I have an idea of what may be going on, based on my own experiences with BPD mother. Perhaps this idea can help you.
PwBPD have a poor sense of self, and are extremely sensitive to shame and being exposed for having anything wrong with them. They take victim perspective on the Karpman triangle. If they perceive something or someone (intentional or not) as a threat to their self image, they feel they are being attacked.
The unspoken family rule was to uphold the perception that BPD mother does not have any issues. We were not allowed to say anything about her behavior and if we did, the reaction was extreme. My father was fully aligned with this and protecting her. He would get angry too.
BPD mother had a charming and competent external persona. Nobody outside the family had a clue what was going on. If anyone seemed to think otherwise or catch on to a possible issue- they would be discarded.
I knew there were issues when I was at home, but after going to college, and having my own family, I saw my parents mainly on visits. We visited as a family, and BPD mother held it together in front of my kids during visits. I actually began to believe she was doing OK.
In their elder years, Dad was in the hospital for an illness and I went, on my own, to help out. I was alone in the house for over a week with BPD mother, and saw an entirely different picture- the dysregulations, the raging, and it also reminded me of what I experienced as a child. She wasn't doing better, I just didn't see it. But I also was naive about BPD relationship dynamics.
I was concerned about my father coming home to this situation and I naively discussed the situation with his health care team, not knowing the consequences of exposing her.
Her reaction was extreme. BPD mother perceived people as being "on her side" or "not her side". She rallied the "people on her side" against me- triangulated. To protect herself, she had to discredit me to them and rally them to her side and push me out.
I didn't understand what was going on at the time, it was hurtful, but - this was not about me. She wasn't doing anything to me. This was, to her, self preservation.
Looking back at your posts, your D went NC and began this behavior when she saw that you had ordered a book about BPD. In her therapy- she kept trying to get you to admit to doing things that hurt her. This feels hurtful to you, understandable- but I don't think your BPD-D is "doing this to you". I think she feels threatened by your looking into BPD, and this is how she is managing her self image by aligning with her siblings.
My guess is that she also feels threatened by younger D's success- her graduating, her "normal" life in comparison.
I'm not downplaying that this dynamic can be hurtful to relationships. It caused divisions in my family. I'm sharing to hopefully present this as not personal to you, because reacting out of hurt feelings adds fuel to the drama fire.
By holding it together for this one event- your younger-D will have a good day to remember and this doesn't reinforce BPD-D's behavior if she can't rattle you.


