10 articles: Responding to Parental BPD Provocations
David M. Allen M.D.Your choices are not just limited to these two: 1) To either to continue to be mistreated, or 2) to cut off all contact with your family.
A third choice is to change the nature of your relationship with your parents so that you are not being mistreated but are still in contact with them. Impossible, you say? I disagree. While you do not have the power to "fix" your parents, you do have the power to fix your relationship with them. If you change your approach to them in a consistent manner, that will force them to change their approach to you.
However, there is a big problem that you will face in doing this: since you have been in a relationship with them your whole life, they have developed a whole repertoire of behaviors, include recruiting other family members, to give you the powerful message, "You're wrong. Go back to responding the way you used to."
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/matter-personality/201311/responding-borderline-provocations-part-i
What not to do:A. Try to please the unpleasable. If they put you in a damned if you do, damned if you don't position (a double bind), try to do something to please them anyway. If they "yes-but" all of your suggestions for solving any problem they present to you (that is, if they reject any and all offered solutions with a sentence that has the structure, "Yes, I could do that, but... .), keep offering more solutions. If they ask you to do something that is clearly impossible, try your best to do it anyway.
B. Make sacrifices for them. Stay up all night talking with them on the phone and trying to reassure them about their latest emotional debacle when you have to go to work the next day. Give them thousands of dollars to help get them out of a financial bind that they themselves had put themselves in with profligate spending and irresponsible behavior.
Drop everything you are doing and rearrange your schedule for an entire day so you can do something for them like right now, even though the chances are 50/50 they will not even be there when you get to their abode - and be sure to cancel any planned activity that you've been looking forward to forever that might conflict with your doing so. Drive a hundred miles out of your way to take them somewhere.
C. Get defensive. Say, in frustrated tones, "You know, I'm only trying to help you" or ":)on't you understand that I have other things to do?"
D. Act hostile. Cursing them out is particularly helpful for you in achieving your goal of being a complete failure in their eyes.
E. Act guilty. Because you know down deep you should be able to solve impossible dilemmas, and that their behavior is probably all your fault anyway.
F. Stand there and “take it like a (foolish) man.” Are they slapping you around? Verbally abusing you will a barage of invective? Impugning everything you stand for? Screaming at you? Just stand there and let them. Maybe they'll stop.
G. Return in kind. I knew a psychiatrist who got so upset with the verbal nastiness of his patient that he told her she was a dog and that she should have consulted a veterinarian. See if you can stop the BPD person's pain-seeking behavior by inflicting more pain.
H. Lecture them. Tell them all about how cocaine is harmful, that they should leave an abusive relationship, or that they should not ride their bicycles at midnight through crime-ridden parts of town in a bikini with hundred dollar bills hanging out their bras. After all, they are just too stupid to figure these things out for themselves. They'll tell you they think cocaine is good for them. Argue the point.
I. Try to rescue the help-rejecting complainer. Go to their house to try to take them away from an abusive romantic partner. Let them move in with you rent free. Loan them money that they will never pay back. Try to mediate their disputes with others (trying to physically get in between two fighting adults is particularly important - maybe they'll both start in on YOU). Cuss out the people who they claim have mistreated them. Go ahead, I dare you.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/matter-personality/201312/borderline-provocations-how-not-respond
Tone of voice is crucial. You can use the same, and exactly the right words and sound as if you are indeed feeling helpless, guilty or hostile - or you can sound like you are at peace with yourself and with your own limitations.
Be relentlessly respectful of BPD’s suffering, abilities, and values. Be humble without disrespecting yourself or your own well being. Be honest. Communicate an expectation that someone with BPD will be able to behave in a reasonable and cooperative manner, and play to his or her strengths. And keep it up consistently, or ye olde variable intermittent reinforcement schedule will rear its ugly head.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/matter-personality/201401/responding-borderline-provocations-part-iii
Countering BPD provocation #1: Exaggerated over-genereralizations and wild accusations.
A high proportion of people with BPD often make overly dramatic, hyperbolic statements or accuse you of having ulterior motives for whatever you are doing or saying. When they do this, what they are in fact doing is literally inviting you to invalidate them.
In countering this ploy, the idea is to resist the invitation to invalidate them without agreeing to all the exaggerated histrionics or without agreeing that you are some kind of schmuck. Remember, disagreement and invalidation are not the same thing.
The key: No matter how awful or crazy-sounding what they say is, there is always a kernel of truth in it. Always. No matter how small.
The countermeasure, taught to me by the best professor in my psychiatry residency training program, Rodney Burgoyne, is therefore to validate the kernal of truth in the statement and simply ignore all the exaggeration as well as any negative implications.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/matter-personality/201403/responding-borderline-provocations-part-iv
Countering BPD provocation #2: Escalating demands on you to do more and more to make them feel better, when absolutely nothing you do or offer seems to help.
Time to declare helplessness outright: "I sure wish I knew of a way to solve this for you." I can say that with deep sincerity, because it is true. I really do wish I could quickly solve impossible dilemmas for people on the spot. I would love to be able to get people out of bad situations after they had already made it impossible to dig themselves out. If I could, I would be able to help so many people.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/matter-personality/201403/responding-borderline-provocations-part-v
Countering BPD provocation #3, the use of seemingly illogical statements and absurd arguments.
So the natural response to such statements is to want to argue with what the person with BPD says. Of course, this is actually invalidating to the person with BPD, because in fact they are intelligent enough to already know what the other person is arguing for. In response to arguing, the person with BPD will then dig in.
If you want to make an obvious point as a springboard for a discussion, you have to use a disclaimer. You have to acknowledge that the person with BPD already is well aware of the point you are making. You might say, "But as you already know, cocaine is destructive in the long run." Or, "Of course you should have the right to do that, but as I am sure you are aware, actually doing it is dangerous. I do not understand why you want to take such a risk." An important caveat is that you want to keep your statements as brief as possible, and NOT go on to explain what you just said or give additional information that justifies your opinion.
If you do not like that one, you can also just say nicely, "I disagree with you." Disagreement is not invalidation. It does not inherently make one person right and the other wrong. It is just a difference of opinion and nothing more. Many people with BPD have never experienced a respectful disagreement in their entire lives.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/matter-personality/201405/responding-borderline-provocations-part-vi
Others... .
borderline-provocations-part-vii-parasuicidality borderline-provocations-viii-lets-you-and-him-fightborderline-provocations-ix-hostile-sounding-comments responding-borderline-provocations-last-part