"Don't give praise or validation easily" This kind of goes against my natural instinct, as in my profession I worked from a "strength based" perspective, and it was my place to encourage and to help build confidence and character in addition to skills. But I remember a conversation with my mom a few years ago that made me do a double head turn in my personal life. I think my mom is typical BPD in a lot of ways - extreme waif. She is needy, insecure, childish, lack of sense of self, constantly seeking validation, emotionally unstable, her feeling of abandonment is triggered every time we go away...etc etc. So, at a time when she was "low", and visiting our house many years ago, I was in my "strength based mode", and gave her an example of something I thought she did well as a mother. Holy - did that boomerang, and now I can see how it completely fed her narcissistic supply. I got an indignant lecture on what a great mother she was. I could write a book about the ways she wasn't a great mother, as could all of us. Until then, I was blind and didn't see the narcissism. That was a turning point for me when the light bulb finally came on for that trait - or maybe it was in that moment that I "accepted" it.
"Make your boundaries clear − and stand by them". My husband has done this well. He doesn't have all the grooming I've had, and he doesn't have the emotional psych baggage (parentification, fear etc). All her FOGGing doesn't have an effect on him. It's been good for me to observe his detachment. He doesn't feel guilt. I frequently turn to him for guidance when I start feeling the push-pull. He let's me know that I "don't need to do this or that" to "supply" her. I don't seem to know what normal is, so I turn to him for that guidance, including holding my own boundaries.
Yes, great article. I agree- we have a lot of programming/attachment to a parent than to someone we have just met. This may be why your H is able to be of help to your mother and not have it affect him emotionally as much.
The giving praise/validation aspect. With my BPD mother, it also includes doing things for her. Her responses have startled me sometimes- how she seems to grab on to it. She can't seem to get enough of this and feels she lacks it. But she has it- all around her - she has people who have tried to befriend her, she's had material needs met, and she can't seem to perceive this. Encounters with her are transactional- meet her need in some way, even a small thing- because it's the dynamic she wants. I might call her to see how she's doing and she will end the call with "need more pictures of the grandkids" or something and it's that she needs this in the relationship. So even if the "need" isn't something I wouldn't do- it's that this is the relationship- and the choice of words.