Thank you all for your thoughtful and supportive comments. It feels like I am wading through quicksand, working to stay above ground but darkness is pulling me downward. I keep re-reading your posts to clear my head and find my way forward.
It turned out my daughter had a therapy appt scheduled for Monday morning that she didn't realize, as she thought the T had terminated her. She went to the appt, and ended up cutting it short because (as she told me) her therapist couldn't help her with what she needed (to die). So they have ended their contact. DD said that the T said she would contact her supervisor to see what else they could offer, but DD is not interested. I have left several messages with the therapist, with no return call. I'm going to try the supervisor next. This is unusual, because her past therapists have always returned my calls especially when they felt her safety was at stake.
Yet the whole scenario makes me think that this is a desperate cry for help. Her disordered thinking is just confusing her as to what kind of help she needs. Clearly you are important to her, as she wants you to be there with her. But she's all mixed up.
I agree with this. And I do want to be there for her, just not in the way she wants. The fact that she is drawing me into this is tearing me to pieces. I don't even want to reach out because I fear that it will turn into another emotional cascade of heartache and pain for us both. Last call, she was trying to talk about who could care for her two cats when she's gone. I told her I couldn't do this. She pushed back and told me it was the least I could do. She flips from needing me to hating me and back again within minutes. I'm trying to stay calm and focused and hold my boundaries, and I'm beyond exhausted.
She said she wanted to have a new therapist, "because it's nice to have someone to talk to every week" and I agreed to help her find someone. But she's asked me to do this in the past and when I've offered options she has shut them all down. So I'm going to try again, which I suppose is the definition of insanity. Not easy to find someone, as we live in a rural area and there just aren't professionals working with BPD clients. Every call I've made has suggested that I reach out to the Community Mental Health agency she was already working with. If I'm frustrated with the system, I can only imagine how alone and burdened my daughter feels. Have I mentioned that she is adamantly opposed to DBT? I've read that Mentalization-Based Therapy and Schema Therapy are also good approaches, but have yet to find anyone offering these services.
In the US, the move would be to call 9-1-1 and report that she's a danger to herself or others, that she verbally justified taking her own life and that it's imminent. That doesn't solve anything long-term, but it does solve the problem for a week or so as she goes from the hospital to in-patient.
I wish she would go to a long term in-patient. Our experience has been that she either is released from the ER because she fakes her way out or she is admitted and stays for 4-5 days in which they take her off all meds, put her on new meds, and send her on her way with instructions to reach out to a therapist within a week of leaving the hospital. And we get the anger, blame, mistrust, and hate.
I know how right you are, Pook. She has free will and I'm powerless to make her do anything she doesn't choose to do. It's her battle to fight. She is so confused and weak and alone, with no one to advocate for her anymore. She has alienated her friends (or at least thinks she has, so she doesn't reach out to them), doesn't contact her siblings, and often tells me that she's only contacting me because she has no one else to talk to. So I feel compelled to do something.
Sometimes I think my own thoughts are just as disordered as hers.
I literally looked to the sky and said, "Jesus, please take the wheel" I pray for my daughter EVERY single day; she is the first thing I think of in the morning and the last at night
I don't know how any parent could navigate this nightmare without a strong prayer life. And yet. It has become so overwhelming that I forget to lean into the faith that sustains me in all other circumstances. Thank you for the encouragement.
As awful as it is to get those calls, the silver lining is that you do have a connection with her, and she values you. There is hope in that.
Thank you for this.
