If anyone has any suggestions as to what is needed to improve the parent-child relationship when a parent has BPD, we would appreciate the input as we, too, struggle with how to help.
Valerie Porr
Well, there’s a lot of advice all over this site for family members on how to cope with loved ones with BPD… but seeing as you guys work with families I’ve got to ask… have you tried talking to or working with parents who have BPD on their part of the relationship?
Something I’ve always found slightly frustrating about support sites for family members is that there seems to be no expectation at all from the pwBPD, even though it takes two to make a relationship work.
Me and my mother both had BPD and for my own part I tried my best to try to find a balance between keeping her happy and keeping myself safe… and in the end it proved impossible to find a healthy balance between the two because she wasn’t doing any work of her own (or maybe her issues were bad enough that she wasn’t able to, idk).
Now in a setting like the one you mentioned, where professionals work with parents and children, one of my suggestions would be educating the parents on how to gain more emotional independence from their children (this may not be an issue for all BPD/child relationships but it is for many). I believe that could probably be achieved if the BPD parent can be taught both how to self sooth and how to improve on and expand their relationships with the other people in their lives as a way of not putting all their emotional eggs in one basket. These are a couple of the things I’ve done for myself as a way of breaking away from the enmeshment with my mother and I tried to encourage her to make friends of her own too but unfortunately her issues with people made that too hard for her. Then again, she wasn’t at all self-aware and refused to get professional help so I assume the parents you work with will be different and it should probably be a lot easier to get them to try to make efforts in that direction.
Anyway, I guess what I’m saying is that my suggestion is to work with each member of the family, with and without BPD, on the things they could each do to improve their part of the relationship and not just the ones that don’t have BPD.
Of course, the ones with BPD might need to be approached differently because many might start off with “oh gosh, you’re absolutely right, I see my mistakes now and will work right away at correcting them!” and then it’ll turn out that they didn’t really fully understand and didn’t really have the tools to make corrections… so that might be a slower process that might need to be approached more carefully… but I do believe it’s possible if it’s done with outsider intervention like what you mentioned.