What is your goal in confronting your sister now? Where do you anticipate it will take your relationship with her?
Is it necessary to confront her?
My goal is to get the past abuse out in the open, point out her problematic behaviors, how they've impacted me, and signs I've seen in my niece that she's starting to be impacted in similar ways. I'm hoping that calling attention to it will help her spot the behaviors that are still there. I don't believe she does everything with malicious intent, but she seems oblivious to how her actions affect others.
This feels necessary to me. I'm at the point right now where I can barely look at her through my anger, and I'm hoping this will open a door for us to start building a more normal relationship. These might be naive hopes, but it's also my first time ever confronting her with the impact she's had on me from those more volatile years. We've had smaller confrontations throughout the years that have mostly not gone well though- but I was also more immature and not aware of how to handle her gaslighting and turning things on me.
Now?
I think this is the best time to confront her. It's the first time in a while that she's been sober, and the first time in years that she's had therapy. From what she told me, she did really well in rehab, had a lot of growth, was part of some sort of leadership program, and they even had a dual-diagnosis program so she says she's on the right meds for her BPD for the first time. She should be at her best right now, so if there's ever a time to get her to understand my point of view, my therapist and I agree that this is the time.
That all being said... she also lies. She showed me her chips and bracelets from her programs, but I have no clue the significance of them. I have no clue if she really tried in rehab or if she just muddled through it to be able to say that she did it. Before she went in, it seemed like she was already priming us for a relapse by telling us how most people fail the first time and have to go back to rehab.
What boundaries do you have in place with your sister? Have they worked, and how well have they protected you?
My main boundary with my sister is that I no longer talk to her if she uses abusive language towards me. She knows that if it devolves into name-calling then I won't respond and she'll just be yelling into the void. This has been firmly in place for about 6 years now and hasn't been an issue. Prior to this boundary, she was super hostile towards me, but once I went no contact for a while she suddenly liked me and we haven't had any majorly hostile events since.
I live pretty far from her usually and she's hesitant around my husband (I think she recognizes that he doesn't like her), so she tends to behave herself when she's on "my turf" at least.
Beyond that though, I don't honestly have many boundaries that are maintained. If I tell her I'm not mentally able to have a tough conversation with her, she finds a loophole and instead just bombards me with her side of the conversation anyway. If I tell her I'm too busy to do something for her, she messages me about it every day to see if I'm still too busy. It feels like she stomps all over my needs whenever there's something she needs from me. Sometimes I just get steamrolled.
However, I feel like not having the confrontation is being too passive when my niece is in the picture. I might not have great chances of her listening to me and recognizing her toxic behavior, and I'm terrified of the outcome, but some chance is worth it if it benefits my niece. At the very least, I'd like to be able to tell my niece someday that I tried to help in every way I could and this feels like the first step in that. My sister is a single mom and my niece has 12 more years with her.