Hi Pook 075,
That is so amazing that you figured out a way of talking that is really effective in keeping most conversations calm between you and your ex-wife and daughter. Kudos to you!! I am curious though - how do you think this would play out if you were still living with both of them and the pressure/expectation was naturally much higher? I guess it's impossible to really know since this isn't the current reality, but what is your guess?
That is so amazing that you figured out a way of talking that is really effective in keeping most conversations calm between you and your ex-wife and daughter. Kudos to you!! I am curious though - how do you think this would play out if you were still living with both of them and the pressure/expectation was naturally much higher? I guess it's impossible to really know since this isn't the current reality, but what is your guess?
Honestly, I don't know. I've taken several short trips with my BPD daughter and we got along well the entire time. But that's also sort of deceptive because my kid was always happy on vacations and getting away (my ex was as well). It's like traveling lets them get out of their own reality for a little bit and just exist.
I will say, however, that our relationships have fundamentally changed because I'm not the enemy. I never was, of course, but they used to perceive me that way when they were disordered. So by not fighting back, by learning to be patient and supportive, what used to ruin the week now might ruin a minute or two.
Even when my kid completely loses it and has a full-blown meltdown towards me, she's messaging later that day or maybe the next day, acting like it didn't even happen. Of course, I know it happened and I also know that I'm probably not going to get an apology. She knows it too but can't admit it, so she'll usually try to do something nice for me instead. Again, it's a fundamental change in the relationship and that changes everything else involved. I almost never see my kid at her worst anymore and if I do, it's because she's so far gone that she needs immediate medical/psychiatric intervention.
I've thought about this so much when I first found this site and really researching BPD because when our relatives, spouses, whatever are treating us badly, we often notice that they're still kind to the neighbors, their co-workers, other family members, etc. We know that they can become toxic to the people they're closest to because they feel like those people have turned on them. So I figured, okay, we need to change the narrative...how do I actually show that I'm not the enemy here?
Boundaries are important on our end to protect our own mental/physical health when things are too much. That's sort of like putting on football gear to protect you from hard hits in a football game. It definitely helps, sure, but the real goal is not to get hit in the first place. I think we can get so focused on boundaries that we forget the other side of the equation- how do we just stop fighting and get back to a place of laughing and having fun.
I've done that two or three times now successfully (my ex wife's brother was the third) and it certainly wasn't easy. It is worth the fight though to just say (and keep saying) "I love you and I'm here for you. What can I do?"
At first, you heard disordered answers because that's where all the whirlwinds come from. You could stop doing this, you could always do that, you need this and this and this. But that's not what this is about, those aren't the actual problems.
The real enemy is disordered thinking and you have to get past the surface level stuff to really talk about the actual problems. In most cases, it's not feeling loved, seen, or respected. That's why my standard response, "I love you, I'm here for you no matter what..." sort of tackles all the BPD objections at once. I just kept saying it, especially when things were ugly, especially when I wanted to fight back or tell them off for the ridiculous things that were being said.
I hope that helps!


