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P.S.
I love Pook's comment and would add that by providing so much money to your BPD son, you might be increasing his stress level. I saw this with my BPD stepdaughter, too. How, you might ask? By having so much money, they quicky set up a lifestyle that is unaffordable, unmanageable (for a pwBPD) and unsustainable. I write "quickly," because with BPD, there's typically a dire sense of urgency, an intolerance of delayed gratification, plus strong entitlement. Your pwBPD might buy an expensive new car with a seven-year loan payment. But with the expensive car comes expensive insurance, plus a desire for off-street parking, plus premium gasoline, plus expensive maintenance, plus premium tires. They're locked into a monthly payment and expenses that are beyond their budget, when reality is that taking an Uber everywhere would often be much cheaper. In addition, they lack "practice" in car ownership, which one would usually get by starting with a beater. And they sign an apartment lease using you as a co-signer, because on their own, they wouldn't be approved for the apartment, which is surely more luxurious than their wage allows. Maybe they move far away, using your resources (co-signing, first and last months' rent, help moving, help setting up with new furniture, etc.), which they never would have achieved on their own. Yet by moving far away, they're farther from their traditional support system (e.g. therapists, friends, family). And they just have to go on vacations involving planes, while they beg you to buy the tickets, because it's a "once in a lifetime" opportunity. Yet they spend way too much on the vacation itself--hotel, rental car, restaurant meals--charging it all to a credit card. Why do they keep getting credit? Because you bail them out by paying off past credit card debts. If you didn't bail them out, then they wouldn't qualify for new credit, and if they didn't have credit, then they couldn't afford the vacation--they'd have to save up for it like a normal person on a cash-based budget. Plus, you can't help but wonder, how are they taking so much vacation time while working? Are they putting their job at risk? On top of everything, they just have to have a dog, but didn't plan for the cost of vets, apartment pet premiums, kennels, etc. They think that having a pet is a "right" and might expect parents to pay for that, too. Don't forget that you're probably the automatic "free kennel," even if you don't want to take responsibility for his pet.
Anyway, all this means lots of extra stress for the pwBPD, because his lifestyle is not only too expensive, but also complicated--by administrative, logistical and caretaking obligations. Sometimes I think life would be simpler if they avoided lifestyle inflation financed by well-meaning parents. Instead, if they lived within their means, they probably wouldn't have so much stuff to take care of (car, lots of furniture, large monthly payments, pet, complicated travel), which at the end of the day is a lot less stressful. Plus, if his living quarters are modest, staying home all day isn't very entertaining, which means he gets out into the world more. He learns that he has to work, gradually and consistently, to get what he wants. In the process, he bolsters his identity and learns he has agency in his life. Eventually he can let go of the blaming and victim attitude. Or so I'd hope.
Just my two cents.
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