But I have not done anything abusive to her, except react to her own abusiveness. Sometimes this was pent-up anger at what she took from me as a young woman, but never anything violent, just a normal person's emotional disregulation at an abusive person. (She even at one point accused me of "reactive abuse"...whatever that is?) I have become the enemy for her and that won't ever change. The victim consciousness is very intense on her end. I am seeing it now for what it is and that I don't think there's any chance for transformation, though I continue to pray for it, maybe some miracle could occur, but I don't know if I've ever heard of a borderline awakening out of their patterns.
My parents stayed together and so, my father was my mother's main emotional caretaker (his choice). In his elder years, he got ill and BPD mother's behavior escalated. I didn't understand this initially, stepped in to help, but her emotionally and verbally abusive behavior was difficult to tolerate. I had to have boundaries with this, for my own sake and also for me to be able to function, at work, at home.
As Dad's health deteriorated, I also experienced my own emotional distress over the situation. If we are dealing with our own emotions, we have less bandwidth to deal with other situations. I had not gotten angry at my BPD mother probably since I was a teen. Not that there wasn't any issues- I had learned to not argue with her, but this time, I was overwhelmed and I yelled at her.
If you have heard the expression "don't pee in the wind"- that would describe why not to do this. If anyone expressed anger at my BPD mother- it wouldn't get through to her. She dysregulates and projects it all back at you. You then feel worse for having done that.
Why do we get upset with, or try to bring up hurts with a loved one? It's not because we want to hurt them. It's because, we want to be seen, understood, and hopefully find a way to move forward with them. If we didn't care, we wouldn't bother. But this didn't work with BPD mother. She'd dysregulate and project her feelings back out. It didn't connect with her. It only made things worse.
I think a determinant for our relationship was my own ability to self regulate and also decide on what boundaries I would have to have. Her needs could be constant but nobody can be someone's 24/7 emotional caretaker. She didn't like boundaries. It seemed that whatever I could do for her was not enough. I'd visit and do things for her but she'd find something I did or didn't do that would upset or disappoint her. What helped me to see that this wasn't personal to me but a part of the BPD dynamics is that she did this with caretakers too in her elder years. The closest a caregiver got to her, the more this kind of dynamic happened. It doesn't seem fair that the closer one is to someone with BPD, the more they experience the disordered behaviors.
It helped to have a spiritual perspective on this. There's a higher Judge in all of this, who sees both of us in a much clearer way. While I think we are required to act in ethical ways towards others, I don't think we are expected to tolerate behavior that is hurtful to us without limits. Where you find yourself in this balance is an individual decision- something you will be wrestling with your own conscience over. It felt more like walking a tightrope, sometimes falling over one side (too much) or the other (not enough).
I think this article describes the emotional situation well, even if it's not exactly the same circumstances.
https://slate.com/technology/2022/03/mentally-ill-parent-elder-care-boundaries-liz-scheier.html