The thought of my kids being dragged into this cycle was the final straw. I cut her off completely for years.
But then the flying monkeys started. My own mother in tears about it, saying when she was gone I would be their only family, I couldn't turn my back on them. So I opened the door again. This time more guarded, more careful, more arms length for the sake of my parents.
For a few years this seemed to work. Minimal contract. Civil almost friendly at family occasions. Then the nasty messages started up again. I pulled away again, not announced, just pulled away. My adult children recognised what was happening and chose to pull away themselves. One broke contact altogether, one maintains a text relationship, but is guarded. This seemed to work another year or so.
The flying monkeys have just returned. That's what has prompted me to join this forum. I am running out of ways to cope. My mother is upset that the kids don't contact their auntie. She believes my partner and I are controlling them into no contact. They are old enough to be part of the conversation now in their 20s so we have given them full disclosure.
Where do I go from here? I can't cut my mother out of my life, but the distress this is causing her is unbearable. I am also not about to try and persuade my kids to speak to her when they don't want to. I don't want them dragged into this cycle of harm.
I think one of the difficulties with a pwBPD is that they are connected to other people in the family. So having boundaries with them can involve other people with whom we still want a close relationship with.
My father was a protector and enabler to my BPD mother. I never considered going NC with my mother. However, in college, I sought out counseling and the counselor brought up the topic of me doing that with BPD mother- because of the emotional effects on me of the relationship. So I tried it and it lasted one week, because any relationship with my father also included her and I wanted a relationship with him. My mother's FOO and some family friends also were "flying monkeys" to her.
I knew that the family expectation was compliance with BPD mother and I went along with this for the most part, and for many years, until going along with her wishes began to involve my adolescent children. In my family dynamics, I am not the golden child. My "value" to the family was based on my being useful to her, to do things for her- household tasks, emotional caretaking. She didn't look to my kids for that when they were younger but when they reached adolescence, I observed her enlisting my children into this role too. That was a bottom line for me. It isn't my children's jobs to be her emotional caretaker.
I didn't cut contact between her and my children but was protective during that contact. By that time, the kids also had a sense of discomfort around her. These were their natural boundaries. I wanted to respect that too. They had learned to treat her respectfully but I let them decide on how much contact they wanted with her. They were also old enough to understand mental illness and we discussed that. One of my kids didn't want contact with her at all, due to some experiences with her, another could handle some contact with her.
Young children have no choice when it comes to relationships with adults in the family. They are dependent on them. For older children, a relationship becomes more similar to one between two adults. If a child has a sense that someone is not a safe person for them to be close to- that is a protective boundary. We want to preserve this sense for them, so that they don't get into relationships with disordered people. If we force them to ignore it and force the relationship, we invalidate it.
Your children have no obligation to have a relationship with your sister. If there is contact in the context of a family event- like a wedding, or if they are all there together on a holiday with your parents- they can be expected to behave cordially. That's just being decent. But they aren't obligated to have contact with her otherwise if they don't want to.
Flying monkeys make having boundaries difficult. It's a part of the entire dynamics. Unfortunately, my having boundaries with BPD mother came with a cost. This is family dynamics- at first the effort is to get the person back into their previous role. If the person doesn't do that, they risk being "expelled" "exiled" from the unit.
My choice for a middle ground was lower contact "LC". It may involve less contact but it also is the content of that contact. If we spoke, I kept the conversation light and cordial, and did not discuss personal or emotional information.
For me, this was a quieter, less dramatic choice to maintain personal boundaries while still having contact. How other family members responded to that was their choice. I remained cordial to the best of my abilities. My priority was to protect my children and not have them be partipants in this dynamic.
My best advice is to continue to stand up for what is important to you- your children, while remaining cordial to the FM in your family. If your mother brings up the topic of contact with your sister, politely state that you love her but this isn't something to discuss. Talking won't solve this for her. Remain calm and cordial but stand your ground. Unfortunately- they will react to this- but this is their choice to make. You can only control how you behave and how you treat other people.
It's hard to see your mother in distress, but also- to sacrifice your children's emotional well being to make her feel better is unreasonable. I never wanted to be in this position- but that was the result of this kind of dynamic.