The worst part is that they constantly want my help and when I try to honestly help, even in ways sensitive to their own fragile thought process, I immediately get stopped, talked over, or hear a “yeah, but”.
They want my help, but the reality is they want validation of the very things they claim to want to try to get over.
That's insightful of you. I agree 100%. The pwBPD in my life often asks for help and validation. But the help she want's isn't help in solving the root cause of a problem; the help she wants is money, allowing her to AVOID solving the problem.
She doesn't really want validation, either. She requests validation of her convoluted victim narrative: that she's traumatized by life, that it's too hard for her, that all her problems are caused by other people. That she can't work, she can't study, she can't get anything she wants. I might ask her, Well, what do you really want? She'll reply that she wants more plastic surgery and to move abroad, for example to Paris, because she can't stand where she's living right now. I might say, Well, I can certainly see the appeal of moving abroad, and it's certainly possible. In fact, I lived in two different foreign countries when I was around your age. It's doable if you work for it. Now, what sort of steps do you think you might take to work on making your dream come true? (She doesn't offer any ideas.) May I suggest that you sign up for a language class and try to work here at company with offices in Paris--later on you could apply for a secondment, how does that sound?
Unsurprisingly, she doesn't like any of my suggestions, because it's the wrong type of validation and help. Why? Because my proposed real-life solutions don't involve me forking over cash, but rather involve her working on herself and towards her supposed goals. It becomes increasingly clear that her goals are mostly based on fantasy. The moment she starts thinking about practical realities (learning a foreign language, working a job), she feels overwhelmed and wants to give up. That's when she'll double down on her victim narrative: My family is the reason I can't do anything I want, my life is miserable, it's hopeless, it's your fault, you're horrible, you OWE me, I never want to see you again but send me money because I have to get out of here ASAP.
Besides, when trying to validate someone's feelings, there's an underlying assumption that the validator has some empathy and understanding. Yet the pwBPD in my life doesn't want to admit that other people might "get" her and understand her issues. No, she wants to be the gold medalist of the grievance Olympics, unique in her traumas, untouchable. In her mind, it's impossible for me to empathize with what she's going through. Basically, my pwBPD's suffering has become a core part of her identity, and if I claim that I "get" her, it probably feels like trespassing or stealing the one thing that belongs to her.
Underneath it all, I think she knows she's being unrealistic and unreasonable. But her negative emotions take over and interfere with her life, hampering her ability to maintain stable adult relationships and tackle the mundane tasks of daily living, while working gradually towards future goals. She's convinced she doesn't have what she wants, and yet she's also utterly confused about what she really wants, while she doesn't have the patience to work towards what she wants, either.