So my question is this: If there are experts out there that know this is a living hell for kids to grow up in this environment, then why is it so VERY difficult to protect them legally while they are small?
Why is our court system so slow to act to provide these children with a stable and loving environment?
I'm not by any means suggesting that the BPD parent get the boot. But I am suggesting that the courts should look at these "high conflict" custody cases and go straight to the psych evaluation. Getting the child help early is the only way to keep them from suffering needlessly, and to keep the risk of PA down.
Putting majority time share and decision making in the hands of a nonBPD parent would certainly make things easier for the child.
My short answer? It's more complicated then
BPD = less custody/ nonBPD = more custody. I've worked in child advocacy before, and there
is a lot being done to make sure the children are kept safe from suffering endlessly... . however, the bar is set pretty low as to what makes a parent fit. Mental illness is also not grounds for a loss of custody.
I read an article recently that discussed that the trend is that
both parents tend to be part of these high-conflict situations. These kinds of cases fill up the courts' dockets when parents just can't agree to simple things (from vacation time to whether or not Junior can play soccer). So these judges are finding that by giving primary custody/decision making to only one parent - it reduces the conflict because without joint decision making, there is no room for arguing.
We all know that it is nearly impossible to co-parent with a BPD if they are choosing to be difficult. Why must the nonBPD parent and the child have to suffer through this illness any longer than necessary? It is hard enough to get away from the BPD, and then the courts continue to ask you to co-parent with them for years before they act. If they(BPD) were reasonable there wouldn't be this problem to begin with.
There are success stories and there are not-so-successful stories on these boards. Obtaining custody through the courts is a long process and there needs to be a significant level of value to transferring custody, and that goes beyond just having a parent who is suffering from BPD. It's not an absolute determination that a parent can't be a parent - even with the research that shows high risk factors for the children. The same goes for other kinds of parents who are say... . below the poverty line... . or a teenaged parent... . where studies show higher risk for the kids.
It's not so black and white so to speak.

I also absolutely agree that it can be extremely difficult to coparent with a pwBPD, because reason does tend to be a foreign concept.

Mine is a success story in that my husband has learned skills in dealing with her (and his frustration) with minimal court involvement, because he learned very early on that it was a pretty big gamble and the stakes were too high. The court system proved to be pretty biased towards their mom and he wasn't willing to fight the good fight.
So he instead embraces a life where he continuously and without fail, takes the high road. It is not even relatively fair - not in any sense of the word. She also doesn't have a negative effect on him (for the most part) and he is really good at neutralizing situations. He knows when to take a time out and when to engage, he knows her triggers and he has learned some pretty keen communication skills. I call him the ex-wife whisperer.
