Recently life has been hard. I have suffered some pretty heinous betrayals from some people that I had poor boundaries with who were people I though I could trust. It is so hard for me to stop reenacting my trauma with people who are similar to my disordered family members. Please share your stories and give me some feedback on this.
I am sorry to hear this Zachira. I think it can be tricky "knowing who to trust". If we trust the wrong person, and share more of ourselves and/or our vulnerabilities with that person, there is a potential that they can betray us. They may or may not understand they have betrayed us. I think my way of navigating this is sadly to trust very few people. I trust my H. I have one close friend (of 30+ years) I trust. I have 1 cousin I trust (lives 800 miles away). And I could trust my dad (deceased 21 years ago). These people I can count on to have my interests at heart. They know me well enough to understand me, not judge me, and still like me despite my flaws. Beyond that, I don't really count on anyone, and learned early in life that people can't be trusted for all kinds of reasons. People who are acquaintences I will chat and visit with about all kinds of topics, but I will rarely share anything private, such as info that has any potential of making me vulnerable at any time now or in the future. Even my 1 close friend calls me a "private" person. I have other friends, and we have great conversations, but it is less personal - I chose to keep my vulnerabilities and private life private.
I think growing up with my uBPD mom played a huge role in my trust issues. I also think that being bullied through grade school played a role. I recognized in mid adulthood that I had trust issues. What I didn't recognize until more recently was where they could have come from. Nobody would recognize from knowing me that I have trust issues unless I told them. Let's just say that when it comes to personal conversations, I'm very good at being a reflective listener, and making it about them. I rarely reveal personal info about myself, and keep it general. A number of years ago I noticed that people I hardly knew were opening up to me about stuff I didn't really need to hear (eg. in the grocery store). I learned in my university days that a great way to make friends was to get people talking about themselves, which most people seem to like to do. LOL I could pick and choose what to share about myself, but privacy was a learned self-preservation skill for me. The less I opened up about myself, the more I could trust people to not disappoint or betray me.
Since you are writing about a difficult neighbour, I can say I have encountered my share of triggering people in my life. Some people here may remember that I came out of retirement and returned to work to find a "safe" boundary from my mom's demands. (She demanded my attention for her emotional caretaking and to do tasks daily for hours at a time, and if I couldn't do it as soon as she wanted, or when she wanted, or the way she wanted, I didn't love her). So I went back to work, which was a "boundary" that made me unavailable to my mother. That of course brought on a rage about what a selfish daughter I was. One of my jobs that I went back to was a career job that I loved, but it was only 1 day a week, and I am retiring from that this July. The other job was in a different sector that allowed me to use my skills and experience in a new way with a new audience. I really enjoy this job and the clients I work with, but not so much the people I work with. I have a small number of colleagues. One of them (colleague #1) is dBPD and is open about seeing a psychiatrist once a week. I give her credit. I wish my mom had been able to do that. Still, when this colleague has an emotional dysregulation in the office, it is distressing for me, whereas someone else might be able to brush it off easier. My boss (colleague #2) also has emotional dysregulations. That is the harder one and when she goes off the rails, everyone in the office feels it. Even if it's not BPD, it feels too familiar with having had a mom with BPD. Ironically, I went back to work (to a job I like) to escape my mom, but found myself in an office with people who have similar issues. And when I started the job, there was another colleague (colleague #3) who made me her scapegoat and what I underwent is called "harrassment" in the workplace. She slandered, and lied, and blamed, and accused, and called me names. I was strong enough to know who I was, and just determined to do my job well and trust that eventually others would get to know me for who I am, and not this woman's lies. Eventually she left the workplace, but my boss (colleage #2 also with emotional dysregulations) didn't have the skills to navigate the situation, and much of the time, wasn't even present. I finally lost my cool during my first performance review (when my boss accused me of some slander that colleague #3 had spread). I am well known in my community with a solid reputation and wasted no words mincing what I thought about what she was saying and why. After that she dropped it and seemed to respect me more. I let the results of my work show who I really am. I agree with another responder here who said that sometimes with some people we just need to be assertive. I would add blunt. It's the only thing some people seem to understand.
While it's not at all the same with your neighbor, there are some similarities. The way it seems to me, we have unfortunately learned to recognize some dysfunctional people because of our early childhood experiences. Now, later, as we have grown, and reflected, and learned new skills for coping with difficult people, it sometimes seems like they are all around us because we are so easily triggered by them based on our early life experiences. It was pretty unlucky for me to land in a workplace with so many difficult people when I went back to work to set a boundary to give me space from my mom. You end up with a difficult neighbour living right beside you. In fact I think there are difficult people everywhere for everyone. They are in churches, on boards, in workplaces, CEO's, political leaders, neighbors, and in families. Everyone seems to know one. They just seem to be a fact of life.
People can be complicated.
It's almost unbelievable that your neighbour hired a contractor and "changed your door" because she didn't like it. Does she own or manage the place? Did she have a right to do this? Should she have given you notice? It sounds nutty. How can someone do this? I would be calling the police. I think you actually showed incredible restraint. I wouldn't beat yourself up about blowing up at her. Goodness. She obviously has issues. I would hand her issues back to her by reminding her where her own door is and suggesting she could change that one instead. Humour maybe?
My mom used to make fun of me every Christmas for biting into a glass Christmas tree decoration as a baby. She would do this in front of family or company. She loved telling the story and treated me as if I was so stupid I would bite into a glass ornament. I have no idea what she "got out of telling it" every year. I was in my 50's before I finally replied by asking her in front of guests, why she hung a glass ornament on the bottom of a tree where a crawling baby (who puts everything in their mouth) can reach it. She never once told the story again. I didn't try to humiliate her. I just asked the question out of curiousity in a calm voice. After 40 years of being the dutiful daughter and listening to her tell that story, it ended with that simple question.
Sometimes, we just have to find a way to bat the ball, or birdie, or issue, back at them, and let them sit with it.
Not sure if that could work with this neighbor?
Or adjust your schedule or routine so you don't run into her as much? I did that once 10 years ago in a different workplace with a different boss. She was just "too much" for me at the time, so I changed up where I parked and how and when I entered the workplace so I could avoid her.
Maybe none of these will work in your situation Zachira. The truth is, I just feel bad for you having this person live so close to you, so I might be being too "solutions based". These difficult people can be a "lot". Don't let her rent too much space in your head. She and her problems should stay on the inside of her own head, and on her own side of her own door.