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I haven't been here for a while. I think a part of the reason for that was emotional exhaustion, lack of energy, and another part was that uBPD mom (89yrs) finally got into assisted living (after 6 years of waiting for her to agree/consent, and then work her way through a waiting list). The relief after helping her move to AL gave me space to do a few other things (I used to be on here hours a day sometimes trying to learn and make sense of her, and learn strategies to grow).
What follows is a bit of a reflective piece following mom's passing, and because this site sustained me for many years once I found it. I got a lot of support here, and learned so much. It was a real difference maker to find a community that understood, and I was a frequent poster. While the posters on here have changed since I started (and dropped off), I see patterns with the current problems and stories. With BPD, the wheels on the bus just keep going round and round. It's a terrible illness that has devasting impact on relationships, and causes distress for everyone. What follows is just a few thoughts and observations since mom passed in January.
Assisted living didn't change the BPD, but it still made an enormous difference in our life. They were responsible for her instead of me/H. That was intense relief. In the beginning there was a honeymoon period which wore off quickly for her, and soon her emotional needs and demands were as before. We still had to take her to all her medical and dental appointments, do her shopping, and pick up the phone for every little difficulty she had (and contrived crisis), but the work load was still diminished although remaining significant. My observation is that nothing changed with her. Still negative. Still chaotic. Still needy. Still demanding. But the relief for us was that professionals could now handle some of it (daily needs, connectivity, giving her meds), and we could leave town and know that she was taken care of, and not lying on the floor of her house injured or even dead. She used to always rage that if we loved her, we wouldn't go away and leave her. It was awful. One time we were 2000 km away in a campsite, and she would text we had to come home and help her because her phone wasn't working. She was serious.
So glad those days are gone. Looking back, there is some years of bad stuff that I don't know how we survived (H and I). I really don't. I live in a small town where everybody knows everybody, and everybody thought she was wonderful. But she only showed those people her good parts. As the only daughter, there was an expectation "to take good care of her".
Mom went into hospital in the New Year (had stopped eating and taking her meds), went palliative a few days later, and passed away a few days after that. She had so many complex health problems. She was a fighter in every respect, including fighting death! She had her family (me, H, D, S-in law, S) with her, and once she went palliative, despite the relationship, I stayed with her at the hospital and asked for a chair-bed for nights. That was a journey I hope fades from my memory. I did it for her, but probably mostly for myself. I am weary of feeling guilt, and wanted to know I had done everything I could. I tried so hard to be a good daughter (and I was), but with her BPD illness, failure was the only option (as she saw it).
She never once said thank you, or sorry. I shared nice memories, said nice things, but not surprisingly, even at end of life there was no need on her part to resolve anything. I suppose it's magical thinking to hope that at end of life, she could say anything that would give me something positive to hang onto for the rest of my life.
A dear friend lost her mother about 8 months ago, and continues to grieve although the grief is slowly lessening. When mom passed, I continued to grieve the mother I never had, instead of the one I lost. Can I really grieve the one I lost? My grief is profound, but so so complicated. There are a few good memories, and some funny ones too. It's just messy. I think maybe that's what someone meant when they said "it doesn't get better after they die". Some things change: the chaos and interruptions stop, the drama episodes end, the physical and emotional demands stop, the rages and abuse ends, but remarkably it's like the sensations and feelings from a lifetime of those behaviors, lives on in my body. My nervous system hasn't recognized her passing. My body aches and problems haven't either. They're with me for the rest of my life. And neither has my memory, or ability to sleep realized that she's passed. She's still everywhere. I've been struggling with depressive-like symptoms (some days I am a hot mess). My new (young) doctor said "no" to sleeping aids because he labelled it grief. He actually said "my grief was an indication of how close my relationship to my mother was". I just looked at him. He is young. It was an Ygritte moment when she says "You know nothing Jon Snow". My brain wanted to inform him that doctors should be asking questions of their patients to learn what is really going on instead of making assumptions filled with bias (from their own lived experience) but I kept my mouth shut. Where I live, nearly half of the population isn't lucky enough to have a family doctor.
I'm still not sleeping, and she passed over 2 months ago.
I am retiring from my most demanding part-time retirement job (meaning I came out of retirement to work 2 part time jobs which gave me a boundary from my mother's demands and expectations and rages). I am going to transition back to full time retirement one part-time job at a time, if that makes sense. If it sounds crazy, it probably is. The lengths we go to in order to navigate our family member with BPD are extreme.
I am mom's executor, so I've already put probably hundreds of hours into that. In that way, she's still all around me (paperwork and processes everywhere at home), and I haven't been able to move on. It's impossible to articulate how much work and time is involved in being an executor (at least where I live).
Her memorial service is happening in May. Maybe once that is over, I will be able to move on a bit, because having to honour all the good parts of her will be behind me.
A lifetime friend told me today that in her mind, she's always seen me as a spunky, energetic, engaged person, and for a while now that spark has been gone. I looked at her and said one word: defeated.
She is a dear friend and replied by saying all the right things. She's wonderful. But it was interesting to hear the perspective from someone who knows me. I can't "see" myself, but she described it, and I summed up her description in one single word.
After work yesterday, a colleague came to check in on me. Someone caring about me just triggers me, because that's always what I wanted from my mum. Mom was just so narcissistic that her self-absorption demanded all caring be for her at her whim. There was nothing left for her child (I was an "only"). Remarkably, she could care about other people, just not family members. So this colleague coming to check in just flooded me with sadness and the waterworks opened up. Just brutal. Such a vulnerable feeling. It's a part-time job that I love because of the nature of the work (my career- but in a very part-time capacity), but it's demanding, takes a lot of energy, and is physically hard on my body, so it is time to let go. That is another loss.
Pivoting away from "loss", what leaving the work will give me is freedom and space to do some things on my bucket list. I have a long bucket list, so now I have to work on getting excited about that and moving forward, instead of looking back. It's so easy to focus on the loss and trauma (especially during grief), but it's important to look forward too, and I just realized I have to do that while writing this.
But I recognize it is hard to get excited when the body is full of so much trauma. I have been overwhelmed by problems, and I am weary. It's a process to feel better, and doesn't just magically happen when they die. But I want to start feeling myself again, and am hopeful that I will be able to find that. It's been a while. The next thing to work on. Always something more to work on.
Just my observations of my experience after mother passed. When others used to post that their mother had passed, I always wondered what that experience would be like.
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