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Hi Notwendy,
Thanks for your considered reply. I agree that sometimes the dreaming is image-related, a sort of bragging about intentions. My BPD stepdaughter will do this a lot, and even put intentions on her resume: I'm moving to XYZ city; I'm studying for an MBA. Yet the reality is that she hasn't taken any concrete steps to move, and she hasn't signed up for any MBA classes yet. Maybe these days, with social media, "intentions" are all that matters, and it's important to be always "broadcasting" what she wants, to get attention and affirmation. And yet sometimes, I think it backfires. Other times, I think it's more of a request for help (money, logistical support) to facilitate her intentions.
To illustrate, she'll say something like, I really want to go to Paris. I might say, That sounds marvelous. Paris in an amazing city. Have you looked at flights? And then she'll say, No, I mean live there. I might reply, that's certainly possible, maybe in a couple of years. She'll say, I want to go now. I might say, I'm not stopping you. I lived abroad for over a decade, in two different countries in fact, it was an amazing experience. And then she'll try with her dad: I need money to go to Paris. Suddenly, fantasy clashes with reality. Where's the money coming from? Where will she live? Does she expect me and her dad to lease an apartment for her? What about a visa? She doesn't speak any French, she doesn't know a soul in the country, she'd be far away from her support system. We might say something like, you can't just show up there and expect to live and support yourself without a plan. She'll reply, Other people make it work. But what she doesn't understand is that other people make it work becuase they actually do the preparatory work. Maybe they study a semseter abroad through a college program. Maybe they get a job and then transfer abroad on a work visa, and do a ton of language study on the side, like I did. She seems so naive about the real world that it's scary. Maybe it's cognitive dissonance: dreaming like an adult, but having an understanding of reality like a 13-year-old.
I guess my stock response has been: We're not preventing you from doing what you want. But she hates that response, on the one hand because she's the one to blame if her dream doesn't come true, and on the other hand, because I'm not helping enough. But the funny thing is, I think I could help her on execution, provided that she's realistic about timing and the work required. Yet she wants instant gratification. She wants the glitz without the guts, she wants the sweets without the sweat. She always wants to be somewhere else, so she doesn't have to live her "real" life and get a "real" job. Ugh.
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