I was hurt about not hearing her pregnancy news directly but I sent her and her husband my congratulations. Today I got a text saying she is cutting me off and never wants to see me again. That hit hard and my husband was shocked . . . He doesn't understand why she did a compete 180. He is supporting me and doesn't know how to help repair this situation. She just wants to hear me say it's my fault she is upset and if I don't then she will not have a relationship with me. Today I realised that this is not the first time she has tried to cut people out of her life. Do I just let this play out? Do we try an intervention? I'm afraid she is going to have a mental breakdown.
Hi Mom,
The pwBPD in my life is my adult stepdaughter. She has cut out everyone in her family (including parents, siblings, aunts, uncles and cousins), on and off, for years now. When she does this, it's a sure signal that she's mad, and she wants to "punish" others with her absence. It's ironic, because I think she wants closeness and belonging more than anything. Sometimes I think that cutting people out is a way she tries to reclaim control, when her life feels totally out of control--but all she ends up doing is feeling alienated, in the name of "protecting" herself from "toxic" people.
If you read these boards, you'll see that cutting people out is a hallmark of BPD, directly related to the pattern of volatile and unstable relationships used in the diagnostic criteria. It's almost so predictable that you can infer that things are amiss in your daughter's life right now. Indeed, she's blaming YOU, to avoid taking responsibility for herself. She's avoiding you, because her lack of mental toughness is preventing her from dealing with uncomfortalbe feelings, and she's retreating in AVOIDANCE. You imply that your daughter seemed OK the other day and then did a complete 180? That's very typical of her impulsivity and distorted thinking. Instead of taking a breather, calming down, getting some perspective and evaluating context, she probably replayed interactions in her mind and twisted things to make you out to be the biggest villian possible. Instead of calming down, she ratchets up and tries to hurt you by cutting you out.
While your daughter might feel neglected/second fiddle since you have been distracted by your own issues lately (namely, taking care of an ill husband), my guess is that's not your daughter's primary issue. My guess is she's just latching onto that as a deflection from her underlying issues. A 29-year-old getting all riled up and claiming intense hurt because you decline to host a holiday event, and then to cut you out and threaten never to see you again is not rational--it's designed to cast blame your way, inflict pain, exert control and express her despair in an extremely misguided way.
I know it hurts, but I have a couple of tips for you. First off, I wouldn't stage any intervention, because I think it would backfire. Even if your daughter has BPD, she doesn't want to hear it from you, and she certainly doesn't want to hear that you think she needs to get therapy. She is adept at blame-shifting and would probably accuse you of "assaulting" her, hating her and being psychologically abusive. She would likely project and insist that YOU are mentally deranged yourself. She might be so loud and convincing that you might begin to doubt yourself . . .
Secondly, I'd advise not to "beg" her to resume communication, or even to reach out right now. I think that begging only gives her incentive to continue to cut you out, because she's getting feedback about your hurt and concern. In her distorted thinking, any begging from you is not only confirmation of your guilt, but also proof that her punishment is inflicting pain on you, leading her to try it again or take it to the next level. My general advice would be to give her time and space to calm down, an "adult time out" so to speak, and not to interrupt the time out. Let her come back to you, when she's ready. My guess is that she will soon enough, when she needs something. And my other guess is she'll pretend like the whole thing didn't happen. My advice would be not to expect an apology, because she's incacapble of giving one (she always thinks you are at fault, and she avoids taking responsibility for her life). You can go ahead and pretend like nothing happened, either. In my opinion, that's not such a bad outcome.
If your daughter's self-enforced "time out" extends over several weeks, and if you haven't had any communication whatsoever but you feel you must reach out, then I'd advise to message her as if you would a distant cousin--for example on major holidays or her birthday--with a simple, bland and relatively emotion-free message like, Happy Holiday, hope you are well. Please do not betray any of your own neediness/sadness or make any sort of demand, because the message shouldn't be about you and your feelings--your daughter has enough on her plate dealing with her own feelings. That way, you are "including" her, while not demanding a response. My guess is that she won't respond anyway.
In the meantime, you take care of YOU. You can use the hiatus to get back to baseline. If you're lucky, your daughter will still communicate with her dad, and you can keep tabs on her that way. Even if she cuts you both out for a time, you can feel proud that she's making an adult's life for herself and coping on her own, probably for the first time.
I know you're her mom, and this hurts. But your role is transitioning now. You aren't responsible for your managing your daughter's life and feelings anymore. You can't make her feel better or fix her life--she has to decide do that for herself. In the meantime, I think you should model for your daughter what a healthy adult's life looks like. That includes getting therapy for you if you think that would help. That includes seeing friends and pursuing hobbies, too. I'd say, focus on getting to a happy place so that when your daughter starts communicating with you again, you are in the right frame of mind to celebrate the birth of her child. Based on what you've written, my guess is that she'll be back soon enough, when she needs something. But if she doesn't need something and she remains distant for a long time, then you can be proud that she's coping on her own.