I am grateful for all the feedback, no apologies necessary. We are all just doing our best here, trying to support each other and ourselves. Plus it's helpful to experience when something doesn't quite resonate as right for my situation. And truly, I didn't give enough information about that situation. I wonder whether I am the only one on the board who feels (irrationally, clearly) like I am betraying my uBPD if I write too much detail here and (more irrationally, still) has the paranoid delusion that if I write too much detail, she'll somehow get on this board, read my posts, recognize our interactions in my posts and then come after me! SMH
You are all so helpful to me. At some point, I'll write more about this situation. I need to stop now.
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You are not the only one. If I speak to anyone about my BPD mother, it feels to me as if I am betraying her. Mostly, I don't- except to a therapist or my sibling who also is aware of the situation. I also don't want to come across as badmouthing her and feel it's not OK to publically expose anyone's issues.
On this board, and I encourage others to do the same- I don't reveal so much information that the person can be identified specifically. Most of our situations are not unique to us and so the issue could be with anyone. I'd say to anyone to not reveal more than you are comfortable with. The dynamics are often common and details aren't necessary.
As a reply to Pook's suggestion, I think it depends on both people. Pook- you are skilled at this but not everyone is. If the daughter doesn't have effective relationship skills, helping her with how to respond to the pwBPD can be helpful. If they are going to have a circular blow up with no resolution, then perhaps intervening at first is a good start but ultimately- this is their relationship to manage as they choose as adults. It's going to go the way it will.
For me, I feel I was expected to not have boundaries with my BPD mother and to tolerate her behavior in order to keep the peace. This wasn't the case for my children. They had boundaries. I didn't want to diminish their own natural inclination to not tolerate hurtful behavior from anyone. This is normal boundaries. However, they also knew how to behave respectfully to a grandparent and would not have been rude in return.
It also wasn't their role to be an emotional caretaker for my mother, which had been an expectation for us. I realized this was "normalcy" for them. I didn't want to undo it. So if someone was being hurtful to them, they had every right to tell them to leave them alone. With my mother, they chose how much contact they wanted and when/if to respond to her texts/calls rather than to directly confront her because we all knew that confronting her was not effective.
It's also normal consequences. If we treat someone poorly, they may not want to have a relationship with us. This begins even in kindergarten. Nobody wants to play with the bully on the playground. However, with my mother, there were no consequences in the immediate family as we walked on eggshells around her. So if someone else were to tell her off, it may be a normal consequence, even if it led to more drama.