Hi broken mom,
I'm sorry your daughter seems so upset. If she's reaching out after weeks or months of estrangement by making demands and a suicide threat, my guess is that she's feeling a lot of stress and/or disappointment right now. Worse, she has tried to drag your ex into this, by venting to him all her (ancient) grievances about you, when technically you have't done anything wrong in recent weeks. He's upset that she's upset, and he's also blaming you.
Trust me, this isn't about you at all. This is about your daughter bumping up against adulthood without the necessary emotional skills to cope. My opinion is that young adulthood is the worst--from around age 22 to 25--when it becomes increasingly clear to her that she's not functioning very well, and when her tantrums seem totally incongruent with her age. Maybe as a tween and teenager, she could get away with throwing fits, especially within the confines of her immediate family. But as a young adult, well she's discovering that throwing tantrums and acting out all the time isn't really working for her as it once did. People don't want her around because of her drama and inappropriate outbursts. She's not invited over much. She's lost her friends (and probably doesn't have any left). She can't keep a job. She can't really handle independent study or keeping house. She's totally overwhelmed by the responsibilities of adulthood, let alone parenthood. Her life starts to look dysfunctional, and she knows it. Yet her expectations remain totally unrealistic: she expects always to be the center of attention. She expects too much devotion from friends and family. She expects others to over-function for her. She's selfish. She feels irritable and aggrieved, full-time. She feels traumatized, abused, neglected, inferior, constantly dissatisfied. Her aura is negative. Her entire mindset is negative. She's stressed out. She thinks her life is over. She can't stand living another day. She's exhausted, and yet she stays up late at night scrolling through social media, feeling left out and insanely jealous of "everyone else." But her thinking is increasingly disordered. She doesn't understand where her troubles are really coming from. She adopts a victim narrative, blaming everyone else for all her woes. And that, in my opinion, is the worst part of BPD, because she thinks she's helpless, and she abdicates responsibility for her own life. She has basically given up on herself. Others might step up to "help" her, but the more others do for her, the less competent and confident she feels. She RESENTS you for being so reliant on you. Does that sound about right?
Let me guess, her entire family has generally been supportive of your daughter, by providing her money, free housing, logistical support and/or free childcare. But rather than be appreciative, she's upset and uber-demanding. She blames others for all her problems. Worse, she uses her own child as a pawn, to "punish" you for not doing exactly as she wants. That's a frequent scenario on these boards.
Now that probably doesn't make you feel much better about the situation, because you don't want to see your daughter in such distress, and you don't want to be alienated from your grandkid. Just know it's BPD, and it's not your fault.


