In short, I have three kids. I was my BPD kiddo's person. After a challenging relationship with my husband, she split and took her siblings with her. The oldest and youngest now speak to me. They miss me and seem torn. I haven't spoken to the middle one, C, for five years. She is the only one that also lives in my city, and I happen to know through her siblings that she is dating a guy named N.
I just needed to put the story somewhere that people would understand. If you're also dealing with this, I hope for you what I hope for me - that we find moments of joy, that we live life fully and continue to grow and find meaning and purpose.
Joy, I know it hurts not to be in touch with your daughter. When you write she had a challenging relationship with your husband, I take it that he's her stepdad, not her "real" dad, correct? That right there explains a lot to me. Assuming I've got that right, I'll venture another guess, which is that your daughter never accepted that you remarried, probably because she wanted 100% of your attention for herself. She couldn't comprehend that you wanted to move on, enjoy the stability of a healthy marriage, find companionship and love with a true partner. What's more, she doesn't embrace change, because change usually means growth, complex relationships, more responsibilities--all of which seem scary and completely overwhelming to her. Deep down she wants to retain her "toddler" status, when she got everyone's attention and had all her needs taken care of. Any threat of change made her anxious, resentful, fearful of the future. Let me guess some more: she acted out, created chaos in the household, resented you for remarrying, tried to punish you every way she could think of. Maybe she "regressed" and became really clingy, literally trying to use herself as a physical and emotional wedge between you and your husband. Did she have a meltdown at the wedding? How about at Thanksgiving and Christmas, ruining it for the family? Did she refuse to do anything with (or for) stepdad? Did she ignore anything he said, no matter how nice he had been to her over the years? Did she give him the silent treatment whenever she didn't get her way? Or maybe she threw tantrums until you both relented? Did she treat him like an ATM but nothing more? If my guesses are on target, it's because I lived through something similar.
Yet I think it's actuallly pretty awesome if your daughter is having some success at "adulting." If she's supporting herself somewhat and carving out an adult's life for herself, I think that shows you did a whole lot right. Sure, she feels she has to maintain the "I had an abusive childhood" (aka victim narrative) to convince herself that her family is causing her all sorts of problems. But, if in spite of all that negative thinking and victim attitude, she's still functioning in the real world, that is something to be joyful about. That's a main goal of parenting: preparing your kid to funcion independently in the real world. That's wonderful.
Deep down, I suspect your daughter feels shameful. She might regret acting poorly and making some bad choices. Most of all, she might think that you are ashamed of her, and that might be why it's so hard to reconnect with you. She might be secretly jealous that you have everything (good looks, a loving husband, a nice home, kids, maybe a good career too), whereas she thinks she has nothing, and it's just not FAIR. She's might feel like every day is a struggle, whereas she thinks other people have it so easy. She just can't be happy for you (or anyone else) until she's happy with herself. My guess is that once she's feeling more established as an adult--she finds a steady boyfriend, she gets a job she likes--she'll have a better sense of who she is and where she's going, and she can start to let go of some of the ancient grievances and negativity. She'll embrace an identity as a functioning adult, not an aggrieved/abused child. At least that is what I would hope.
In the meantime, I guess I'd advise that you should model for your kids what a healthy adult's life looks like. That includes taking care of yourself, as well as not fretting about things you have no control over. It means you enjoy your life with your husband, you pursue your hobbies, and you spend times with your friends. If your daughter doesn't want to spend time with you, that's her choice and her loss. But try to give her the benefit of the doubt--she's just not ready to repair the relationship with you yet, because she's working on herself and doing her own thing, and that's OK. You just be happy that she's doing what makes her happy.