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The worst part about all of this, even worse than the years of manipulation and delusions, is the fact that I see so much of her in myself. I’m working to fight it, I really am, but i’m terrified i’m becoming her, and that i’ll curse my children in the same way. I’m feeling hopeless, this is incredibly out of character for me to post on this site, hopefully i didn’t do anything wrong, i just need advice, direction, what the heck do i even do.
St Dymphna, welcome! You are safe here.
You've come to a place where we all have someone like your mom in our life, so we "get it". You are not alone.First, you are not your mom. Just the fact that you have the insight to think about this shows how different you are from her. Do you think your mom ever questions her own behavior?
One thing I learned on this board when I landed here some years ago, was that it was okay to think my own thoughts, and feel my own feelings. They didn't have to (and shouldn't) mirror my mother's. When I look back on it now, it was strange that I didn't know that. But my mother raised me to be emotionally enmeshed with her, and it took a long time to figure out how to untangle that.
Second, you are reflecting on this. Your mom likely doesn't have the capacity to reflect. While I'm no psychiatrist, my experience with my uBPD mom, reading a ton of books, doing my own research, and being on this board since 2018, makes me think it's quite uncommon for persons with BPD to "reflect". Personally, I believe "reflection" is one of the key tools that can protect us from being like them. You appear to be reflecting.
I think almost all of us "nons" are "afraid" of being like our mom's. To look at it another way, reflection is probably the very thing that protects us from becoming "mini-thems". We desire to NOT be like them, perhaps we catch ourselves sometimes, but then we take ACTION to do things differently. Inotherwords, we grow. This is key. We work on ourselves.
I love it that you are 22. I didn't reach the end of my rope with my mom until I was in my 50's. Call me slow. Call me easily manipulated. Call me a caretaker. Call me foolish. I actually have a lot of hope for you because you are onto this while you are still forming your adult values and developing your adult sense of self. Good for you!
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My counselor suggested an Al Anon group to meet with but I figure go straight to the source.
You are also clearly resourceful because you found us! And you are a problem solver. You are solutions based and looking for support to help navigate a complex problem. Your mom on the other hand is a problem maker by the sounds of it.Does that help? Your mom likely wants to believe you are like her. If this is the case, you don't have to believe it. Does this fit?
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It’s like i can’t even hate her for what she’s done because i know half of her doesn’t even remember it.
I want to address this because it's something that has come up on this board at other times over the years. Many of us can relate. It seems like they "pretend" that they don't remember. This may be true. It may be true sometimes. But I also wonder if a person who is raging or otherwise under 100% control of their emotional brain and 0% of their rational brain may have distorted memories, or a bit of amnesia because of the mental state they were in. I don't know. Or maybe, they just "deny" because they can't regulate their own deep shame, or reflect and learn from it to avoid repeating the behavior in the future. In the end, it might not matter why they don't remember it. The important thing for us is to realize is this is who they are, and they are unlikely to change, and so...what do WE have to do or change or acknowledge ourselves to navigate this dysfunction? One time when my mom was raging at me at her house, I picked up my shoes and walked out the front door, closed the door, and went to my car (didn't even take the time to put my shoes on). She opened the door again and kept yelling at me across her driveway. The point is I didn't try to reason with her, or defend myself, I took action, and left the abuse. The best way to teach a person, is to let them learn through natural consequences. She lost the audience that was giving her attention. She lost the opportunity to vent. She lost her daughter, and the ability to have a relationship that day. Some people are so dysfunctional, we just have to learn new skills (eg unspoken boundaries) to navigate our lives with them.You definitely did not do anything wrong by posting here. Just like there's nothing wrong with joining an Al-Anon group, and there's nothing wrong with having a counsellor. You are trying to solve a problem. How can there be anything wrong with that?
My question is: what makes you feel like there could be something wrong with that? Where do you think that could be coming from?
Post as often as you like. Take care


