You are right...it's not about potatoes or even me. They will lash out if they are having trouble in other areas of their life, often things I have no awareness of, such as a work problem or a text arguement w. a family member. I happen ti be there and then become the target. They also know from many incidents I wont become aggresive right back. Thank you for your thoughts and will try and put them into practise.
With my BPD daughter, every now and then she'll come at me out of nowhere with the most vile stuff. It doesn't happen very often anymore, but I still have to keep my guard up and prepare for it.
Because once she starts a rant on how I was never there for her, never cared about her, etc. it would be so easy to defend myself or launch into an argument. I was a good dad that provided and showed up when it mattered. Instead of arguing though, I'll just listen until I can't take it anymore or she runs out of steam. When I finally get to speak, I'll ask, "Where did all that come from? What happened earlier today?"
Sometimes, I get the truth. Maybe something happened at work or a friend said something ugly to her. Other times, I get another barrage- the car wouldn't start, I'm broke, my ex reached out, nobody cares about me, etc. But by not taking that initial bait to launch into a fight, I start to get things I can talk out with her and actually help her calm down.
That's the whole goal here- being able to talk about what's actually going on.
Because what happens is the car didn't start, someone was rude at work, etc. But the focus doesn't stay on that, it shifts to the people she's closest to and how they're not going to understand how hard her life is. So we skip the initial talks that she has in her head and advance straight to the, "You're a horrible person that doesn't care about me," narratives that she's convinced are true.
Again, the "fix" is not engaging on that and digging deeper each time. It can be incredibly hard at times though (as we all know) and sometimes we'll certainly fight back without even realizing what we're arguing about. It's rarely what they're saying and always what they're feeling...getting that out in the open is nearly impossible though.


