Hi & welcome, Bluetrue76. No worries on where to start, we can just chat about what you've shared and I know we'll figure out where to go from there.
Your D17 has a
lot going on. Can I ask, does she accept any/all of her diagnoses? How has she interacted with the diagnoses (i.e. "I don't have an eating disorder I just look this way" through "I feel relieved to be diagnosed BPD because it helps me understand myself")?
Has she done any kind of hospital time for anything? ED treatment center etc?
Are the hallucinations only auditory or also visual (or, I don't know, "other")? What is her level of self awareness about the hallucinations, as far as you can tell?
How long have you guys tried the Rx? I'm guessing it takes a while for the positive effects to kick in, or to know if there are even positive effects?
I’m trying hard to ride this out with her at home by her side literally.
What sense do you get from her about your support? Does she seem to accept/value it, or are you sometimes the "bad guy"? It could be positive if she accepts your help to get through this episode.
...
wondered whether anyone else has experienced this part of BPD
While the person in my life with PD traits isn't a child, you will see some stories on here of kids with BPD with delusions, for example, and then other stories on other boards of people with romantic partners who have "voices"/senses telling them to do some psychotic stuff. I believe BPD was so named because pwBPD seem to exist right on the edge of where neurotic traits meet psychotic traits (and I don't mean "psycho murderer" type stuff in the way "psychotic" sometimes gets used in popular culture, rather more the "psychotic break" sense where your mind/psyche isn't dealing with reality). So it's sort of "part of the program" for a person dealing with BPD to have moments or times of delusion, paranoia, psychotic episodes, hallucinations, etc. It does really depend on the individual, though, if/how it shows up.
...
That being said,
you also are going through a lot, and you have for a long time. I'm wondering what your support system is like? Family members? Close friends? Therapist? When there's a pwBPD in our lives, there's no such thing as "too much support". I'd be interested to hear about how you take care of you.
Keep us posted on how you guys are doing.
-kells76