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Hi there,
I see that your daughter is trying, and it was nice of her to recognize your birthday, with a token gift no less. However, it seems sad that it might have been a "cover" to rekindle her grievances, a sort of bribe to extract what she thinks she wants--an apology from you. Maybe it would depend on the wording of her note, but my sense from you is that you feel manipulated, correct? Do you think that if you apologized, your daughter would recognize her role in the situation, the issue would be patched up, and you two could move forward? Or maybe you think that if you "confess" and apologize, it would be tacit consent for your daughter to continue to treat you badly, and that she might escalate with increased demands for your time/money/resources which you can't afford to provide?
Oftentimes on these boards I read about situations of estrangement from BPD adult children. I'm currently in that situation right now. Generally I advise parents not to "beg" their estranged child to resume contact, because they are keeping their distance for a reason--possibly to get some time and space to get back to baseline, to "protect" themselves from supposedly "toxic" behavior, or maybe even to punish the offending parent with their absence. When parents reach out too soon and frequently, I think it infringes on the adult child's desire for space, while at the same time it reminds the child of the unresolved emotional tension. Having said that, on these boards I've recommended parents to consider sending simple well wishes on important dates, such as birthdays or a major holiday, to show that you still think about them and want them to feel included in the family. But by the same token, I've advised to minimize any emotional content in the message, and anything that looks like manipulation or a bribe, such as "I have presents for you." Here, the situation seems to have been reversed, because your estranged BPD daughter is the one reaching out to you on your birthday, but she sends a mixed message by trying to extract an apology from you. That's exactly the sort of thing I've advised against. Do you see what I mean?
I'm not sure what I'd do in your situation. I think I might acknowledge and thank her for sending the happy birthday wishes, in the hopes that that might open the door a crack towards a reconciliation. But I doubt I'd make any unwarranted apology. I might think about an apology along the lines of, "I'm sorry if your feelings were hurt, I never intended that," but my opinion is that it probably wouldn't be acceptable to your daughter, based on your post. She's already showing her discontent for the timing of an apology from you, and my guess is that she'd dispute the content of it too.
Increasingly, I'm wondering if an apology will ever work with a pwBPD. I get the sense that parents here are desperate and have repeatedly reached out to an unkind adult child who should have been the one to apologize. A reasonable person would have empathy, seek clarification and understanding, find a way to patch things up and move forward. But many pwBPD lack these traits. Worse, their expectations can seem totally unreasonable, maybe even delusional, and their version of events can veer far off from the truth. I guess I'm saying, apologizing for actual wrongs with reasonable people can lead to a positive outcomes, especially if you are sincere and try to make it up to them. But making an unwarranted apology to an unreasonable person only fuels the fire in my opinion. Apologizing could signal that you accept abusive behavior from your daughter. She could take it a step further and demand retribution. Does that sound about right? I guess my question is, what is the most likely scenario?
This might be a little off topic, but I'll wrap up with a situation I encountered with my adult BPD stepdaughter. She was estranged from her sister for a few years. She had the idea of flying to her sister's place and reading her a letter detailing all the ways she felt abused by her sister, to air her many grievances so to speak. I think she thought that upon hearing the words, her sister would apologize. I didn't have to read the contents of the letter to sense that this idea wasn't a good one, because I was certain that the letter contained major fact distortions and was highly accusatory. I felt there was no way her sister would agree to the narrative, let alone apologize, let alone "atone" and pay retribution. I felt the whole scenario would backfire, and probably blow up. So I discouraged the trip (BPD stepdaughter wanted the money for it). At the same time, I felt the planned trip was just another distraction from what my adult BPD stepdaughter should have been doing, namely concentrating on her therapy and resuming some college studies. A cross-country trip with a failed apology and sisterly blow-up would probably derail everything. So I think it was best to maintain the status quo of estrangement at that time. Clearly the BPD stepdaughter wasn't "ready" for reconciliation, as her thinking was too unreasonable, and her expectations weren't realistic. Sound familiar?
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