Hi again,
I myself have an aunt who is a high-conflict person. Since she's high functioning, I wouldn't say she has "full blown" BPD, but I suspect she has some BPD traits. When I was young, she seemed to complain too much in my presence, for example about various physical ailments. When I was just eight or nine, I had the sense that she was mean, hyper-critical, whiny, attention-seeking and inappropriate--let's just say she wasn't my favorite relative. And since she's still living seventy years later, I can't help but think she was exaggerating about her (poor) health, A LOT.
Anyway, one time my aunt had a meltdown when my brother visited with her over a long weekend. He had just gotten accepted into a college, and he decided to wear a sweatshirt from his chosen college during the visit to his aunt's home. I think that most "normal" people would have congratulated my brother for getting into his chosen college, especially his aunt, who happened to be a teacher! But when it comes to someone with BPD traits, I think you guys can imagine what happened. Auntie accused her young nephew of being insulting, condescending and pretentious. She threw a hissy fit because he dared to wear such a sweatshirt in her home. After the visit, she sent some mean correspondence to my mother. We were shocked that she wasn't able to be happy for someone else, not even her nephew--and that she couldn't keep the negative thoughts to herself, but rather lashed out with wild, incoherent accusations. After the incident, she became estranged from our family, for years. All because a highschooler wore a sweatshirt with a college insignia on it. Geesh. Jealous much? I think only a BPD-twisted mind would consider such a thing as insulting and deserving of long-term estrangement. At the time, I didn't know about BPD, but now I think it was a classic BPD response: misplaced envy, projection of attention-seeking behavior, convoluted "victim" logic, and lashing out to ruin someone else's happy moment.
And here's the rub: once my dad passed away, my aunt tried to reconnect with my mom. My mom was torn up about it, because her sister had been so mean (e.g. the sweatshirt incident) and unsupportive over the years. As an example, she was invited to my dad's Celebration of Life but made a lame excuse not to attend. My mom and I talked it over, and I basically advised her, it's OK not to let her "back in." Auntie had never apologized or even been nice, really. Why rekindle old grudges? Why invite more drama? I think my mom appreciated that I said it was OK to prioritize her own happiness. And so Auntie remains estranged.


