Hi all,
Thank you so much for the thoughtful responses and questions. Let me clarify a bit about the situation.
I met bonus daughter (BD) when she was 10 years old.
I gave birth to my son (BD's half-brother) when BD was 12 years old.
7 months after that, I left their father.
He totally cut contact between me and BD several months later. So she and I had no contact for about 4.5 years.
When she turned 18, she chose to move out of his house and in with me and my son (now 6).
The 3 of us live together now.
As for BD's biological mother. They were estranged since BD was ~3 years old, and got in touch after she moved in here, however, bio mom has several other kids and lives in a different state. They haven't seen each other in-person since BD was a toddler.
My current partner (*not* her father) and I have been together for a little over 2 years now, and we live separately. But he and I are going to get engaged and we would like to move in together in about a year.
I believe he and I are on the same page when it comes to her now, yes. As of this last June (3 months ago) I realized many of the things about the living arrangement were NOT working for me and were not sustainable. I wrote up a living agreement which clearly lays out the conditions for BD continuing to live here, which include:
- She must attend therapy and psychiatric appointments
- She must take her medications as prescribed
- She must be working and/or in school
- Respectful communication, no volatile behavior (door slamming, yelling, etc)
- She is responsible for her own groceries
- She must complete her daily and weekly chores
- No guests unless they are pre-approved by me, and they also meet certain requirements
- No substances (including alcohol, nicotine, etc) inside my house at all
Etc.
It also lays out exactly what I will do in the case of violations of the agreement. E.g. if she forgets her chores 1x, I give a reminder, if it happens a few times, we need to have a sit-down conversation about it and that may require we get her therapist involved, if it becomes a pattern then the living situation is unstable and we need to talk about the transition plan.
I see that she is trying in many ways. For example, she is working and she walks to work (~1 mile) without complaint now. She has respected the major rules - such as substances/guests - I believe because those are the ones with the steepest consequences.
The chores, groceries, etc.......are ongoing areas of difficulty, which may be true for most teenagers, and I think more so for teenagers with BPD.
Thank you again for listening and caring
