I understand your situation with a child. And I might feel totally different if my pwBPD was my child. Mine is my parent.
that makes sense... .i have nc w/my bio dad who was not present in my childhood... .i have nc w/him because i get nothing from having a "relationship" w/him. it is all one sided and shallow. i have other relationships to tend to that are much more reciprical! is he disordered? probably.
I've spent my life trying to make her happy and failed just as recently as two days ago,
i understand your need to please and keep peace to try to improve the relationship... .and i also understand that we don't have the power to make anyone else "happy".
while she continuously works at eroding my boundaries
i am definitely a big believer in firm boundaries... .it is where we find our personal power and keep vigilance over our own lives!
It depends on how strong I am in any one period of time. And how it impacts my own recovery with my bipolar disorder. As a human person it is an impossible goal to be 'recovered' - I can only keep moving along the path towards 'recovery'.
yes, as human beans we are all fallible and fall short at times. you bring up an interesting point about recovery... .is there such a thing as "recovered" from BPD or bi polar... .if one looks at these disorders from a biological perspective, then if "healthy chemical/brain activity" is achieved over a long period of time, then could one be considered "recovered"? w/BPD... .if one changes thier thinking, achieves consistant wisemind, and then healthy coping/behavior is achieved over a long period of time, are they recovered?
getting off topic "family systems" a bit here... .yet... .as the article says, it is all relevant and intertwined.
lbjnltxs