My dad was one of life's optimists, a placid good guy and I think that must have been a good counterbalance for her behaviour - I was always more frightened of her when I as a child when my dad was away in business because her mood would always turn! Funny thing is she has a blazing argument with my brother the other day and said that we kids used to beat her up! She remembers made my brother ill with stress recently!
Anyway she always kinds of pulls us back in when she realises she's gone too far and my brother and I were invited for lunch yesterday. I of course had to hear her extremely venomous version of what happened between her and my brother before he arrived.
She doesn't like sitting outside when it's warm so it was nice that she wanted to yesterday but it was a weird experience in itself because I knew she had stripped a number of rooms if the house of all the furniture and everything in it but walking through the empty dining room and sun room to get to the garden was still shocking - my dad loved the sun room and it's like she's got rid of every trace of him! She even gave the fireplace away from in there that a future buyer of her house would have to replace! The garden was bare, it was my dad's pride and joy but the summerhouse, wooden furniture, ornaments and statues all gone! Not even one of his bird boxes left. This is where it also gets really chilling, my brother came whilst she was inside and he showed paving stones in the garden that she had carved "DEATH" in to several times! She had showed him them the day before on his birthday! What is she trying to achieve by doing that!
She had a rant that her doctors have now started refusing to prescribe her Lorazepam and Diazepams anymore - alcohol abuse ABC suicidality will do that! She laboured the point three times that she's been on them for 46 years - I'm 46 so I'd that a loaded dig to blame me being born for how she is.
You get the caring mum moments but the dark, evil.twin keeps coming out and makes every visit hard!
I also was afraid of my mother. Even if I could rationalize this as an adult, the physical reaction of fear- that was automatic. She also did the push pull- if she sensed she went too far, she'd be very nice after that, but it got hard to trust the "nice"- because her moods were unpredictable.
This automatic fear response isn't due to not being able to forgive- it's years of experiencing an unpredictable person and not feeling emotionally safe around them.
NC is one choice but I didn't want to choose that. I assume you will be in some contact with your BPD mother and also as a support to your brother. Your mother is not going to change, so how will you manage visits and contact?
Some things that helped me were to call on a schedule and not be available other times. However, as BPD mother got older I wanted to know how she was doing so that changed. When she was in assisted living, there were nurses and assistance there so I knew I could put my phone on do not disturb at night- as there were people there to assist, and I could call in the morning or they also could call me at night.
One idea for you and your brother is to each take shifts of calls- and have some time where your mother is only able to call one of you. Set your phone for do not disturb for her # or block/unblock. If it were a serious situation, you can still call each other.
The reason for this is to allow us to calm down the "fear" response and feel safe, and to sleep better. This is basic self care of ourselves and protects our own sleep. It's not about your mother or anything she did or didn't do- it's making sure we take care of our own basic needs. This is also why I chose to stay in a hotel when visiting her when she was still in her house. Staying somewhere else also gave her some alone time, although it was hard for her to be by herself, she still liked her privacy and own space.
BPD mother also emptied the house of my father's belongings quickly. This seems opposite to what we'd expect. I think your mother and mine as well also experienced a sense of grief or loss in their own ways, but due to projection, it was more like feeling angry, and removing items that she thought made her feel that way.
Visiting her with someone else along also helped. She would hold it together better when someone else was there.
Something about being with me also seemed to trigger something in her. I think she could sense I was fearful of her- and perhaps was reacting to that? I don't know. It wasn't intentional on my part- I didn't have any intentions of being hurtful to her or bringing up past issues. Rather the opposite- during short visits, I just tried to make it nice, not get into any drama, and go along with what she wanted as long as it was reasonable. Still, she seemed to perceive something I did or didn't do as being hurtful to her and so she'd get upset or angry- over something I couldn't have imagined she'd see it that way.
Another safety boundary was to say goodbye to her the day before leaving and tell her I would call her when I got home rather then to speak to her right before I left, because this could be when she'd be angry at me. This allowed me to drive home without being upset or interruptions.
I assume you and your brother will be in contact so if the two of you can come up with a plan to give each other some "time off" while the other takes phone calls or visits, it will help preserve your own sense of well being. These boundaries aren't a negative. They aren't about your mother. It's about how to be able to visit her. It is difficult but if you choose to have contact, it's to help you make the visits less stressful if possible.
The medication abuse is an issue- but you have no control over it. It's a dilemma because, she also now physically is dependent on them and likely they help her manage her anxiety so she was self medicating. However, since they are tighly regulated, her doctors won't be willing to prescribe them, as they have limits on what they are allowed to do.
For your mother, the regulations, and electronic records are a relatively new change. She's been doing this for a long time, and they weren't being tracked this way. Now a doctor can look up her records and see what she's been taking and the doctor has to follow regulations about this. That they won't do this for her is a natural consequence of her behavior. This is out of your hands- the medical system is who needs to manage this.
When BPD mother was in assisted living, the staff would manage the medicines. BPD mother had a lot of anxiety and medicine helped with that- so the medical providers did put her on some medicines that could help. One thing about the Lorazepam (or any one of these drugs). It did help her when she was using it before but as she got older, she would react to it differently. She'd be delirious on it, not know where she was, as if she had dementia but it would get better when she was taken off it so it wasn't the dementia but the medicine. I learned that this is a common reaction in older people, so if your mother is acting worse on Lorazepam, consider this possibility.
The other challenge for you is that there also could be physical changes with your mother's age. A common cause of confusion and changes in thinking with older people is dehydration and/or urinary infection. This happened with BPD mother too.
Your mother may not want to go to emergency if she's acting out but this may be the best course of action for her so they can check her over.