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 81 
 on: December 06, 2025, 11:40:53 AM  
Started by CPH73 - Last post by js friend
Hi Cph73,

I know that it is tempting to tell your son that you suspect he has Bpd because you want him to get the mental help that he needs but It should really be left to the professionals when he himself identifies that he has re-occuring problems that effect his r/s with others.

For me my udd's secrecy was also big issue too and it has been that way since her early teens.  She is now 32yo. A lot of what I learned about the things she did in her teens was often only after the fact and some of the things she did then I would have been jailed for as an adult but luckily for her because of her age at the time they didnt press charges but it has left her with some lasting repercussions that she doesnt know that I know about.No details of her life have ever been shared. Even all her pregnancies (3) I have learned about through other people and when I have asked her she has denied.

Im sorry that you are already feeling anxious about your sons visit. What helped me when I felt that about spending time with my udd was to break the day up. Sometimes 10mins was long enough to feel the tension begin to rise so I would often take a break and go off into another room to do something else or be around others. For you this could be perhaps offering to take turns walking his dog if he brings his pet with him.

I think also having other guests there could also take the pressure off you. My udd has always been close to a particular family member and has really done well in family gatherings if this family member is there as I think she has felt more relaxed. Another time the family member was not there and she ended up starting a physical fight with another family member and attacking me when I tried to break it up.

I also think that other guests can also more effectively steer the conversation away from the topics that get your son fired up, and as your son is a heavy drinker I would make sure to only have a few alcoholic drinks in my home and the rest low alcohol or 0 %. Fingers crossed he wont even notice  it is low or 0% if he has already consumed a lot already. Laugh out loud (click to insert in post)

 82 
 on: December 06, 2025, 09:40:04 AM  
Started by Trying306 - Last post by CC43
Hi again Trying,

In re-reading your post, which had a lot to unpack, I see many similarities with my adult BPD stepdaughter.  I agree with Sancho, it's likely your dear daughter isn't sleeping well.  I bet she's scrolling on her phone at night (just like my stepdaughter did), simultaneously feeling left out and less than her peers.  Meanwhile, she's freaking out about her studies.  She might view screen time as a distraction, to get her mind off her troubles, but what's really happening is she's procrastinating and losing sleep too.  Even if she's in bed for twelve hours straight, that doesn't mean she's getting rest.  And then in the morning, she's freaking out, tired and cranky.  She feels crappy, and her mood reflects that.  She doens't "get" that she feels temporarily fatigued, that she'll have to power through the day, and that the best course of action is to put herself to bed at a reasonable hour the next night, to get some restorative sleep and feel better tomorrow.  Rather, she catastrophises and feels awful, concluding that her life is terrible.  At the same time, she's beating herself up over and over again, wondering why she can't seem to get her school work done, and she's afraid she's going to get bad grades, if she's not failing already.  So she lashes out at you, calling you stupid.

Look, both of my stepdaughters fell apart at the beginning of sophomore year in college.  The support offered to first-years (orientation, get-to-know-you activities, etc.) was withdrawn.  The friendship circles were already solidified.  The newness faded.  The dynamics of living on campus became challenging, especially between roommates in cramped quarters.  My stepdaughters had short tempers, and their general demeanor was petulant and demanding, which meant they lost former friends and were kicked out of rooming situations, making them feel abandoned.  In parallel, the classes weren't the easy, introductory classes anymore--coursework got harder.  Students had to pick a major.  In the case of my BPD stepdaughter, she had a childhood dream about a certain career, which had a challenging acedemic track.  When she started taking the required classes, she realized she just couldn't handle them.  Maybe she could handle them intellectually, but emotionally, she couldn't muster the sustained focus or discipline she needed to study, as she was ruminating about negative thoughts all the time.  She started skipping some classes in avoidance, and she quickly got too far behind.  Her "dream" came crashing down.  She felt lost, disappointed, incompetent.  She didn't understand that she could find a tutor, change majors, or transfer to another college that was more suited to her academic level.  You see, she catastrophized everything, and her volatile emotions hijacked her brain, which had no bandwidth left to find a more logical solution to her problems.  I'm sure she felt she was letting her parents down.  She hid her troubles until she couldn't take it anymore and attempted suicide (both stepdaughters did this, but only one was diagnosed with BPD).  But college isn't for everybody, and college isn't the only pathway to a happy adulthood.  These days, with online learning options, it's perfectly possible to delay college courses, take a lighter courseload or learn at a more maneagable pace.  It doesn't mean she's dumb.  She just needs a pace that is better suited to her current emotional level.

As for the boundaries in the home, the reality is that your daughter is an adult.  I'm sure she uses that status to her advantage.  I think that the standard, child-based punishments don't work anymore (withdrawal of dessert/car privileges/phone time, etc.).  She'll say, you can't take MY phone, I'm an adult.  And she's right.  But what you can say is, You're right.  You're an adult, and adults can choose to pay for their own phones or go without.  Adults can choose to eat with the family, but if they don't, then they are responsible to prepare or buy their own food.  They can use the kitchen as long as they clean up after themselves.  Fair enough?

I know, it's not easy, because the most likely scenario is that the status quo will reign in your household:  your daughter will continue to hide in her room, lash out and feel miserable full-time.  It may be that you have to let her live that way until she's so miserable that she hits bottom and moves out, or decides to take therapy seriously.  If she moves out, her problems will stay exactly the same, but she might have to learn that the hard way--yet she won't have you around to blame anymore.  And maybe that's when she prioritizes therapy, i.e. following her doctor's instructions and learning healthy habits.  That's what my stepdaughter did.  It's weird, because her dad and I have always emphasized healthy habits (eating right, sleeping at nighttime on a regular schedule, getting regular exercise) as the backbone of general health and well-being.  But she had to hear it from doctors to believe it.  I think that therapy emphasizes all those healthy habits, one way or another.  And once she focussed on building a healthy routine, in addition to taking medications as prescribed (and avoiding illicit substances), she turned things around pretty quickly.  You see, a healthy routine is predictable, and it also reduces stress!  An added benefit is that a healthy routine can help solidify her identity:  "I'm a pescatarian/athlete/enjoy yoga/drink ginger tea after dinner/sleep well/create art when I'm stressed." 

My BPD stepdaughter also says she was a victim of sexual assualt.  I'm truly sorry for anyone who suffers that misfortune.  But I can't help but have some doubts about her story, because (i) the fact patterns and timelines don't align and (ii) her other stories of purported "assuault" are completely twisted beyond all recognition.  Her entire vocabulary of trauma, assualt and abuse has involved a re-definition of the conventional words.  Now, I have no doubt that she has felt pain and victimization.  But I think she makes up a lot of scenarios in her head and blows a lot of things completely out of proportion.  One example is when she accused her aunt of abusing her, when what really happened is her aunt offered her some water.  Her emotional reaction was so over-the-top that she threatened her dear aunt with violence.  What a nightmare indeed.  Come to think of it, the BPD brain might resemble a nightmare sometimes--thinking disturbing, twisted, bizzare stories that at the same time feel very real.

Just my two cents.

 83 
 on: December 06, 2025, 05:34:55 AM  
Started by campbembpd - Last post by Notwendy
I’m not a lawyer but I think how credit card debt is managed depends on if one is in a community property state or not. Separating finances in a marriage may be worth consulting an attorney about.

My BPD mother’s spending was an issue in her marriage and later in her elder years.  Speaking to her rationally didn’t work - other family members tried too. It was difficult to understand but I think it must have been emotionally driven. While it makes sense for you to try to speak to her first-it may be that the separate finances are the way to protect some savings but it may depend on the laws in your state.


 84 
 on: December 06, 2025, 04:06:09 AM  
Started by mssalty - Last post by Rowdy
This seems to be quite a common theme.
I too used to be accused of not wanting to do things because apparently my facial expressions told her I didn’t. She used to believe she could tell exactly what mood I was in by looking at my face. I even said to her once that I feel like I need a badge to wear each day with a happy face or a sad/pissedoff face to tell her what mood I was in.

That and if I ever breathed heavily I would be accused of huffing at her (I had a collapsed lung over a decade ago and had a section of lung removed so sometimes I exhale quite loudly) and she would then think I was pissed off with her when I wasn’t at all.

That’s not to say she was always wrong. It was a near 3 decade relationship, so at times she would do things that would make me huff, there were times I didn’t want to do something and my facial expression probably gave that away, but it gets draining when it is every bloody time they think they can read you like a physic and you have to argue with them about your own actual feelings.

 85 
 on: December 06, 2025, 03:58:21 AM  
Started by sisyphusinsb - Last post by Under The Bridge
Hi and welcome to the site - you're among friends who have experienced the same things you're going through. BPD always runs to the same script and we can all relate totally.

35 years is a long time but you're still together - that's commendable. How have you been coping with your wife's illness? Many people have different ways to reduce the conflict, how are you managing at the moment?

We're all still learning so feel free to tell us more or just plain rant and get things off your chest, it always helps.

Regards.

 86 
 on: December 06, 2025, 02:11:20 AM  
Started by xxninxx - Last post by xxninxx
We've been together for a few years now and most of the time she makes me happier than anything else ever could. I don't really know why things got bad this time. Things were fine Wednesday morning, but since that night everything has just sucked. We were just talking about our days and now everything is wrong again. She's convinced I hate her, there's no place in my life for her, and that I want to leave her and am only staying to prove some point. I don't feel that way at all though. I really love her and I know she only gets this way when something makes her feel abandoned or rejected. I must have done something wrong, but I don't know what I could have done.

I'm trying to reassure her that I love her, but no matter what I say or do she just responds "okay." I'm trying not to get frustrated, but it's hard because I have so much else going on right now too. I have papers I need to write and exams to study for, and I have a job too. It's getting to the point where everything is just making me mad, but I don't even get the luxury of being able to be mad because if I don't pretend I'm fine then everything falls apart even faster.

I just don't understand it sometimes. When things are good you tell me you love me and don't see a future without me, then somethings happens--usually just a little misunderstanding--and then for days or weeks all you want to do is push me as far away as you can. I don't know. I understand that you can't help the way your mind works and how you perceive things, but I can only pretend that things are fine so much.

I feel terrible. I'm tired, I'm stressed, I'm pissed off. I have to pretend I'm perfectly okay though because that's the only way she'll feel better. Things will only get worse if she knows how I feel, so I'm just fine.

 87 
 on: December 05, 2025, 09:48:03 PM  
Started by Trying306 - Last post by CC43
Hi Trying,

I know it's really tough.  I have an adult stepdaughter with BPD, and at 20, she was basically an emotional terrorist in the home.  She went "nuclear" with suicide threats.  She wouldn't eat with the family or help out one bit.  Her room and person were a mess, a reflection of her mental state.  She'd stay up all night and sleep until after noon.  She'd blame her family for all her problems.  Though she could pull herself together to do things she wanted, like go on spring break, at home she was passive-aggressive and extremely moody.  The irony was, it's wasn't spring break because she wasn't even enrolled in school.  She was NEETT--not in education, employment, training or therapy.  I think she was NEETT for far too long, to her own detriment and to that of her entire family.  If person isn't studying, working, volunteering or doing anything but watching screens all night, what are they?  They're doing nothing, which very quickly feels like becoming nothing. 

If your daughter manages to pull herself together enough to attend school and keep some friendships intact, then I'd say, that's a sign she's high functioning.  But the stress of it all is probably wearing her down, and when she's with you, she shows it.  My concern is that she's being violent.  Look, just because she has BPD doesn't give her a free pass to be violent.  That includes violence against you, your family and herself.  No violence should be a firm boundary in my opinion.  If your daughter is violent, I think you call the police, every time.  Now, pwBPD do NOT like boundaries.  It's likely that your daughter would up the ante with her behaviors, becoming meaner and more violent.  Because she has a victim attitude and uses projection, she would probably claim that YOU were violent, and that YOU started it.  (My stepdaughter did that, saying that family members "assaulted" her when she was violent.)  This is called an "extintion burst."  But if you are firm and call the cops every single time she's violent, she should learn that violence isn't tolerated in your home.

I think you are spot on in your analysis of your daughter's maturity.  It helped me to think of my adult BPD stepdaughter in terms of intellectual/chronological vs. emotional age.  At 20, she was bumping up against a complex adult's world with the emotional skills of a young teen.  She simply wasn't equipped to handle the academic pressure, social dynamics and expectations of autonomy of young adulthood.  Her emotional brain was still at the level of a young teenager, ruled by self-centeredness, impulsivity, desire for instant gratification, intolerance of discomfort, difficulties handling setbacks, a quick temper, lack of empathy.  She also lacked perspective and had a very naive, childish understanding of how the world works.  Worst of all, she didn't really know who she was or where she fit in.  I think she was terrified about the future and completely shut down in avoidance.  Yet thinking in terms of emotional immaturity gave me some hope.  My stepdaughter needed some extra time to mature, as well as therapeutic support to learn some better coping skills.  I think that's why DBT therapy can help people with BPD, provided that they commit to the process.

If your daughter is calling you useless, mean and stupid, when you are clearly not any of those things, that is code for what she thinks about herself.  She is so ashamed and preoccupied with feeling inferior that it colors everything she sees.  She interprets the world through that distorted lens.  Based on what you wrote, I'd say she's projecting her insecurities onto you, which is a common BPD behavior.  I'd say she's extremely insecure, and she needs tons of reassurances from you.  My guess is that she's finding college extremely challenging with a full course load and much less support than what she was used to as a younger school girl.  One thing she might try is a reduced course load, until she gets a better handle of it.

I'll wrap up by saying that it sounds to me like you are over-functioning for your daughter.  I know, you want to reduce the stress in her life, in the name of keeping her stable.  But if you protect her too much, she'll never feel the natural consequences of her behavior, and she won't learn.  I'd say, she's the one responsible for her mittens, and all her clothes in fact.  If she can't find her mittens, then she'll have cold hands for the day, which is the natural consequence.  If she's late to class, she bears the consequence, not you.  If she doesn't face any consequences, she'll never learn.  And if you treat her like an 8-year-old girl, she's going to act like one, and slowly she starts to feel like one, too.  If she wants food, she needs to come to the kitchen like everyone else.  It's not your job to provide her room service.  You don't have to tell her your plans, just stop acting like her personal maid/short-order cook/butler/chauffeur and start treating her like an adult.  Adults have responsibilities, too.  In my opinion, she needs to help out in the home, and when she starts helping out, she'll start to feel more competent and part of the family.  Just because she has BPD doesn't give her the right to be a demanding freeloader, correct?  But if you start to make these changes, my advice would be to proceed in baby steps, with one change at a time.


 88 
 on: December 05, 2025, 09:20:42 PM  
Started by mssalty - Last post by mssalty
It’s been awhile since I’ve had a truly BPD experience with my SO but today was triggering.  My SO assumed from a facial expression that I didn’t want to do something.  I have zero idea what expression I made and I was looking forward to doing what I was asked about.  When I got angry at my SO jumping to conclusions, my SO doubled down on knowing exactly what I was thinking and that I was essentially lying about how I felt. 

All I wanted was to be heard, believed, and acknowledged that it was hurtful to assume something that wasn’t true. 

I looked back on here and over a decade ago I’d posted something very similar and how my SO jumping to conclusions about my thought process made me question my own reality. 

It has been a very rough year and I thought my SO was moving out of her BPD behaviors.  Now I think it’s that I simply have gotten good at not triggering them and sucking up my own feelings and tonight I couldn’t.   


 89 
 on: December 05, 2025, 08:55:14 PM  
Started by CocoNR - Last post by SoVeryConfused
Hi,
This sounds so difficult. I can relate to the constant texts and calls, and some of the horrible things said. I believe they say whatever they are feeling in the moment, and what will hurt the other person most. I also believe them when they say they don't remember - I almost think it's protective because if they remembered everything, they would not be able to look themselves in the mirror.

I don't think you are a bad parent at all. Of course, you've hit your limit. Anyone would. What you can say is that all the wonderful things you have done for her so far haven't improved anything, and they've only brought more chaos to you and your family. So, trying NC or very low contact seems reasonable.

I was reading the book, Caretaking the BPD/NPD, the other night. It's for partners, but it still has a lot of good stuff for us. It made the point frequently that we have one life, and if we are not happy with how things are going in this one life, only we can change them. That really struck me.

Life IS too short. We can't control another person or work harder than they do on their health. I hope you can find a way to care for yourself, and if that's NC, then it is.


 90 
 on: December 05, 2025, 08:49:52 PM  
Started by sisyphusinsb - Last post by sisyphusinsb
Not sure how to begin.  I'm married 35+ years with 2 children and one step child to a woman who is clearly BPD.  I did not know that early on, but I did know that she had "emotional issues" from day 1.  It has been a long road.  I don't have to tell everyone on this forum how difficult this has been, of course.  But I am happy that I have finally found a place to share my experiences and frustrations with people who have been dealing with the kinds of things that I have. 

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