o'clock, she asked if it was ok that BF comes to stay. Apparently he has already left."

And then: "It's ok."

With more clarity than I've ever had with one of these interactions, I said, "It's not ok. It's actually inconsiderate and disrespectful. She didn't ask permission, she set it up so you could not say no. Well-played SD22, she just played to win and won."

He responded, "She did want to make sure it was ok, and BF does have a schedule where he doesn't always know when he's going to have time off. I don't know why she didn't just ask a few days ago, and if she didn't know for sure, to say it was a possibility."

I said, "SD22 is more socially challenged than most kids her age. How is she going to have successful long-term relationships if she doesn't understand how to interact respectfully with people? The lessons start here, with us."

H bee lined it out of the room.

I figured his emotions were already in play when he walked in and I added some gas to the flames.

I also feel realistic about changes in our relationship. Change takes time. Things seemed to be ok after we talked, altho I sensed a tiny bit of tension in H which often happens when SD22 is topic of conversation.

Later, I left the house to do other stuff. BF arrived, SD22 arrived. When I got back, H was uncharacteristically angry, barely holding it in. SD22 was trying to print her resume the night before the job interview and my printer wasn't working. I'm more or less the tech person in the house, H wanted me to help SD22 and I said, "Why doesn't SD22 plan to go to UPS tomorrow morning and print it out there. I prefer to be in a trouble shooting mindset with printers. They drive me nuts. This gives SD22 a chance to problem solve and it's more likely she'll learn from this experience."

Not sure this made H angrier per se, altho later in the evening he walked out of the house by himself trying to cool off. He rarely gets angry. He has never walked out.

After we were alone, H kind of kitchen sinked me -- he does that when things boil over. Lots of stress at work for him, which makes it harder to tolerate lesser stresses.

I guess I'm trying to do some forensics on what happened and welcome any insight. My T feels I am overly invested in validation when it comes to SD22, and encourages more detachment, especially for the sake of having a healthy marriage. She believes H is too deep into white knight/hero complex and that I need to create my own path, starting with calling attention to SD22's disregard for me. T also requested I not refer to the BF visiting as a boundary issue and instead refer to SD22's behaviors as rude.



Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: kells76 on June 20, 2019, 09:34:13 AM
I'm more of a "trees" person than a "forest" person so this exchange caught my eye:

Excerpt
"It's not ok. It's actually inconsiderate and disrespectful. She didn't ask permission, she set it up so you could not say no. Well-played SD22, she just played to win and won."

He responded, "She did want to make sure it was ok, and BF does have a schedule where he doesn't always know when he's going to have time off. I don't know why she didn't just ask a few days ago, and if she didn't know for sure, to say it was a possibility."

This reminds me of one of the classic underlying conflicts for SD13 & SD11 -- typically SD11 will do something that SD13 doesn't like, and where SD13 goes with it is "You MEANT to do it" (that is, you intentionally did this thing to get at ME personally). So, then, instead of the conflict/resolution being about "That thing hurt me; please don't do it", it becomes an argument about whether SD11 "meant" to or not. Which, as you can imagine, is an unwinnable argument. In fact, it's kind of argument-proof -- each side convinced that "they know" what the other side "meant" inside their head. And it misses the whole point of "I felt hurt when X happened" opening up the door for "Even though I didn't mean to, I can see that you were hurt, and I'll try not to do it again". Where the argument about whether someone meant it or not is really a bid for recognition of being in pain.

I wonder if that was part of this slice of the encounter -- you and DH having different views on whether SD22 "meant" this setup. Your experience sounds like for you, it came across as "she set it up this way and had agency and control". DH's response sounds like for him (for whatever reason, which might be a rabbit trail), he did not see SD22 as "doing it on purpose". I just wonder if that segment of the back-and-forth was subtly a disagreement about "what SD22 MEANT to do".

I would need to think more about the "forest" but those trees stood out to me. I wonder if there's a way to bypass the tacit "did she mean it as a setup or not" conflict and move to "(whether she meant to or not,) that is 100% not working for me". Though I'm sure you've thought about that before.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: worriedStepmom on June 20, 2019, 10:25:42 AM
Your H reacted a little differently this time - he displayed anger and removed himself from the room to calm down.

Do you know where his anger was directed?  At you, SD, or himself?


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 20, 2019, 02:51:03 PM
you and DH having different views on whether SD22 "meant" this setup.

kells76, I hadn't thought about the nuance of what you're saying and I could see how it might make him upset. I also think he's not used to me being so direct. In the moment, I felt, Wait a sec that's disrespectful to you, H -- it's Father's Day and you were planning to spend the evening helping her deal with interview anxiety. Talk about a one eighty."

Then I felt, Wow -- if I was cooking the same dinner I made the night before and suddenly another person was introduced to the meal without my consent, that would've made me fume.

Your H reacted a little differently this time - he displayed anger and removed himself from the room to calm down.

I am wondering if his anger is about me changing my limits? I'm introducing new parameters, this is simply a sign that things are changing? He was all over the place with what was bothering him so it was hard to tell, worriedStepmom.

At one point he said to SD22 (with some heat), "You can't wait until the night before to print your resume for a job interview, SD22. Tomorrow, be enthusiastic about the job even if it isn't the one you're excited about."

So he sort of kitchen sinked her, too.

H came out to sit with me on the porch and swore, which he never does. "Has there ever been a generation like this before? I mean, f*@k. Our generation has really effed up this generation, they can't do anything for themselves."

I don't know. I'm wondering if this is a version of a nonBPD person's extinction burst. I don't get the impression that H really knows what he was angry about, which makes me think it's anger that the unhealthy dynamics are being confronted and addressed.

Sort of related...What I find interesting is that SD22, who is probably falling apart right now because we're home together and I'm not hanging out with her, was able to walk onto the porch and say, "I just want to say that the reason I didn't print out my resume the night before is because I've been really busy, working really really hard to get a job. I've sent out tons of resumes and I've been going to interviews and taking praxis exams and driving all over the place." I don't know how it ended because I got up to give them space.

What I'd really like to say in those moments is, "Hey SD22, your dad and I are out here relaxing, together. How about ask me if it's ok to go talk to your dad, that you'd like to discuss something in private inside. That way, I can sit out here and enjoy my wine while you two discuss a private matter between the two of you."

That's not an SD22 I've seen before -- With H, she will usually lip tremble and go in for a hug, like she's 3. I don't know if she was able to pull herself together and stand up for herself because her BF was there?

H and I had a follow-up talk where he said I don't like SD22, that I'm nicer to SD25. I responded that I have compassion for all of his kids, and understand the trauma they've been through better than most. And that we are working toward a healthy family structure where we focus on what's best for everyone, not just one person. I said that SD25 is very considerate, she will say, "Is it ok for BF to come sometime this summer?" I appreciated that because S17 was having surgery and didn't want an extra body in the house while my stress levels were elevated. She is thoughtful about food that's in the house, replaces things she broke, always asks permission and says thank you.

My T keeps saying to focus on manners, what is respectful, and to get out of this frame of mind that it's about boundaries, which it is except that detracts from the point of getting SD22 to rise to the occasion and learn some interpersonal effectiveness.

I'm so agitated right now  :( SD22 has knocked on my door twice since I came in here to write this. I can't believe I don't answer these knocks anymore -- it seems so rude! I'm not like this with anyone else in my life.

When I went out to get something to drink, she was right there, wanting to know what if I thought she might not get the job she applied to two days ago. I would love to help her get centered and then I remember no one told me she was coming, no one asked my permission, no one showed that my time matters.

I think H was angry because he wants me to help him carry this load and I cannot do it the way he is comfortable doing it.

Sorry! I'm all over the place. I'm annoyed at myself for finding this stuff so challenging.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: worriedStepmom on June 20, 2019, 03:42:42 PM
Be nice to yourself.  This stuff is hard and I'm not all that good at it either.  (I asked my H last night if he'd thought about signing up for an app to communicate with his ex, so that way I could send her paperwork and stuff she needs to know and he completely froze.  My tone and words were  conversational but he acted like I'd slapped him.)

If I were you, given that we're a few days out, I'd ask him why he was upset on Sunday and see what he has to say.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: Panda39 on June 20, 2019, 04:33:59 PM
Excerpt
I'm so agitated right now  Frustrated/Unfortunate (click to insert in post) SD22 has knocked on my door twice since I came in here to write this. I can't believe I don't answer these knocks anymore -- it seems so rude! I'm not like this with anyone else in my life.

This isn't rude, it's setting and enforcing a boundary.  Enforcing a boundary that will teach her how to respect someone else's space, but yes it's uncomfortable and I'm hearing discomfort with your DH too. 

This doesn't mean you should change what you are doing but, what I hear is your DH kind of being squeezed between the old/his daughter and the new/you.  Again an uncomfortable place to be, maybe even a conflicted place to be.  Conflicted with doing what's easy versus doing what is hard/healthy or wanting two people he loves to both be happy.  I used to get particularly conflicted between what I wanted to do and what I thought I should do, and I would blow a gasket because I couldn't make everyone happy ...it's a lot of pressure.  I see his anger/frustration coming from the different pressures he is getting from you and his daughter.

But like I said this doesn't mean you have to change what you are doing, you are a trailblazer for them, and being the trailblazer isn't an easy job...so it will be uncomfortable.  Learning something new after 22 years of the same dynamic will also be hard...so it will be uncomfortable.

To me it's about getting comfortable with the uncomfortable as you make changes and connecting as a couple often.

Panda39


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 20, 2019, 07:16:42 PM


Wow..now I get some insight into the dynamics at play in the relationships.

You were right to stand up for yourself. 

AFTER the job interview I think you should ask your hubby to talk to her about no more asking after BF has left.  She should expect the answer to be no in the future.  If it was me..I would up the ante more and say if he won't talk to her..you will.  (I'm a bit forward on things like that)






kells76

H and I had a follow-up talk where he said I don't like SD22, that I'm nicer to SD25. I responded that I have compassion for all of his kids, and understand the trauma they've been through better than most. 

OK...ugg..double and triple ugg. 

This kind of thing really drove me bananas, since I hate mind reading.  Perhaps it's not a big deal to you.

I would suggest a response of..."If you are interested in my feelings about (fill in the blank), please ask."

It appears to me the response was a bit "JADEy".   

OK..all that off my chest.

You are standing up for yourself...solid work.  Also be pragmatic about the job interview.  Her getting a job would be wonderful.  So...make sure you find her, encourage her, tell her you believe in her, then go on about your business.

Drinking more wine on the porch could be called for as well..   

Best,

FF




Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 21, 2019, 08:50:18 AM
My tone and words were  conversational but he acted like I'd slapped him.

Do I ever understand. H goes into a defensive crouch when I so much as say SD22's name.

I see his anger/frustration coming from the different pressures he is getting from you and his daughter.

This. And he can't figure out what he wants. We talked about what it would mean if he put himself first and it's been a revelation that he has no answer. He's never done it, he says. So putting himself first means letting him rescue SD22 and be a doormat.

you are a trailblazer for them, and being the trailblazer isn't an easy job...so it will be uncomfortable. 

Thanks Panda39. I really hate the discomfort  so it's a good reminder that the discomfort is connected to change for the better.[/quote]

I would up the ante more and say if he won't talk to her..you will. 

H and I are both assertive in other parts of our lives. We seem to be a bit hobbled when it comes to SD22. I will talk to her and it will probably take time to find the right moment for me. I also have an urge to record the conversation because I know it will be twisted out of shape and SD22 will try to triangulate H.

I'm in this uncomfortable place where my need for change is incremental, driven by love for H and wanting to slow walk this new dynamic, and impatience that the issues seem so trivial and should be easy to solve. 

I realize too that I have a part in this. I am so irritated by small things that resentment has built up and there's enough that I can barely have a one-on-one conversation with SD22 without feeling outsized emotion.

Often I flee the house when it's going to be SD22 and I together, alone. I am trying to stop this. Yesterday I arranged tasks to do around the house so I was always moving.  Standing still seems to make me a sitting duck.

SD22 followed me everywhere I went, talking nonstop about a situation with the job interview that I couldn't follow, it was so self-absorbed I didn't even understand the problem and didn't dare ask. I knew she had already talked to H, her BF, her aunt, and I'm sure others. From what I could gather it was a nothingburger. I just kept saying, "Huh, and Oh? and Hmm. What advice have others given you? Sounds good. I guess so, I don't know enough about how that works." But I'm so irritated with built up resentment I can't get centered and say what I would recommend someone else say 

I would suggest a response of..."If you are interested in my feelings about (fill in the blank), please ask."

That's a good suggestion. In the moment I felt guilty because I don't find SD22 likable. SD25 is someone I would like regardless. Prime breeding ground for a JADE.

My T's suggestion is to focus on functional aspects of SD22's manners (likability) so that she can improve, and in the process, get H on board to work with me on some of these limits -- he knows she has interpersonal problems. Like pointing out what H can do to help SD22 be a better house guest.

I can't shake this feeling that SD22 enjoys when H tells her, "Hey, do something nice for LnL" because it means she got under my skin. I'm really trying to ignore this competitive dynamic and get to the heart of these minor resentments. I keep thinking I have to rise above this stuff and now I'm feeling so irritated I can barely be in the same room with SD22.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 21, 2019, 09:18:06 AM

There are some other threads where parenting is being discussed.  As a Dad to 8...I have some opinions. 

What you guys are attempting to do with SD22, would be more appropriately "taught" when she is a toddler.  One of the things parents that don't help their kids become "likable" or "have manners" sentence their kids to is a lifetime of "mean faces".

You are a prime example of this.  (please don't take that as negative).  I've yet to find anything to pick at you on for your reaction to SD22's "manners" or lack thereof.  You state you know you have to rise about it and are having a hard time doing that...because it is hard...and because you know the problem isn't being solved...it's being enabled

The monster is being fed.

Now...pragmatism is required here.  Don't talk to her right before the interview.  Encourage her and cross your fingers.

But...ugg..here comes the "judgmental" part of me (ESTJ)

Do you want to "treat" the symptom...or do you want to work on the "root"?

Where is the root?  It's ok..it's us.  You can say it here.

Circling around.  SD22 is not likable.  Don't feel guilty for a normal reaction. 

      Free hugs here anytime!

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: worriedStepmom on June 21, 2019, 09:39:25 AM
Do you want to "treat" the symptom...or do you want to work on the "root"?

Where is the root?  It's ok..it's us.  You can say it here.

Circling around.  SD22 is not likable.  Don't feel guilty for a normal reaction. 

This seems to be what your therapist has hit on as well.  If the family focuses on SD22's behaviors that are rude/inconsiderate/etc rather than your reactions to them, it might make it more likely that those behaviors will change, and it might make your husband less defensive.

Are there ways that you and SD22 can connect that don't require you to be her personal sounding board?   The resentment can be overpowering, and sometimes it's necessary to find a way to insert some good feelings in there, too.

Also, would it be appropriate for you or H to talk to SD22's boyfriend about his atrocious manners? It's isn't just SD22 who is dropping the ball here - he is assuming that he will always be welcome at your home without ever asking you, and without even providing notice.  (Unless he is doing that, and SD22 is not passing on the information.)  If expectations need to be reset, they need to be reset with both of them.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: GaGrl on June 21, 2019, 10:35:30 AM
I will go back to something I brought up a whole back. SD22 does not consider herself a "houseguest." To her, she is simply "home for a few days. " So she acts as she would if she were hanging in her own home, with all the dynamics of a relationship with her dad that pre-date LnL. Not before the interview, but at some time soon, she needs to be clear that she is a houseguest and no longer a resident, with expectations that come with being a proper houseguest.

I agree that manners need to be addressed. If not, this will continue in all social situations and relationships that she enters.

How aware and savvy is the BF? Explaining the houseguest expectations to him may help tremendously. It would at least provide one more gate to SD22 in that he would ask -- have you cleared this visit with your dad AND LnL yet?





Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 21, 2019, 10:52:10 AM
  " So she acts as she would if she were hanging in her own home, with all the dynamics of a relationship with her dad that pre-date LnL. 

This is where I was going with "finding the root".

The dynamics she is used to produced...?

Therefore we should keep them the same or make...?  Nuanced changes? or massive changes?

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: ForeverDad on June 21, 2019, 11:41:35 AM
SD22 followed me everywhere I went, talking nonstop about a situation with the job interview that I couldn't follow, it was so self-absorbed I didn't even understand the problem and didn't dare ask. I knew she had already talked to H, her BF, her aunt, and I'm sure others. From what I could gather it was a nothingburger. I just kept saying, "Huh, and Oh? and Hmm. What advice have others given you? Sounds good. I guess so, I don't know enough about how that works." But I'm so irritated with built up resentment I can't get centered and say what I would recommend someone else say 

This is from way out in left field, but maybe, just maybe, there's something here to try...

Back before my separation and divorce, before she was trying to make herself convinced she could allege child abuse to shut out the last outsider in her "Me and my preschooler against the world" mindset, back before... I'm pretty sure when she was on some of her rants and rages that I tried hugging and redirecting her.  Didn't work, of course.  Even by that time she was too far down that rage path and couldn't consistently listen.

But I don't see conflict from SD22.  She sounds more of the waif type.  Could a hug or something equivalent help redirect her into your suggestions for more productive directions?  "SD {hug} I see you're focused on ____ but I can't help you much there, so now is a good time to refocus on things for which I can contribute, how about we ____?"  True, hugs and such may not always work or stop future situations, if it works then this may need to be part of your repertoire (collection) of tools to be kept at hand as needed.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 21, 2019, 12:01:44 PM
and because you know the problem isn't being solved...it's being enabled

The problem is definitely being enabled. I'm trying to figure out my part of the enabling piece. How to have limits in a situation where there are two people, making 3 in the drama triangle. It's like trying to collect marbles when people keep emptying the jar.

Encourage her and cross your fingers.

I'm not centered enough to even encourage her, I hate to say. I have validated her so much in the past that my T thinks it's had a negative effect, sending the message that I am a sucker. SD22 is so good at eliciting the emotions she wants from people, she is likely presenting warped situations to us and we encourage her, support her, give her advice, reassure her. I don't know if it's possible for validation to "feed the monster," that's what it feels like could be happening. We don't know for sure because we only hear bits and pieces.

Do you want to "treat" the symptom...or do you want to work on the "root"?

I want to work on the root and to be candid I am so irritated right now that dealing with the symptoms is bugging me. 

would it be appropriate for you or H to talk to SD22's boyfriend about his atrocious manners?

BF25 has Asperger's so he looks to SD22 for help on social situations. Hold the laughter.

And we have to take some responsibility, too. I started to make a separate meal for BF because he does not eat vegetables (S17 trends this way, too). So the day BF arrived here unexpected, what did H do? He made him a separate meal for dinner.

I will go back to something I brought up a whole back. SD22 does not consider herself a "houseguest."

Sigh. You're so right.

I guess the best way to describe what I'm trying to do is get H to see it this way. He intervenes because he believes that SD22 being a houseguest will make her feel abandoned.

How aware and savvy is the BF? Explaining the houseguest expectations to him may help tremendously. It would at least provide one more gate to SD22 in that he would ask -- have you cleared this visit with your dad AND LnL yet?

That's a good idea. If he is anything like S17, he will welcome the concrete directions because then he doesn't have to second guess.

I don't see conflict from SD22.  She sounds more of the waif type.  Could a hug or something equivalent help redirect her into your suggestions for more productive directions?

I wish I could do this. I was doing this in the beginning. Somewhere along the line I over validated her and in her mind became a sucker. She started to patronize me in my own home. It's hard to describe ... and if I become aloof, she creates a crisis, her lip trembles, she wants a hug. And the hugging, my god. It is constant between H and SD22. If I come home, SD22 will get up cross the room and hug her dad. It's a "he's mine" move.

When she goes in for a hug, I sometimes have to leave the room.

I'm regressing. My son's medical situation is jacking up my stress and I'm having a harder time with this stuff.

This morning SD22 sat outside my office door and lingered. You would think I was being attacked by lions the way my nervous system responded.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 21, 2019, 08:04:20 PM

I wonder if there is overthinking or "overtooling" going on. 

All this talk about too much validation, triangles...etc etc.

Toss all of that out the window.  It's "pep talk time".  A one way pep talk.

Perhaps something like this.

Walk up and ask her a specific question.  (ok..so an almost one way pep talk) 

Something like.."Tell me about the the skillset you will emphasize most in your interviews"

Listen for a minute...two at the tops.  Look at her..a pat on the arm

"SD22..I want you to listen to me.  You're going to do great.  Focus on that skill you just talked about.  listen to the questions and find a way to work that skill into an answer if possible.  You've got this."

Perhaps another pat (not a hug..you are in charge)...exit.  Go do you own thing.

Let her pick up her jaw...or do whatever she needs.

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 22, 2019, 07:06:08 AM
"You got this" is my main phrase with her -- I'm her biggest champion when it comes to recognizing her mature behaviors.

I think this is a step parent thing. I have everything I need to address the manners/limits directly with SD22.

Doing so creates conflict between me and H.

I repeated to H last night, "If it's easier for you, I can tell SD22 that there's a lot going on in July with our travel schedules and SD25 studying for boards. That way she can make plans in advance so she isn't here when you're away and SD25 is slammed."

It's like what worriedStepmom describes -- you would think I slapped him. He said, "I'll share our schedule with her and tell her when I won't be here."

Me: "There are three weeks blocked out in July where she cannot come for a visit. That includes SD25's two weeks before boards."

H: "I think she'll be fine here if she knows SD25 is busy, and I'll tell her she's on her own for dinner when I'm not here that week."

I feel like I have to start saying things directly to SD22. It's going to cause conflict in my marriage.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 22, 2019, 08:29:16 AM
It's going to cause conflict in my marriage.


Hmmmm...and there isn't conflict already? 

I'm not seeing this as being an easy transition for your hubby.  It appears he is moving in the right direction, but at a glacial pace.

I'm also a pragmatist and there is part of me saying..."FF..advise her to hold stead and see if she gets a job after a couple interviews.  Once she has a job, the entire dynamic will change.

If after a few interviews there is not even an offer...it will obviously change as well.

What do you think of that analysis?

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: sweetheart on June 22, 2019, 10:04:33 AM
lnl I have an overwhelmingly strong sense as I read the thread that there is more going on for you, the trigger is very obviously SD22, but the strong negative feelings coming up for you sound extreme for the situation you describe for us.
. For you to be so thrown by all of this, and you do sound really thrown and reeling by the strength of your emotions often indicates a far more complex dynamic. If you had to look elsewhere for a cause, with SD22 as the trigger, where would you look, how far back might the search take you? It might be worth having a look with your T, maybe exploring times when you have felt overwhelmed in similar ways, experiencing similar powerful emotions; even if you come up empty.

GaGrl makes a really insightful observation, in that SD22 is just doing what’s she’s always done, being herself at home. I am in no doubt that she doesn’t really ‘get’ what’s wrong. I don’t mean that her behaviour isn’t tricky, but this is who she is, always has been. The origins of her issues lie with her parents who have and continue to permit her to behave as she does.
Is it possible that your h doesn’t have that much of an issue with his daughter’s behaviour, and really just hears your challenges as you ‘not liking her’, and as unnecessary conflict?
Do you like SD22?

For me there is an absence of open, direct unambiguous communication between you all, the words in the house sound stifled, stilted and confusing. Is there a palpable atmosphere when you are all together?



Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 22, 2019, 02:44:35 PM
if you had to look elsewhere for a cause, with SD22 as the trigger, where would you look, how far back might the search take you?

uBPD brother (violent)
BPD ex husband (alcoholic)
narcissistic father

Therapy is why I'm here with this ... I'm working with a somatic experiencing therapist. She sees a pattern in how I respond to interactions with SD22 that look older.

Isn't that true for a lot of us?

Is it possible that your h doesn’t have that much of an issue with his daughter’s behaviour, and really just hears your challenges as you ‘not liking her’, and as unnecessary conflict?

H has a uBPD ex wife, dBPD sister. SD22 is quiet BPD.

Liking a child who suffers from BPD is not a word choice I would use. 

Do you like SD22?

I have compassion for SD22. I don't like her disorder. I don't like pretending that she is ok.

Excerpt
For me there is an absence of open, direct unambiguous communication between you all, the words in the house sound stifled, stilted and confusing. Is there a palpable atmosphere when you are all together?

What do you mean by palpable atmosphere?


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 22, 2019, 02:53:44 PM
It appears he is moving in the right direction, but at a glacial pace.

Check.

I'm also a pragmatist and there is part of me saying..."FF..advise her to hold stead and see if she gets a job after a couple interviews.  Once she has a job, the entire dynamic will change.

I hope so.

We'll see.

The dynamic that's similar with my FOO is family members are expected to allow a disordered person to be destructive because intense emotions are scary and cannot be tolerated.

She is chronically suicidal. H's denial about this are stunning to me.

Maybe it's a quiet BPD thing. No one is throwing things or name-calling or going in and out of psychosis but the underlying dynamics are the same.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: sweetheart on June 22, 2019, 04:50:33 PM
Our FOO and past relationships are why most of us are here, but it read in your thread as though there was a disconnect for you with SS22 between what you were saying on an intellectual level and what you have been experiencing emotionally. That's why I asked, it wasn't clear that how you felt might also be linked to past traumas.

Changing the dynamic in your blended family needs as you are acutely aware for your h to be invested in changing his pattern of relating with his daughter. would he consider therapy if he's not in it already? would you both consider seeing a T together to look at how this situation is impacting on your relationship?

By 'palpable' I meant a tense atmosphere that everyone is aware of.






Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 22, 2019, 09:16:33 PM


I feel like "Mr Doublespeak"...because on the one hand I'm pushing for more directness...more explicit...

yet I'm also saying continue the "tiptoe thing" (new ff name for it) for a few more days to get through interview(s).  Basically..keep "walking on eggshells"

OK..I feel like I need to back up and clarify a few things.

Does your hubby understand that his actions as a parent (his patterns) have contributed to his daughter being the way she is (part of that "way" is suicidal on some level)

Disclaimer here:  I don't want to dismiss the suicide thing, yet I also don't want to overblow it.  Since in recent history the SI has been "implicit"..vice "explicit".  Lots of assuming about what "having those feelings again" means.

That really sums up something many posters are trying to put into words/express in different ways.

The communication patters are implicit, assumed, understood and most of all deniable.  I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that if asked directly..SD22 would deny her "feelings" comments were SI or were somehow taken out of context.

Anyway..let's get back to clarity.

1.  Does your hubby understand his role in this. 
2.  Have you had a clear conversation with your hubby about how you see his role.  (clear..not suggestive)

When is the interview again?

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 23, 2019, 10:06:45 AM
I'll try to simplify this.

It's similar to what kells76 was discussing in another thread, about how it isn't the content of the conflict so much as the underlying structure of the conflict. The pattern of relating in the family.

Being a step parent is a complicating factor.

It's the piece that I can't quite get my hands around.

I'm posting on this board because of the step parenting dynamic.

The current and past context:

I have created a validating environment for SD22, and H.
I do not try to fix or rescue or save SD22, or H.
I am really good at self care when it comes to SD22.
I am (recently) decent at making my limits (re: SD22) with H clear

Then in T, I'm encouraged to wake the family up about SD22's SI and her troubling behaviors, even though to me they are more *quiet* than what I've experienced directly in FOO and my previous marriage. So my tolerance levels are high ... like a lot of people here, I would assume. T is saying, This is the same underlying family pattern (violent family) where we acknowledge that things are not ok then pretend they are because pretending creates the illusion that we have control.

I've had two therapists, both have expressed alarm with SD22's behaviors and how the family is responding to her. It's a splash of cold water. I'm being encouraged by T to do the splashing. I've started.

It's the opposite of what I want to do.

It is relatively thankless and goes against what I thought was my role as a step parent. I feel like I'm being asked to rescue fix and save.  

I don't know if this is simplifying things or making it more confusing.

The step parenting dynamic has been: Let H and SD22 work things out, I will practice self-care and do my best to apply communication and relationship skills to H as he figures stuff out. I will have limits with SD22 that I express directly with her, gently and consistently. Loads of effort on this last one, to create limits I have control over while validating her experience as I make those changes.

Now it is (with T's encouragement): Wade into the middle and start shining light on things. Be more assertive about SD22's mental health and relationship + communication issues. Be clear about limits with H when it comes to SD22. Be vocal. Be vocal with SD22. Don't allow SD22 to split the family and create communication silos, coach people into open conversation with SD22's emotional safety as the main driver. Keep an eye on her behaviors going underground and look for an escalation in attention-seeking behaviors that may be used clumsily to get the family back into line, a way to control the change.

The SI thing is the key to everything, it can't be dismissed.

My sense of self-preservation says to stay out of this. To abide things, walk on eggshells, get in line with the (blended) family's ways.

My T is saying get in there and get people to pull together. No more letting things slide or SD22 will be in charge of the family and she is in no way shape or form the person to dictate what it means to be a healthy cooperative supportive family.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 23, 2019, 11:48:47 AM
I'll try to simplify this.

We are kindred souls.  When I try to simplify things..lots of words come out as well.  For me...this post actually does help simplify it because I can walk right along beside you taking inventory of things (just like I would do)

Solid work!

Of course I've got come comments/clarification/judgments.

The pattern of relating in the family.

OK...my ESTJ is really riled up to make comments here, yet I believe the wisest thing is to hand you the ball back.  Can you describe in a couple sentences the "pattern of relating" in your family?  Please..no judgment...fly on the wall stuff.  

Then...

A couple of sentences about how you would like the "pattern of relating" to actually be structured.

Warning:   Be watchful that you don't insert solutions.  Stick to the "pattern of relating" here.

Being a step parent is a complicating factor.

Ah...finally "release the Kraken"  FF ESTJ is on the move.

https://youtu.be/38AYeNGjqg0

You are being far to deferential to your H and SD22 about activities that impact your life in your home.  Yes it's his home as well and perhaps SD22 imagines it to be hers.  The definition of "home" may be different for everyone here (and that's ok)

What's NOT OK is that LnL's definition is consistently last and the person who doesn't pay for the home and that persons BF "rule the roost"

NO...

Just NO.

LNL...you need to "find your inner Kraken".  


It's the piece that I can't quite get my hands around.

I'm posting on this board because of the step parenting dynamic.

Before you are a step parent...you are the steward of LnL.  That includes where LnL lives and the environment that helps LnL be the best person she can be.  

Do not "rank" being a good step parent over taking care of LnL.

Priority 1  Take care of LnL
Priority 2  Take care of LnL marriage relationship
Priority 3  Take care of LnL child
Priority 4  Take care of LnL step child

I'm going to claim that if all involved rigorously applied this and inserted their own name for LnL...life would be so much better.

What do you think?



I have created a validating environment for SD22, and H.

There are some things that you likely validated that are perhaps invalid or weren't the best to validate.  

There is major dysfunction and pretending going on.  Most likely less validation and more clarity.  Perhaps validation "and also" clarity, perhaps in the form of SET.  

How much "t" in set is there in your communications?


I do not try to fix or rescue or save SD22, or H.

I've not focused on this part of the story, although I would say that if there really is chronic SI..shouldn't that get "fixed"?  Or at least you should try.

Clarity:  I don't know enough to have an opinion if there really is chronic SI.  At this point I'm accepting that at face value.


I am really good at self care when it comes to SD22.

I agree.  

I might also argue that self care involves being more assertive about your home and needs...ranking taking care of needs.


I am (recently) decent at making my limits (re: SD22) with H clear

Yes...and hubby is reacting..expressing...something.

It's undeniable a pattern is changing here.  

Do you think you are halfway to where you want to be?  1/3 of the way?  almost there? (rank your progress)

Then in T, I'm encouraged to wake the family up about SD22's SI and her troubling behaviors

This is clear and are you trying to wake people up by speaking softly at the door...gently tossing covers back...allowing multiple snoozes...or are you making sure they wake up and pay attention?

I've had two therapists, both have expressed alarm with SD22's behaviors and how the family is responding to her. It's a splash of cold water. I'm being encouraged by T to do the splashing. I've started.

I'm seeing "spritzing"..."sprinkling".  It would seem to me that your Ts want you to climb up on the high dive and do a massive jack knife...making sure the splash sprays everyone who hadn't intended to get wet that day.

Note:  I think you need to directly ask your T(s) how they think you are doing "splashing" and if you need to dial it up...or down.



It's the opposite of what I want to do.

Here is where we tend to be opposites.  My T is usually looking for a leash to put on me (she'd blow the whistle and get me out of your pool because of too much "splashing")

That's ok...I'm generally thoughtful about "dialing back" my responses.

My guess is you are usually thoughtful about "dialing up" your responses.  Am I right?


It is relatively thankless and goes against what I thought was my role as a step parent. I feel like I'm being asked to rescue fix and save.  

Not really...I see them asking you to "pretend".  

What if you were like a big light that you put on a pole outside your house.  You can get those from the electric company..flat fee every month.

They "judge" everyone the same.  You come close to LnL...the light will be there.  No pretending...no shadows.

That's very different than "rescue"


I don't know if this is simplifying things or making it more confusing.

These stories (our stories) aren't simple.  They are NOT succinct.

This post helped "clarify" quite a bit.


  Wade into the middle and start shining light on things.

I like your T!

 
The SI thing is the key to everything, it can't be dismissed.

Agreed and if your T is alarmed...I'm alarmed.  Is "alarm" being communicated regularly to your hubby and SD22?

My sense of self-preservation says to stay out of this. To abide things, walk on eggshells, get in line with the (blended) family's ways.

Sometimes when you go for a massive jacknife off the high dive...you end up with some red skin and you are sore for a bit.

Self preservation and high dives don't really go together.  

What was it your T wanted you to do again?  

https://youtu.be/87bNM8UCSgE

Best video I could find on short notice

My T is saying get in there and get people to pull together. No more letting things slide or SD22 will be in charge of the family and she is in no way shape or form the person to dictate what it means to be a healthy cooperative supportive family.

Look at what I did a strike through on.  Please rewrite that.  No more pretending.

Also...I asked before if you wanted to treat the symptoms..or the root.  I didn't get clarity back.  

No more pretending.  Where is the root?

Awesome thread..lots of clarity.  Keep it up.

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 24, 2019, 08:32:01 AM
Can you describe in a couple sentences the "pattern of relating" in your family?

It's a competitive family structure. This is a term Loebel describes in Having a BPD Daughter. My take on what he's describing: the family caters to the needs of the most neediest, demanding family member. Everyone else competes for scraps. One person benefits at the expense of others.

Versus a cooperative family structure, where the needs of each member of the family are considered, and people cooperate as a unit because the wellness of the family unit is the priority. Everyone is considered.

you need to "find your inner Kraken".

This pretty much sums up my therapy.

Priority 1  Take care of LnL
Priority 2  Take care of LnL marriage relationship
Priority 3  Take care of LnL child
Priority 4  Take care of LnL step child

What is stumping me is how to do this in practice given our family dynamics. Taking care of LnL can be hanging back, letting the family sort themselves out (step parent dynamic).  

There are some things that you likely validated that are perhaps invalid or weren't the best to validate.

Agreed. It's a good point to make.

It wasn't that I validated her too much. I validated the invalid. And yes, too much S and E and not enough T.  

if there really is chronic SI..shouldn't that get "fixed"?

SD22's suicidal ideation is what changed the dynamic -- my dynamic in the family. With a kick in the pants from my T. Her instructions: say it out loud to H and make sure he hears it: "SD22 is chronically suicidal. What are we going to do about it? Here are some things I've thought about..."

We now talk about this openly, including with SD25 who has been the recipient of more open SI from SD22.

I don't know enough to have an opinion if there really is chronic SI.

Her psychiatrist has told H that SD22 is chronically suicidal. SD22's therapist has said she calls the suicide hotline regularly, as is appropriate. SD22 tells SD25 she doesn't want to live, is having those thoughts again, has nothing to live for. She cannot tolerate being alone. One time she tried to open the door of my moving car as I backed out of the driveway. Scared the living daylights out of me. I believe she was suicidal that moment and terrified to be alone.

SD22 is diagnosed bipolar with psychotic depression. She's medicated and the medications don't seem to be touching the emotional instability. Her current psychiatrist wants to reconsider her dx.

Do you think you are halfway to where you want to be?  1/3 of the way?

Far enough in to realize that there is a cost. I speak directly to H about SD22 being rude and I am back in an openly turbulent home environment.

Been there, done that, have all the souvenirs. It's true that the family dynamic contributed to the turmoil, that others are responsible. It also is true that I was the one peeling back the cover. So it does feel like there's a choice -- I can hang back and things are quietly nutty or I step forward and poke the bear.

My guess is you are usually thoughtful about "dialing up" your responses.  Am I right?

I lead from behind, yes. I used to lead ocean kayak trips and I liked to tell people where we were going and how we were going to get there, then hang back and keep on eye on people. To keep people close I would give them a rule of thumb to gauge how far they could go before they were putting themselves and the group at risk.

You come close to LnL...the light will be there.  No pretending...no shadows.

What are the words that shine the light? I'm struggling with two things. One, I don't want to be the leader of H's kids, the step parenting dynamic. I seem to have waded into that role and it looks like I'm reluctantly going forward.

The other thing I'm struggling with is what it means to have a pool of light. Clearly that can throw H into a whirlpool.

Is "alarm" being communicated regularly to your hubby and SD22?

I have taken the approach to communicate directly with H and with SD25. I leave the direct communication with SD22 to H.

I asked before if you wanted to treat the symptoms..or the root.  I didn't get clarity back.

This ties into something H said last night. We talked about SD22. He said, "I have to focus on tactics because I'm not smart enough for strategy when it comes to her."

Big admission from H. By smart, he means skilled -- he's not a T.

I'm not either.

I mentioned some tactical things, and did he feel they aligned with his sense of things. When SD22 is anxious she blows up everyone's phone and spins into a drama of urgent proportions that tire people out and push them away. H and I agreed it is "same page" tactic to say: "Have you had a chance to ask anyone else for advice? I would stick to one person's advice and go with it. See what happens."

Or: "Your dad mentioned a great idea -- he gave you a book to journal when you feel anxious about something. He said, "If it isn't an emergency that requires 911, write it in the book and leave it for 24 hours and see how you feel after giving it a chance to rest."

We did make some headway about another thing. H wants to ask SD22's permission to see her T together under the auspices of H learning better ways to support SD22 as she transitions to adulthood. I think that gives SD22 too much power. I suggested he give SD22 a choice: they can go together, or he will see T on his own. SD22 and T can come up with ground rules so that SD22 understands that this is a session for H, not a session about SD22.

I'm more comfortable leading from behind like that. Spritzing.

The master jack knife in a step parenting dynamic is a big move.

It could empty the pool.  :(


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: worriedStepmom on June 24, 2019, 09:05:19 AM
formflier, you rock.

Priority 1  Take care of LnL
Priority 2  Take care of LnL marriage relationship
Priority 3  Take care of LnL child
Priority 4  Take care of LnL step child

I'm going to claim that if all involved rigorously applied this and inserted their own name for LnL...life would be so much better.

The great stepparent dilemma is always wondering whether the marriage is a higher priority than the spouse's child.  The stepparent juggle is to come close to but not cross the line, so their spouse isn't forced to choose.

This is one of those cases where he's going to have to choose.  And that's scary.



Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 24, 2019, 09:44:56 AM
The stepparent juggle is to come close to but not cross the line, so their spouse isn't forced to choose.

Exactly.

We had that dynamic big time three summers ago when SD22 came to live with us.

With help from a T, things are shifting to something new (cooperative family structure) that none of us have experienced before. H and I have something cooperative, but it falls apart with SD22. A lot of the skills discussed here serve the cooperative family structure.

When emotional, H tends to view my actions through a "pick her or me" frame. And I'm staying focused on building a cooperative family structure. When he returns to baseline, he can see that.

Wading into those deep waters, I've been (somewhat reluctantly)

1. making sure as a family we are doing our best to keep SD22 safe, and
2. building the foundations for a cooperative family structure.

Both are terrifying to H for different reasons. His fears when it comes to SD22 are palpable and also hard for him to express. It takes a lot of trust in a step dynamic to believe a new spouse (me) cares about the step child (SD22) in the same way, especially when I'm asking him to do things that benefit me because that feeds the "choose me over her" narrative.

Always at the back of my mind is a desire to say, "Pick her, that's how I demonstrate you can trust me."

Then back away and take care of myself.

It goes back to what FF was saying about the diff between rescuing and pretending.

H wants to pretend and I don't.

That is not an easy thing to say to a really good guy who is working hard to keep his mentally ill daughter alive and functioning 


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: GaGrl on June 24, 2019, 10:20:51 AM
When DH and I married, we had four adult children. We went through the transition, and I referred to it as "our new family learning to live together as adults." It was difficult. DH and I did agree that, no matter what, our marriage was a priority, and as long as we were OK as a couple, we could handle whatever came up with the children. And it did - - SD38 is eco-friendly and in a relationship with a man who is alcoholic and narcissistic. S36 is Adult ADD and had social anxiety and depression. None of them currently live with us, but they did in the past.

I know I had to let go of what I thought a "healthy" family looked like. Do you think your husband is holding on to his thoughts of achieving a healthy family, when SD22 is no where near stable right now?


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 24, 2019, 11:35:57 AM
Do you think your husband is holding on to his thoughts of achieving a healthy family, when SD22 is no where near stable right now?

It's a good question. I don't know the answer to it.

I don't think he sees that his way of helping SD22 is part of her problem.

I think he sees that I am helping the family, our relationship, and even SD22, to some extent, except that part of him also feels terrified. Everyone is holding their breath about whether SD22 is too emotionally disabled to get and keep a job.

I'm not sure what my role is in shining light on that dynamic.

I think I'm trying to figure out how to toggle between the master jack knife and the spritz of water, what that actually looks like deep in the waters of a blended family with an adult child who has BPD traits and maybe more.

Here's a small example. It's the underlying pattern I'm trying to sort out.

H and I usually head to bed around 9pm when it's just the two of us. We'll watch something on TV before we go to sleep, read, talk, etc. 

When SD22 is here, I notice that H begins this process a little earlier. It's not uncommon for him to start heading to bed around 8pm. I suspect he wants to decompress away from her. SD22 is a fair bit of work and H puts her needs first. Saying he is tired is a polite way to carve out some time for himself.

SD22 will often start texting him as soon as we're in bed. Sometimes she comes to the door and asks if she can come in, or if she can talk to him, even though they spent the day together or went for a walk a half hour earlier. She also does this intense hugging thing with H that can go on a long time.

Every now and then she will manage to keep H occupied with anxieties or fears she has for an hour or so.

I feel for her -- she cannot abide being alone and the one person who says yes to practically every need she is about to go to bed. With me.

So SD22 feels competitive in that moment -- I get to be with H.

For me, I feel the shadowy part of the competition (FOO) and I also want to move toward this cooperative family structure. In that exact moment, I'm not sure what the spritz of water or splash or master jack knife means.

H will sometimes say, "SD22 is worried about xyz, so I had to talk to her and listen for an hour." My hunch is that SD22 found something that hooked H and kept him with her so she wasn't alone. In the past, I would nod, say uh huh then move the focus toward our time together.

My T is saying, "Shine a light on what is happening. No need to make it a long conversation, but help him see what SD22 is doing."

She suggested I say, "SD22 is afraid to be alone. She likes to give you a problem to solve right before bed."

What I've been doing is skipping the nightly walk when SD22 is here and going into the bedroom and winding down for bed. Watching something, reading, hanging out with the dog. It's self-care and I'm reasonable content to handle my stuff with SD22 by carving out this alone time. I can do it this way for a long time.

T's suggestion is (I think) what FF is suggesting, to be a pole of light. If you come close to me, there won't be shadows.

I know I'm going in circles  this is all helping me get things clearer in my head. I'm waffling. I like focusing on the things I have control over and not sticking my head into things I can't control -- I've done the latter and it ended really really badly.

I'm so reluctant right now. I wish the priority list was as clear in practice as it is on the page.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: GaGrl on June 24, 2019, 12:05:07 PM
OK, I see the manipulation. And my first reaction is that there is no one in our household who would even think about knocking on our bedroom door after we've shut it for the night -- my mother of any of our visiting adult children -- unless it were truly an emergency.

That SD22 does this is disruptive of your private time and your marriage. It's really dysfunctional family behavior.

That your husband allows this and participates interferes in her ability to develop tolerance and the ability to self-soothe.

A tactic would be for your husband to say, "DD22, LnL and I are going to bed in a few minutes. Do you need to talk about anything before we close the door? I have about 20 minutes." And then he can practice holding that boundary.  She thinks this is OK because no one shines the light.

A strategy would be to find out from her T which tactics will address the self -soothing. Although the SI may need to be the first strategy to be addressed.

If she doesn't get a job, and her lease is up where she went to school...is there a tentative plan? My bet is that she will expect to move in with you.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 24, 2019, 01:00:12 PM
That SD22 does this is disruptive of your private time and your marriage. It's really dysfunctional family behavior.

Yes. Do you see my dilemma here? I'm trying to find the third way.

1. I control what I can control: me. This involves self-care, setting limits with what I will and won't do with SD22, communicated to H first, then if those limits are not set, I communicate directly with SD22.

2. I spritz/splash support H's way when it's appropriate. When he begins to experience anxiety or stress about SD22's ways, I provide support.

3. I become the pole of light, no shadows near me. This will almost definitely drive some triangulation behaviors if not done tactfully.

That your husband allows this and participates interferes in her ability to develop tolerance and the ability to self-soothe.

Yes! It is making it less likely that she will be able to handle long-term relationships. With family even. Everyone is pushing her away. Her uBPD mom has been mean about it. "Go get your meds figured out."

A tactic would be for your husband to say, "DD22, LnL and I are going to bed in a few minutes. Do you need to talk about anything before we close the door? I have about 20 minutes."

He does that and he caves on the boundary when she tests it. He'll go to bed then she texts him 10 minutes later. I feel aggravated and keep my mouth shut.

The lighted pole approach would be to say, "You did a terrific job preparing her to be alone before bed. She is testing to see if you will keep soothing her so she doesn't have to. Is answering that text helping her develop good skills in other relationships?"

A strategy would be to find out from her T which tactics will address the self -soothing. Although the SI may need to be the first strategy to be addressed.

The T has said we'll probably be stuck in a holding pattern until H can acknowledge that the SI is real, and to get a family-wide safety plan in place. Because all these other boundaries will probably be tested with SI. I think that's why there is more SI with SD25, her sister -- she sets limits and does a better job sticking to them.

I just have to say this. It feels like a thankless position to be in. Maybe in five years we look back and say, Good job. Right now it feels like I'm poking the bear.

If she doesn't get a job, and her lease is up where she went to school...is there a tentative plan? My bet is that she will expect to move in with you.

If she moves into our home without a job, oof.

We have some other moving parts that make it hard to form a plan, potentially relocating, my son getting healthy, change in jobs for both H and me. So things are in flux. SD22 will get a job. It's a question of whether she'll end up in a tough school with lots of behavioral issues and lots of turnover. 


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: GaGrl on June 24, 2019, 02:53:19 PM
I'm hearing some things about your boundaries now...

When your husband gives her the good-night and then caves -- what is preventing you from shining the light?

And, if DD22 texting after you've gone to bed is violating YOUR peace and quiet, what would happen if YOU were the one responding for the next 3-4 violations? That is, the next text would come from you, saying that her dad has gone to bed and the two of you will see her in the morning, and phone is being turned off.

And where is her BF in all this? Sleeping blissfully, or watching a movie? How does he get off the hook?

LnL, it's a conundrum. I feel for you! It would be making me crazy. Just the excessive hugging would get under my skin.





Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 24, 2019, 03:44:38 PM
First, I want to thank you guys for sticking with me on this. It means a lot.

When your husband gives her the good-night and then caves -- what is preventing you from shining the light?

Increased conflict. SD22 issues wedged between me and H in our bedroom. Might be what she wants...

if DD22 texting after you've gone to bed is violating YOUR peace and quiet, what would happen if YOU were the one responding for the next 3-4 violations?

That would probably fall under the master jack knife approach.

I have thought about this when it comes to SD22 coming to stay. Asking her to please run it by me at the same time she asks her dad. But in a nice way   . I've thought about saying, "I like to have advance notice so I can plan my calendar. Next time how about give me a heads up. It's good practice for any kind of visit, that way I'll know to make time on my calendar for you."

Then stand back and wait for H's head to explode.

And where is her BF in all this? Sleeping blissfully, or watching a movie? How does he get off the hook?

BF is a new issue. He is on the spectrum and he's very sweet. He has a lot of anxiety and doesn't know what to do, so he defers to SD22. He's kind and I like him. I don't like him arriving before her and I no longer let him in before SD22 is here. I don't entertain him.

If my backbone was all the way grown in I would tell him directly because if he's like my ASD S17, then he would appreciate the concrete instructions.

I feel for you! It would be making me crazy. Just the excessive hugging would get under my skin.

I never thought people hugging would make me bananas.  


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: worriedStepmom on June 24, 2019, 03:51:40 PM
Increased conflict. SD22 issues wedged between me and H in our bedroom. Might be what she wants...

I would argue there are already SD22 issues wedged between the two of you in the bedroom.  Every single time he leaves the bedroom - and you - to solve her crisis of the moment, it's feeding your resentment.  I'm sure he can sense that, too.

I could have advice on baby step boundaries here or there, but it really does sound like it all comes back to "SD22 is suicidal and H is terrified yet doesn't want to address the problem."  Chicken and egg - the SI come out more and therefore can be addressed directly around people with boundaries (like SD25) but H won't implement boundaries because he doesn't want to acknowledge? confront? the SI.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: GaGrl on June 24, 2019, 06:16:33 PM
I agree -- it always circles back to that fundamental issue.

Again...frustrating.

I do think S22 is manipulative. My fear in talking to her about SI concerns would be that she then uses SI as a manipulation tool, leading to a inability to discern whether it's real or not. So, all SI would have to be taken at a highly serious level with the safety plan kicking in.

(FWIW, LnL, your script for addressing S22 on the visits is spot-on and quite gracious. If H flares at this, he really is in a hyper-sensitive place on this. There are so many considerations to having guests, even outside your availability -- enough food in the house, other supplies needed, make sure clean bed linens and towels are available (after the last visit just five days ago...). Of course, if she's not really a guest, you can tell her to do laundry and make the bed hers elf, and hand her a grocery list.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 25, 2019, 06:33:52 AM

OK...let's accepts that SI is the critical piece here.

When is hubby's appointment with her T? 

When is the last time that SD22 made an SI comment?

Did that comment get accurately relayed back to her T?  Confirm she has a local T and an T where she lives.  Two Ts.

How long has her meds thing been an issue? 

Trying to put this into words..but basically for someone that some involved Ts are saying is chronically suicidal there seems to be a lot of debate and avoidance of direct communication about what to do...and not much doing

Has SD22 made actual suicide attempts that can't be explained as something else?  When?

Ugg...figured I would create a post just for SI details.  Lots of other stuff I'll think about.

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 25, 2019, 08:45:12 AM
I would argue there are already SD22 issues wedged between the two of you in the bedroom.
 
I guess I have this magical thinking where if I am proactive (e.g. speaking directly to SD22 using effective words when she crosses boundaries), I am somehow causing things to flare. Versus passively having things flare (e.g me staying quiet, dealing with my  resentment in a delayed way).

H won't implement boundaries because he doesn't want to acknowledge? confront? the SI.

He knows. You know that space right after knowing something that is emotionally flooding? I experienced it when I began to prepare for my divorce. He's in that space.  Limbo that is denial/not denial. Lots of baby steps.

SI would have to be taken at a highly serious level with the safety plan kicking in.

I'm working on getting us into an 8 week class for supporting a loved one with SI, hopefully everything lines up and H will commit to going. I think he will. I have said that if I am concerned about SD22's well-being when she's alone with me in the house, I will call 911. He wants me to call him first, and I have said that without a better of understanding of what I'm dealing with, I'm calling 911. So the class is an incentive to put something in place that's evaluated by professionals for our specific situation -- H wants to hear professionals say that it's ok for me to call him first.

When is hubby's appointment with her T?

It's theoretical at this point. For reasons that are complicated to explain here, I know SD22 will never agree. I encouraged H to give SD22 a choice: he goes with her to T together, or he'll see T alone -- SD22 can discuss ground rules with her T before hand.
Basically, inserting myself into their business. If H lets SD22 decide, then nothing will happen.

When is the last time that SD22 made an SI comment?

That I know of, May. I happened to be in the car when SD22's T called H about a billing issue and the T said (paraphrased), "I cannot be SD22's crisis responder because of licensing reasons -- I cannot provide crisis response across state lines. I've had to put a boundary in place for her, and I've encouraged her to call the suicide hotline, which she does regularly and appropriately. I have encouraged her to consider a full evaluation and potential change in diagnosis and she shut down."

I know that's crossing a line of confidentiality for SD22 (adult) but since SI is involved people seem to be willing to say things.  

Confirm she has a local T and an T where she lives.  Two Ts
Two Ts and a psychiatrist. One of the T and the psychiatrist are in her college town. The other T is in our state -- SD22 has seen her since she was 16, after the psychotic episode.

How long has her meds thing been an issue?

I'm not really up to speed on that. I don't think H is either.

there seems to be a lot of debate and avoidance of direct communication about what to do...and not much doing

Correct.

Has SD22 made actual suicide attempts that can't be explained as something else?

No attempts that I know of.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 25, 2019, 09:37:34 AM

Thanks for info...so she has never taken actual steps to commit suicide?  Am I reflecting that back correctly.

However, she says lots of suggestive things, calls the hotline.  Has she ever made direct, explicit SI threats to family?


Are you and hubby able to turn off phones for bedroom time? 

When is/was the interview?  When is the next interview? 

Have you and hubby ever done T together?

Has hubby ever done individual T? 

Have you ever done a class together?

I'm wondering how/why baby steps are happening when there is SI involved?  Especially when a T is involved (yours) saying splash water..wake people up. 

So..I don't really get a good vibe about how conversations with you and hubby go.  You clearly state that you will call 911..he doesn't agree...you clarify that you will.   (then what happens)

There is debate about hoping to go to a class..at some vague point in the future with an associated hope that SD22 is still alive to implement tools learned from that class.

Let's assume for a minute that your T and you are correct (and I believe that you are..just so you know)

Wouldn't this make more sense...if there really is a concern about suicide.

You have a conversation with hubby..he disagrees and in the same conversation you invite him to a T session with you so that a clear conversation can be had between all involved parties (minus the daughter...).

I would think that given the seriousness of suicide and your Ts concern..she would be flexible. 

I would think you would be flexible about the schedule given your concern.

And you would assume Dad (you hubby) would be flexible..given this is about his daughters life.

Outcomes

Perhaps your T says something that is critical to her decision making that your husband thinks is factually incorrect...the facts are corrected and your T says.."Oh my ..that changes my judgment...my new judgment is..."  (note..I really doubt this would happen...but..it could)

Most likely your T will explain (without you having to relay or play telephone...)  the suicide concern.

Then your husband can respond to that...you can respond.  A frank conversation can be had.

Perhaps you get closer to the same page..perhaps he better understands your boundary...

There certainly would be far less pretending and "waiting" for...

There is so much in these threads to respond to, so it's hard for me to focus on "the main thing".

I do agree, until professionals judge otherwise, that the main thing is suicide. 

We have a T and livednleanred that believe that.  Apparently a SD25 that believes it as well (am I correct)

So...is it really wise to debate bedroom protocol? 

Wouldn't it be wiser to focus enormous amounts of energy to clarify if the adults can be on the same page or not..quickly.

The plan for a class just doesn't seem to jive with suicide.

Either the suicide isn't that big a deal at which point a class is appropriate or it is a big deal..and we need to hurry to something else.

We have a T saying it's a big deal...

I'm having a hard time wrapping up this post...do you see where my mind is going?

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 25, 2019, 10:17:57 AM
What is my role as a step parent whose adult step child with SI is being enabled by my H?

That's what I'm trying to work out.

SD22 has two Ts and a psychiatrist, a caring grandmother, SD25, her dad, a BF, and to some extent (not much) a uBPD mom.

What is reasonable to expect from me as a step parent when there is SI?

FF, it is helpful that you made the distinction between pretending and rescuing. This post has helped me sort that out.

I get the sense from what people have written here that it's better to:

* be the pole of light (healthy, hard)

versus

* let the family of origin work things out (unhealthy, easier)

I feel a lot of stress about determining on my own how serious the SI is, hence the class. We need professional help. Not just me -- we. Me and H.

Other than that, how do I proceed as the step parent without seriously stressing out my H and by extension, my marriage? Not just stressing him out, but creating a situation where he shuts down (emotional flooding)?

 
she has never taken actual steps to commit suicide?
No.

However, she says lots of suggestive things, calls the hotline.  Has she ever made direct, explicit SI threats to family?
Not to my knowledge. If by direct threats you mean, "I'm going to kill myself."

Are you and hubby able to turn off phones for bedroom time?
Me, yes. Him, no.

When is/was the interview?  When is the next interview?
She was down here for one last Monday. She had a second one in a town 3 hours away on Tuesday. Yesterday she had one. She has another one next Monday.

Have you and hubby ever done T together?
Yes.

Has hubby ever done individual T?

No.

Have you ever done a class together?
Yes. Mindfulness, and mindfulness for parenting.

I'm wondering how/why baby steps are happening when there is SI involved?  Especially when a T is involved (yours) saying splash water..wake people up.

Because I'm uncertain about my role in this. I'm uncertain how to splash water without getting soaked myself. I'm uncertain how to lead this without H's blowback shutting things down further.

You clearly state that you will call 911..he doesn't agree...you clarify that you will.   (then what happens)
I will call 911 if there is no other plan. There is no ambiguity for me. I will call/text him immediately after.

He works at a hospital. He admits patients who come to the ER. I want him to come up with a better plan if going to the ER will not (as he says) have a good outcome for SD22. I want him to be proactive and lead this, and he is for whatever reason, emotional or psychological, not able to do that right now.

You have a conversation with hubby..he disagrees and in the same conversation you invite him to a T session with you so that a clear conversation can be had between all involved parties (minus the daughter...).
That's wading into the family very deep on a super deep issue. That's my question.

Like a lot of step parents here, there is wishful thinking that my partner will take the reins if I just do xyz.

you would assume Dad (you hubby) would be flexible..given this is about his daughters life.
We all know people on these boards, if we aren't those people ourselves, who can stand inside a ring of fire and wonder if anyone else smells smoke. H is like that about SD22. He has BPD in his FOO, a uBPD ex, a uBPD child. Plus a history of being the white knight. So fixing and saving and rescuing without having a healthy plan.

I do agree, until professionals judge otherwise, that the main thing is suicide.

Every professional involved says SD22's SI is red hot, yes. She may not make an attempt right now. She has all the red flags for one eventually.

So...is it really wise to debate bedroom protocol?
 
Meaning?

Wouldn't it be wiser to focus enormous amounts of energy to clarify if the adults can be on the same page or not..quickly.

I've done a C+ job (maybe B) on getting the page in front of H. Sometimes I feel like I'm being asked to pick up his hands and make them do the dialing and typing.  :(

The plan for a class just doesn't seem to jive with suicide.

The class/support group is recommended by my T. It's one piece of it.

Either the suicide isn't that big a deal at which point a class is appropriate or it is a big deal..and we need to hurry to something else

All arrows seem to be pointing to taking over because H has hit the snooze button.

I'm having a hard time wrapping up this post

I am too  

...do you see where my mind is going?

S%*t or get off the pot?


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 25, 2019, 11:43:48 AM
LNL,

You are doing great at this post (a very difficult one I might add).  There is no way to be succinct with such a complex issue.

I'll come back later and try to address each of your responses.


If you ask your husband to turn off his phone for 2 hours so you can be intimate (whatever that entails for you guys)...can that happen.  

Or...

Would he stop (whatever the activity) to deal with a text from daughter in next room who is obviously NOT having an emergency.


Not exactly suggest "sh&t or get off the pot" but that the response should match the level of professional concern (and your personal concern that matches)

Do you see how to outsiders it looks odd that SI is the main issue and to deal with that you are hoping at some point in the future you are your hubby will enroll in a class together.

There is worry about stress on hubby by moving faster.

How would an actual successful suicide affect your husbands stress level?

If you goal is to be kind and give your husband the least amount of stress, what is your likely best course of action?  (I don't see a course of action with no stress..such is life)

Ok...LNL..this is us talking.  We've covered hard questions.  They are likely to get harder.

Given the dysfunction in your husbands family is it likely he would recover from an actual suicide?

Given the dysfunction in your husbands family is it likely he can recover from a "splashing" spouse intent on waking him up to an impending suicide?

Of those two very hard questions, is it more likely than he can recover from one of those scenarios than the other?  

   
 

I'm so sorry to have had to ask those.  Given the gravity of the situation and my encouraging you to have hard conversations...I should "take the same advice".

Have you or has your husband been close to someone that actually committed suicide?  Is there family history on either side?

I'm going to suggest you are overthinking the step parent role.  This is about humanity isn't it?

The step parent discussion would seem appropriate for the hugging thing, the texting thing and all that.

Is it really appropriate given that we are talking about life and death?  I obviously come down on one side of the question (life wins)...it is a legitimate question to give an enormous amount of thought to.


Best,

FF




Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: Panda39 on June 25, 2019, 11:57:57 AM
So you are simultaneously trying to get DH in a healthier place, his D too, as well as create boundaries that protect you, and maintain a happy marriage, and take care of your own son, that's a lot to take on.  Is that yours to take on?  What do you control?  What if they are too entrenched in their past dynamic/behaviors?  Can you maybe tackle this in smaller pieces?  Is there anything you are pushing for that you can let go of...maybe radical acceptance, maybe to pick up again later?

Excerpt
What is my role as a step parent whose adult step child with SI is being enabled by my H?
 

I guess this depends on you, what do you want it to be? You could do or not do a lot of things, you could just let your DH parent his daughter and be a support to him while he supports her and do your own thing. You could provide an alternative opinion/viewpoint/way to do things and let them pick and choose what advice the pick up or not. You could push your DH to work on co-parenting from the same page/united front (based on what you've told us this could be a lengthy process and he has to have a willingness to make changes).  You could just let it all go (radically accept their dynamic) and do what you need to do for yourself like set boundaries that work for you...

I get how hard this is I was in a similar place.  My Partner's daughters hated me, were incredibly mean to me, for that matter at the time they felt that way about their dad too.  I wanted nothing to do with them or they with me...but it was a package deal.  I'll be honest I was close to walking away at that time...too much drama with the kids and the ex.  But I just couldn't throw the baby (my partner) out with the bathwater (the rest of his family).  What we did was take a break from all that, I didn't spend much time visiting with him when his daughters were around we focused on strengthening our relationship and then began slowly re-introducing me into the mix a little at a time. I know your situation is different, more intrusive but I do understand how hard it is to love someone with difficult family members that cause stress in your relationship.

Panda39


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 25, 2019, 12:14:44 PM
ask husband to turn off his phone for 2 hours so you can be intimate (whatever that entails for you guys)...can that happen.
 

That happens if we're intimate because guess who doesn't feel like being intimate when SD22 is blowing up a phone next to her head   We also have a phone truce when it comes to going out for a nice dinner. Other than that, it's a free-for-all, mostly.

Would he stop (whatever the activity) to deal with a text from daughter in next room who is obviously NOT having an emergency.

He's sort of doing this, A for effort. It's hard to convey how many texts are coming...it's excessive. He tries to talk to her during his commute so he can come home and relax. If she's really dysregulated, she will call 4-5 times.

Do you see how to outsiders it looks odd that SI is the main issue and to deal with that you are hoping at some point in the future you are your hubby will enroll in a class together.

Yes. My conflict is whether it's me who leads this or him. I am putting the page in front of him, and he is saying, Ok, Got this. We'll do a class. I'll talk to the T. SD22 will get a job and this will all go away. SD25 can handle her sister.

Then nothing happens other than talk.

How would an actual successful suicide affect your husbands stress level?

I know, right?

SD22's well-being is tied to the whole family. No one goes through this without being impacted for life. We are all stressed by this. We are all stressed by SD22. I have no illusions about the disaster for our family if SD22 doesn't get the right help.

I'm going to suggest you are overthinking the step parent role.

Thanks for being so blunt. That's essentially what I'm trying to figure out.

I think I get it.

The step parent discussion would seem appropriate for the hugging thing, the texting thing and all that.

The honest honest honest truth is that I want H to step up and do his job. She's his kid and he's underwater with her. I have been waving my hands, jumping up and down, playing charades. And I have some pity partying going on. I'm so tired of BPD dynamics. Not the BPD sufferer so much as the family dysfunction around it.

I'm trying to say to H that I'm in his lane because it's about SD22's safety and well-being. The step dynamic makes it seem like I'm singling out SD22. He is protective of her.

He doesn't see that I am too. I can be protective of me, protective of our marriage, protective of her safety, protective of our family -- all at the same time.

Thanks for helping me work through this. I'm feeling reluctant.

I needed a long-winded pep talk  :(


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 25, 2019, 12:29:07 PM
What do you control?

I control a lot less than I can say. I could possibly say more.

Can you maybe tackle this in smaller pieces?  Is there anything you are pushing for that you can let go of...maybe radical acceptance, maybe to pick up again later?

Smaller pieces is sort of how I've been doing things.

The incident that set off this post, saying to H in the heat of the moment, "No, it's not ok that SD22 invited BF to stay and he's already on his way without checking with us first" is the first time I've dropped a boom pow in the heat of the moment. H was in a tailspin for the rest of the night.
 
you could just let your DH parent his daughter and be a support to him while he supports her and do your own thing. You could provide an alternative opinion/viewpoint/way to do things and let them pick and choose what advice the pick up or not. You could push your DH to work on co-parenting from the same page/united front (based on what you've told us this could be a lengthy process and he has to have a willingness to make changes).  You could just let it all go (radically accept their dynamic) and do what you need to do for yourself like set boundaries that work for you...

Check, check and check   I've been doing all that and I could continue doing it, chipping away at things, adapting to SD22 as things come up. H slowly but steadily working together with me.

I do understand how hard it is to love someone with difficult family members that cause stress in your relationship.

This one has taken me to the mat.

I need to sort out what is urgent (SI), what is necessary, and what is desirable. Then look at what I can control, what I can influence, and what I am willing to do.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: GaGrl on June 25, 2019, 12:39:45 PM
A comment on your paraphrase of your H's attitude toward DD22...

DD22 may get a job, but all will not then be fine, nor will "all this" be over.

DD22 will be entering her first adult job. There will be rules and expectations. She will feel inadequate and will be confused over what to do, how to approach things. She will be observed and will be given constructive criticism on how to improve her classroom skills. She will be agitated and is not able to self-soothe.

Your H's phone will continue to blow up.

What will her SI look like then?

He is indulging in magical thinking.



Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 25, 2019, 01:08:51 PM
 
Then nothing happens other than talk.
 

OK...how can you change your talks to they are no longer ineffective?

How can you change the talk to be more clear and create accountability?  (hint...mutual agreement that you will be updated within 24 hours...or other clear deadline)

It appears we are on the same page that we are talking about SD22s life...we are not talking about blowing up phone, hugging and all that.

For clarity I completely support your deference and thinking (even over-thinking...since I can easily overthink..especially new stuff) for all...ALL EXCEPT ...suicide

It's like watching someone break into a house next door and having a debate through the mail (with mail getting lost) about who is appropriate to sound the alarm/call 911.  (hoping the analogy works)

In FF book certain things rise to "humanity" level and you looking at yourself in the mirror later and saying...did I do the right thing.  Especially if you have to do this...heaven forbid...while picking up the pieces of your life after a successful SD22 suicide.

Another poster wisely asked what you control.  You control your actions...your mouth...your fingers that dial digits and type out emails...etc etc.

You are aware that another human is toying with suicide.  You are also aware that a professional that you trust has heard the details...and is suggesting that YOU are not doing enough...not splashing enough water.  (do I have this right?)  That same professional is also saying others aren't doing enough...but she isn't treating them..advising them.    

So...here is the thing.  Most of the time the "point of view" needs to be flipped in BPDish situations.

Right now everyone is "scared" of SD22 and suicide.  

Wouldn't life be better/healthier if everyone was scared of LnL shining a light?  You can't control what they do about suicide..you control you.  A likely outcome is that suicide doesn't get fixed...but everyone is scared for you to find out about it..because you will (take action).

A likely outcome is that some of the people involved will move to a healthier place...

Do you see the "flip"?  I realize you don't want people to be "scared" of you.  

Hushing for a bit.

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 25, 2019, 01:10:27 PM

Hey...important question.

Have you or has hubby's FOO experienced actual suicide?

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 25, 2019, 01:16:51 PM
DD22 may get a job, but all will not then be fine, nor will "all this" be over.

He is indulging in magical thinking.

That seems to be the consensus.

He is like a split screen. There are times when it is emotionally safe enough and he says things that tell me he gets it.

Then he ducks back under the covers.

One surprise in all this: SD25 told H she thought her sister had quiet BPD. He told me.

I said, "I'm impressed that you are embracing the possibility she might have BPD.

Him: "I'm not saying I embrace it. I'm saying I'm open to considering it."

Maybe the thing I need to see here is that little pushes are met with pushback, even though the overall momentum is largely forward.

I wish all this effort guaranteed that next lifetime I get to be born into a healthy family  


 



Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 25, 2019, 01:39:29 PM
how can you change your talks to they are no longer ineffective?

I go all family law court on boundaries

Jk.

But not really.

I can say, "Let's come up with a solution for x and a deadline. If the deadline comes and that solution isn't in place, let's talk about what then. Let's keep this moving forward, we're making good progress. For example: I will have a sit down/text directly with SD22 and help her with these social skills."

Me talking directly to SD22 is an incentive for H to do something.

I guess that's an ultimatum  :(

It appears we are on the same page that we are talking about SD22s life...we are not talking about blowing up phone, hugging and all that.

The SI is in its own category. The other stuff might flow from some of the things we do to handle the SI.

With SI: There is the fear that she will suffer an adult-sized setback (break up, struggles in her job) and make an attempt.
The other fear is she uses SI unskillfully to get emotional needs met.

I suspect she is testing out the latter one. Although my T said these tend to be people who attempt suicide "by accident." Loved ones stop taking SI seriously so the sufferer keeps increasing the severity until something happens by accident.

certain things rise to "humanity" level and you looking at yourself in the mirror later and saying...did I do the right thing.

I really appreciate the clarity you'll all helped me get on this.

ns...your mouth...your fingers that dial digits and type out emails...etc etc.

You are also aware that a professional that you trust has heard the details...and is suggesting that YOU are not doing enough...

Yes.

Wouldn't life be better/healthier if everyone was scared of LnL shining a light?  

A likely outcome is that some of the people involved will move to a healthier place...

I see the flip.

It's the degrees with which I do this.

Right now I am, like you said earlier, spritzing and splashing.

I'm hoping there is something between that and master jack knife.

Have you or has hubby's FOO experienced actual suicide?

No directly in our families.

H works at a hospital.

He sees more humanity (in that sense) than me.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: worriedStepmom on June 25, 2019, 02:18:45 PM
I went master jack knife last night.  It worked, primarily because my husband was tired of dealing with things and relieved I would take over.  I have completely stepped over the stepparent boundary and am now dealing with things that he should be dealing with.  He just can't, and he's accepted that - although he still thinks my plan will fail.  One big difference in our cases is that I am focused on the outward threat (SD's mom) and you have an inside threat (SD's threat to ourself).

Even so, I think you need to go master jack knife.  If your H is this emotionally flooded, then someone needs to step in, and it sounds like you are the only one who can.

My first husband's sister committed suicide.  He and I had to tell his mother and grandmother.  His parents' marriage collapsed, and his mother completely withdrew into herself for several years.  She couldn't even leave the house to go to the store.  It was a nightmare I would not wish on any family.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: GaGrl on June 25, 2019, 03:26:10 PM
The "testing" using SI had occurred to me. She is quite manipulative with the hugging and texting -- that's pretty "in your face" stuff. It could be the SI tests her sister more, even perhaps her therapist -- perhaps because those two don't respond to hugs and texts? It might be an escalated manipulation, or not. But yes -- it has to be treated as real, even if she ends up with a 911 consequence.

So when we first married, I went master jack knife a couple of times without knowing I was even wading into DH's family dysfunctionality. I was presented with some situations where my reaction was an immediate "Not in this house, we don't" kind of thing (imagine tone of voice somewhere between firm and WTF). DH's adult children were so oblivious to how things are done in other ( "normal, non-manipulative) families. His daughter was so depressed and had checked out of child-rearing, and DH was acting as a 55 year old Daddy. I didn't sign up to marry all that. Glad to be an instant Mimi, not glad to raise a 4-year-old while her mom sits on her a**.

But if we were going to live together, you know...house rules.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: Panda39 on June 25, 2019, 04:13:28 PM
The question to me then becomes, if LNL does the master jack-knife does her hubby react the same way as worriedstepmom's DH by just getting out of the way because he's too pooped to play anymore making it a 2 way conversation between LNL and SD or have we jumped on the triangle...LNL the Persecutor, DH the Rescuer, SD the victim and again what is LNL's responsibility here?  Is it her responsibility to do the master jack-knife just because she can? Is this the best approach?  It could be.  I get the absolute frustration of tip-toeing around the elephant in the room.

(https://i.pinimg.com/originals/6e/ef/8f/6eef8f1ce365bcbb0b889d945276cc3f.jpg)

Panda39


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 25, 2019, 04:46:03 PM
if LNL does the master jack-knife does her hubby react the same way as worriedstepmom's DH by just getting out of the way because he's too pooped to play anymore

He's not going to get out of the way -- you're right that a triangle will take shape. SD22 will run to H.

I (hope) I have some things working for me: H knows I can be diplomatic/gracious whatever you want to call it. He knows that SD22 distorts things. And I have said no more triangulating.

what is LNL's responsibility here?  Is it her responsibility to do the master jack-knife just because she can? Is this the best approach?  It could be.  I get the absolute frustration of tip-toeing around the elephant in the room.

I think I have to define goals and set deadlines for action. And then follow the decision tree from there. Otherwise our blended family is going to stay stuck in this whirlpool.

I don't know if it's driven responsibility or humanity or fatigue or all three.

I have to get better at responding in the moment, like what happened with the houseguest moment.

I have to get more comfortable expressing my values through the specific situations that come up.


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 25, 2019, 05:21:49 PM
The "testing" using SI had occurred to me. She is quite manipulative with the hugging and texting -- that's pretty "in your face" stuff. It could be the SI tests her sister more, even perhaps her therapist -- perhaps because those two don't respond to hugs and texts?

This is the most likely thing if you were going to push me to make a "best guess".  She seems so clutzy with her manipulation that I would expect her first actual attempt at suicide (going by prior report of no actual try)...to be just as clutzy. 

That is what scares me the most here  If I detected a very smooth operator here..someone that thinks through manipulation...I would be "more comfortable" (I know..weird to say about suicide)... that she could "toy around" with it without actually being successful. 

I see someone that would "intend" to manipulate/scare and not give a second thought to how many pills...or how hard to slash...or...  and then they actually commit suicide when they just wanted attention.

Again...all of that was my best guess.

More important that my or anyone else posting analysis on these boards is that there is a respected T that is consistently pushing for more "splashing" and is raising alarm bells.

And LnL is very concerned as well (apparently before T pushed hard as well).

Many posters are appropriately raising the question of what is the role..is (x) appropriate and I want to suggest that the questions are important to ask and answer with clarity.

For me:  I would be "on the other side" of the fence for just about any other issue.  "Other side of the fence" being LnL respects boundaries...let's hubby figure this out badly..etc etc.  (that works for texting, hugging and all these other issues)

I just don't think it works (or is appropriate tactic) for suicide.  No do overs.

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 25, 2019, 05:25:19 PM
  Is it her responsibility to do the master jack-knife just because she can? Is this the best approach?  It could be.  I get the absolute frustration of tip-toeing around the elephant in the room.

It appears to me it's her responsibility to do it because her T, who we'll have to trust has a better handle on the actual danger, is pushing for a "bigger splash".

All of these questions could be good to clarify with her T, although I get the sense T has been pushing this for a bit.  (LnL...am I correct here?)

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: formflier on June 25, 2019, 05:56:09 PM
My first husband's sister committed suicide.  He and I had to tell his mother and grandmother.  His parents' marriage collapsed, and his mother completely withdrew into herself for several years.  She couldn't even leave the house to go to the store.  It was a nightmare I would not wish on any family.

WorriedStepmom,

I'm so sorry you had to experience that.  Revealing a death of a loved one is an experience...a turning point.  I remember the faces and the tones and wouldn't want anyone to ever experience that.

The Navy has a policy that you will find out about the death of your loved one in person (not a phone call...or letter).  So...a knock on the door and an unexpected Naval Officer in full dress uniform isn't good news (doesn't necessarily mean the Sailor is dead).  (if there is a chance to rush family to bedside for last words..we'll do it via phone (sometimes) because of timeline issues.)

Anyway...the point is I've notified families of death under "normal" circumstances and it's hard.  (not minimizing the pain at all here)

I've also notified families of death by suicide.  The experiences are completely different.  From my observation, there is the pain of loss and also pain of betrayal.  (the "how could "he/she" do that question).  It's really hard to describe..but the pain is "exponentially worse" from my observation/experience that "normal" death.

https://www.public.navy.mil/bupers-npc/support/casualty/caco/Pages/default.aspx

The CACO process can take up to a year, even longer if there are investigations and reports.  So I was able to follow how these families "coped".  Again...death is hard.  The handful of suicide cases I have been involved in ALL seemed to have massively more impact.

I've also had the experience of stepping in and sending Sailors to medhold.  Basically if they make some sort of SI comment I send them to medical and professionals sort it out.  That's not a fun task...but 100% of those Sailors survived the experience.  Again..a bigger handful...5-10 is the number I'm remembering.

Last...a guy I consider a friend, colleague and much better pilot that I am successfully committed suicide on a deployment to the middle east.  I flew with him for almost 10 years..literally hundreds of hours together in an airplane...lived with him on deployment and I would never..ever have believed he would do such a thing.

The system failed him...he indicated having trouble coping and was sent to his room to chill out..alone.  They found him when he didn't check in on time the next day.  He was not deployed with the squadron.  

All of his squadron mates (me included) spent years questioning whether one more conversation...or probing question...or...(fill in the blank) could have helped.  He had a large family (almost as big as mine).  Massive impact.

Ugg

Obviously an emotional experience for me...and I'm also a guy that "thinks" first.  So..when my personal experience is 100% survival rate when SI is "properly addressed" and when it was not properly addressed with my squadron mate..and he is now dead.

Well...that speaks volumes to me and informs my "stance" that I take in pushing posters to "take action" and let the system work.

LnL..I realize ours is an "online relationship".  I feel like I know you and I'm certainly indebted to you because I organized my "book of doom" along the lines of how you organized for your divorce case (binders, tabs and all that).  Thankfully I only had to show that book to mental health professionals and never had to go to court with it.  Who knows how those meetings would have gone had I not had your example to follow..and actually followed it.  I'm very glad I followed your advice/example.

My long winded way of saying I care for/about you and wish the best for you and your family.  We are a family of sorts online here.

So...thank you and I wouldn't/couldn't live with myself if I didn't push you hard to follow your Ts advice...and do some serious splashing about suicide.

1.  Be thankful you haven't experienced it.
2.  Realize that YOU have a large amount of control on making sure that YOU never do experience the effects of suicide.
3.  Realize time is not your friend here.  
4.  Realize your hubby isn't likely to get this done, even with some serious pushes/splashes from you.

Best,

FF


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: livednlearned on June 26, 2019, 03:23:18 PM
I think the board fairies will be splitting this post soon so I'm going to respond in this thread... (https://bpdfamily.com/message_board/index.php?topic=337587.msg13060714#msg13060714)

You've all helped me figure out where to focus and I'm grateful for that.  


Title: Re: SD22 and boundaries
Post by: Scarlet Phoenix on June 26, 2019, 03:52:35 PM
*mod*

And the thread is locked. The discussion continues in the thread linked in the post above.