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Author Topic: I’m struggling  (Read 134 times)
FindPeaceNow
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What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Child
Relationship status: Adult child living in our home
Posts: 1


« on: April 14, 2025, 03:12:00 AM »

Hello,
This is my first post. It may be more of a vent, but I am at the end of what I can handle. I often come to this site to read stories so that I can validate that I am not crazy and that others, unfortunately, have experienced similar things. I have no one to talk to about the absolute craziness that happens at time. I’m so sick of being blamed for everything wrong in my son’s life. I’m sick of being accused of supposed mental abuse, being a narcissist, selfish and many other flat out lies. I’m not perfect, but I have tried to support him unconditionally and try to validate what I can and try to not respond when it’s a flat out figment of his imagination. I am not always successful and get reactive after a few hours of it. I am shocked with the things he comes up with to blame me for. My self worth has been eroded to nothing. I feel like a complete failure as a parent, as I don’t have a clue how this happened. At other times, he wants to talk like nothing ever happened, and im the go to person to celebrate the successful things that go on. It’s a constant roller coaster of emotions and I never know when the switch will flip. I have been traumatized by his multiple suicide attempts and constant talk about it, which lead me to stay in “conversations”where I have become reactive, that I should walk away from, but am terrified that that will be the last conversation I will have with him, therefore I try desperately to somehow turn the conversation for the better, which is crazy on my part because I’m not dealing with a logical person at that time. I’m probably not very logical at that point either. He has blocked me from being able to call him, but he of course can call me whenever, because I’m afraid to block him. I logically know this is an illness, I logically know it is not my fault, and I can’t control outcomes, but my heart is broken and I feel like my life is going to be like this for the rest of my life. It’s effecting my health living in constant fear and dread. Thanks for listening.
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Our objective is to better understand the struggles our child faces and to learn the skills to improve our relationship and provide a supportive environment and also improve on our own emotional responses, attitudes and effectiveness as a family leaders
BPDstinks
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What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Child
Relationship status: Married
Posts: 202


« Reply #1 on: April 14, 2025, 06:00:45 AM »

hi!  sadly, I do not have much advise, other than....I always feel that way!  it is odd to be a parent of a child who does not want to be parented!
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Pook075
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Gender: Male
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Ex-romantic partner
Relationship status: Divorced
Posts: 1493


« Reply #2 on: April 14, 2025, 09:45:24 AM »

It may be more of a vent, but I am at the end of what I can handle.

Hello and welcome to the family!  I'm sorry we're meeting under these circumstances but I am glad that you finally got your first post out of the way.  I was in a similar situation with my BPD daughter and I can understand how you're feeling- it's no fin.

A few questions so everyone here will have a more complete picture- your son doesn't live with you and he has his own phone.  Does that mean he's over 18?  Who does he live with?  And does he work or go to school?  Who's paying his bills?

I realize that the threat of suicide is real for BPDs.  But you also have to understand that they get what they want through manipulation.  Every time your son treats you poorly and you allow it, then it encourages him to treat you as bad or even worse the next time.

When my daughter threatened suicide, I would dial 9-1-1 and send an ambulance.  After the 2nd time, she never tried to manipulate me with that again.  Why?  Because for that one specific thing, she learned that her words had consequences.

Likewise, if my kid needed financial help and she called ranting away, I would say no 100% of the time.  Deep down I knew that I'd eventually help her out if I could, but before money would transfer she was going to treat her dad with love and respect.  Was she still manipulating me?  Of course, but at least she was playing by my rules and treating me fairly.

You absolutely must set these boundaries and if that means blocking his phone, that's a great place to start. If he's ugly, block the # for 24 hours.  Make that a predictable pattern so he understands that his outbursts are not acceptable.

You simply can't continue taking abuse and hoping that he gets better...you taking his abuse is preventing him from even considering that he's the problem.  You must put up firm boundaries for yourself that clearly shows him, when you do <x>, then I'm going to do <y> because of your choice.

A golden thing a therapist told me years ago that always stuck with me is that mental illness has absolutely nothing to do with being nice.  Being nice or mean is a choice that everyone can make, even narcissists and sociopaths have been known to be very kind, pleasant neighbors.  Your son is choosing to be mean...the mental illness has nothing to do with that.

I hope that helps and again, welcome to the family!

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BPDstinks
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What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Child
Relationship status: Married
Posts: 202


« Reply #3 on: April 14, 2025, 12:10:12 PM »

Pook!  I appreciate your comment!  EVERY holiday, I get SO sad....I keep thinking "this" is going to be "the" time my daughter (pwBPD) FINALLY reaches out (I text ONE time a month ONLY, because I am seeing a therapist who specializes in parents of pwBPD!  (very helpful!) in any case, I always feel like I am in limbo; I think one of the hardest things is when people ask how she is; I want to say
"heck if I know" I just say fine and where she is working, as that is public knowledge; anyway, I appreciate your mental health definition comment!
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Pook075
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Online Online

Gender: Male
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Ex-romantic partner
Relationship status: Divorced
Posts: 1493


« Reply #4 on: April 14, 2025, 09:57:23 PM »

Pook!  I appreciate your comment!  EVERY holiday, I get SO sad....I keep thinking "this" is going to be "the" time my daughter (pwBPD) FINALLY reaches out (I text ONE time a month ONLY, because I am seeing a therapist who specializes in parents of pwBPD!  (very helpful!) in any case, I always feel like I am in limbo; I think one of the hardest things is when people ask how she is; I want to say
"heck if I know" I just say fine and where she is working, as that is public knowledge; anyway, I appreciate your mental health definition comment!

For my daughter, I had to learn to validate what she was FEELING without having an emotional reaction to her WORDS.  When our feelings run wild, the words don't always align.  For example, have you ever whacked your finger with a hammer, or slammed your hand in a door?

In that moment, I'll cuss like a sailor...and I'm a Christian that simply doesn't cuss anymore.  The high emotional pain leads to words I'd rather not use though.  And maybe you can understand that, whacking a finger really really hurts.  Yet it's so hard to see it through the same lens with mental health and sudden outbursts.

The more I met my kid's needs emotionally, the less I saw those explosive outbursts.  Because by being the rock that she needed in her life, a constant that always loved her and gave emotional support, I was "painted white" and recognized as an ally in her struggles.  I eventually did the same thing with my BPD ex-wife and we're in a very good place (we hardly ever talk anymore, but when we do it goes well).

It's okay to be in limbo if that's what it takes to protect yourself.  There is hope to restore that relationship though, and it's through leading with love/compassion and letting go of the past.  The boundaries are there for when things go off the rails, but even then you can do that with empathy and care.

It's certainly not easy, and it's unfair that most of the growth has to happen by us.  But that's the cards we've been dealt in life.  We can play the hand or fold.
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