Hello everyone,
I would like to know if someone's 14 year old is going through with BPD and how they are dealing with it. Please share your experiences.
Thanks
Charu
Hi BPDfreca,
Although we didn't adopt my daughter until she was older, I met her when she was 15 and I was volunteering. She went through more than a dozen foster homes in a couple of years, and 14-15 was when her symptoms started getting bad. I watched in horror as foster parent after foster parent reacted in the worst ways possible to her, making it continually worse.
I cannot stress the importance of validating their feelings enough. These kids expect you to react a certain way, and when you don't, it can go a long way to diffusing the situation. I recommend you read the TOOLS section of this site if you haven't already. But the worst thing you can do is invalidate their feelings, which (I speak from experience) it is very easy to do even unintentionally because what they are saying is often SO ridiculous. You have to ignore what they are saying and get at the meat of how they are feeling. If they're ranting about something someone did to them, just saying something like "you must feel so frustrated and upset." can go a long way.
The second worst thing you can do is argue with them. Again, what they are ranting about is likely complete nonsense. Trying to point out why what they're saying is wrong in the moment accomplishes nothing. If they're mad at you because you won't let them do something, you can simply keep saying "i understand what you're saying, AND my answer is still no."
My therapist (who has years of experience with DBT) taught me that saying that, and putting your hand up in a stop motion close to your chest (in a non-threatening way) can go a long way to shutting the argument down. Try practicing it by yourself. "I understand how you feel, and my answer is still no." It really works.
I hope that helps a little bit. Definitely get yourself a therapist experienced with BPD. There is a good book on BPD in adolescents, too. If you can find a way to stop reacting to them in a way that fuels them, it is very possible to stop the cycle and reconnect. It took us a couple of years to figure it out with our daughter but we are in a much better place now with her.
If your child keeps getting worse even with all of this and him in DBT, you may want to look at in-patient DBT before he turns 18. I think that recognizing it at such a young age, though, there is a lot of hope.