Title: That moment when... Post by: Recycle on May 28, 2020, 10:57:17 PM ...you are in the middle of a worldwide pandemic, and your city is being burned and looted to protest the death of George Floyd...
...and your uBPD Mom calls to ask if you “really want to cut her grass” because you didn’t seem too interested in doing it the last time. Said no one ever? Title: Re: That moment when... Post by: GaGrl on May 28, 2020, 11:26:13 PM "Mom, I'm sure you want to get your grass cut soon. I can help you arrange to do that as soon as the city situation is resolved safely. We all are concerned and hurting right now about being in the national spotlight about such a painful death and it's aftermath."
How much of this can your mother absorb? That might give you a barometer of the severity of her disorder. Title: Re: That moment when... Post by: Turkish on May 28, 2020, 11:58:30 PM Nice SET response!
Title: Re: That moment when... Post by: Amethyste on May 30, 2020, 06:42:27 PM Lol I know it's not funny. But the way you put it lol. I don't know though. Sometimes their minds are only present to their issues and they forget everything else.
Title: Re: That moment when... Post by: Methuen on May 31, 2020, 03:30:54 PM Excerpt ...and your uBPD Mom calls to ask if you “really want to cut her grass” because you didn’t seem too interested in doing it the last time. Ah yes. Self-absorbed, while applying guilt and obligation with an underlying tone of predictable negativity. I once told my uBPD mom (a long time ago) she could attract more flies with honey than vinegar. That didn't go over well. Your quote made me think of "my moment when...". Yep. Can relate. lol Title: Re: That moment when... Post by: Turkish on May 31, 2020, 09:05:12 PM Excerpt Self-absorbed, while applying guilt and obligation with an underlying tone of predictable negativity The Waif needs rescue from his or her underlying sense of lack of self-worth. Title: Re: That moment when... Post by: Methuen on May 31, 2020, 10:46:22 PM Excerpt Self-absorbed, while applying guilt and obligation with an underlying tone of predictable negativity The Waif needs rescue from his or her underlying sense of lack of self-worth. I still remember Turkish, your reply to my very first post on this site. It was the beginning of my recovery journey (still in progress). To quote Imatter (on another thread), "I have learned some things". For Recycle: you've got this. Title: Re: That moment when... Post by: Schmem_25 on June 01, 2020, 04:44:41 PM When reflecting and mourning over George Floyd's death, I in turn wonder what my uBPDm might say about it. I don't talk with her often, though I internally practice conversations about race often in my head for the next time I do speak with her past surface conversations. (Myself, my mom and family are white to preface) Conversations I have had with her have gone like this: she will say a racist comment about Chinese people, laugh as if it were a funny joke, and then clap back quickly with, "Oh come on, you don't think I'm racist."
As if I had the gall to label her as anything other than a perfect angel. Title: Re: That moment when... Post by: Schmem_25 on June 01, 2020, 04:46:22 PM I also think this is a symptom of being white and choosing not to educate yourself about race. :(
But BPD does seem to add a complicated layer. Title: Re: That moment when... Post by: SarahUK on June 04, 2020, 08:20:55 AM Thank you for sharing :heart:
I wanted to comment to say I completely relate to this sort of experience - when I have a hundred and one things on my mind already, from the climate crisis to paying rent, and my uBPD mother says something so exceptionally self-involved I'm winded (though I really shouldn't be surprised by now). At the same time, she will sometimes obsessively watch news coverage and imply I'm being insular and shallow if I try to set a boundary on her regurgitating it all to me when the impulse occurs to her. I don't have great strategies yet, apart from sometimes managing to say absolutely nothing, not even 'Mmm', and letting the silence invite her to take a step back and take perspective! It sometimes works... ;-) I could *use* some great strategies, though, because I'm currently living with my mother. (But also searching for budget accommodation daily.) |