Thanks for responding. She has been with us a few weeks and we are having troupe finding Drs and therapist to take her insurance or won't treat a minor or won't treat her disorder. Those that do have a waiting list til December.
Having to wait for professional help is frustrating, you are doing the best you can. You could go ahead and make the appointment and ask to be put on the cancellation call list. You might get her in sooner.
Feeling manipulated on an emotional level is what I mean. i don't know if it's intentional to get sympathy or if that's just how she is. Her past is full of what I've been told is lies and patterns of destructive behavior yet when she tell you the story's from her point of view she's the victim and my uncle was abusive and her stepmom always hated her. So everything she has done is their fault. I try to be neutral and not take a side.
This is common for people who suffer from BPD and traits of BPD. If they
feelmistreated then they must have been mistreated. Their intense emotions tell them their feelings are facts. The logic/reason part of their brain doesn't have a chance to balance their emotional thinking. Through skills like mindfulness and wisemind (DBT) they can learn to have more balanced thinking which will have a positive affect on their behaviors/reactions. Remaining neutral is optimal. One way to do this and build a relationship with her is by validating her emotions (not her thoughts or beliefs).
But if she truly is just a hurt young girl then how we go about daily life is different than if she tells lies to punish people who make her mad. My husband is home with them during the day so they are close. She likes to just hang out with him or my sons because my mom isn't as talkative or supportive. But am I putting them in danger by allowing her the freedom to hangout with them? But to restrict it would leave her isolated and she resents being treated like a child when my mom makes her go inside once it gets late. Part of me says to treat her as I would anyone else is what will help her heal. But the other part is scared of the unknown of what she may or may not be capable of.
Does she have a history of reporting false allegations of abuse? It may be advisable to keep a daily journal of the goings on in the home... .making specific notes of time frames, who she is with, and what happened that day.
She goes to the dr today, hopefully to get something for anxiety because she wants to hurt herself or die even when she gets upset. She's so afraid of being taken away from us, because she has been taken away from every other place. But in each situation ( other than her real parents) she had to leave because of her behavior , but in her head she's still the victim not the cause of having to leave. I just don't know enough about bipolar and BPD to know what is real and what is just real in her head.
What is real in her head is what is real to her. Simple yet confusing when her reality is not inline with the facts... .keep in mind that to her if she feels it then it is a fact.
She has been in therapy off and on in past after being taken from her parents. Then again at 13 for some troubles. But never consistently and in the past year was diagnosed with bipolar and after being committed to the hospital for several weeks last month she was diagnosed with BPD. No one ever said she had a diagnosis and possibly her parents didn't know because they never told us about it. We just have the records from the hospital with the BPD and her telling us she is on medication for the bipolar.
Is she taking her medications according to directions?
She is super sensitive to any stress around her and gets really upset and scratches til she bleeds. She was cutting in her previous home so thank God thats not happened. We are continuing to search for therapist and it seems that's the only real treatment for this, so I hope it will help. These are just things I've had experienced with her but past things I'm sure has to be involved in the diagnosis.
She has low distress tolerance. Imagine if you had such intense emotions, then imagine how something small like being told "no" would feel to you. To a regular teen being told "no" might leave them irritated/ disappointed. To a teen with BPD it might feel like rejection, unworthiness, controlling.
Hope this helps a bit in understanding her.
Here is some info that may also help:
DIFFERENCES/COMORBIDITY: Borderline PD and Bi Polar Disorder