Hi ParentofBPDteen,
Welcome and hello
You're among friends here. We understand what you're going through.
I finished reading Beyond Borderline and saw in the final pages a note from Dr. Gundersen (apparently a main advocate for defining the BPD diagnosis in the DSM) that people recover from BPD in a variety of ways. Many of them have stops and starts to their therapy, for many reasons. The takeaway is to keep moving forward, one small step at a time, toward hope. It will be two steps forward, one step back, and that is actually a forward momentum, even though the trajectory zigs and zags.
You may indeed run out of money for DBT, your D may not stay with it, and even so, everything can still work out ok. Set backs are to be expected.
I recommend the book Beyond Borderline as a hopeful touchpoint to help you through times of doubt. It includes essays from people who are BPD and recovered. Buddha and the Borderline is also hopeful (and realistic). Both increased my compassion when my tank was running empty.
My T tells me she has had BPD clients who go on to live lives worth living, that where there is a will, there is a way.
Our role is to learn the skills that help protect us and prevent us from enabling, to communicate in skillful ways that prevent things from getting worse. Allowing our loved ones to experience the consequences of their actions is an act of love, even though it is so painful to stand by and witness the trail of destruction they may wreak. It takes a lot of strength to do this.
Also, BPD and Adolescence by Blaise Aguirre is excellent. We become experts on the condition that terrorizes our loved ones by listening to others who understand this disorder from walking the path alongside us, and that includes experts as well as people here. So there's a lot of reading that goes on
I'm glad you are here.
LnL