CC43
|
 |
« Reply #2 on: October 05, 2025, 08:20:45 PM » |
|
Hi there,
It's tough to know what to do sometimes with the recurring cycles of estrangement. The pwBPD in my life recently left her dad's and my home in a rage, and she has cut off all communication. It's really sad, because we were the only ones left in the family she would talk to. She has cut off all ties with siblings, her mom and stepdad, aunts and uncles, her only living grandparent and all her cousins, for a few years and still counting. Sometimes the cutoffs seem really juvenile (e.g. blocking her phone, unfriending people on social media), but the point is, she is estranged and alienated from family. She does the same with ex-friends, too.
The cycles of estrangement have become so recurrent that, like you, I'm almost used to them. My take is that she needs an extended "time out" to get control of herself and get her act together. Typically she will leave the relationship in a rage, because she believes she was wronged in some way, and yet usually it's because something else in her life isn't going how she wanted, and she seeks to blame somebody else for her woes, mainly as a distraction and deflection of her core issues. She has a strong tendency to adopt a victim attitude, because it's just too hard for her to take responsibility for her life and her decisions. Like your loved one, my pwBPD will typically resume contact eventually, usually when she needs something -- money, a co-signer, logistical help, etc. She'll generally pretend that the last blow-up didn't happen. I guess that's OK with me, because bringing up past grievances is like picking at a scab, and why re-live all the pain and bleeding?
You bring up another interesting topic of gifts. My personal view is that unless we're talking about a birthday, Christmas or a major milestone, gifts aren't necessary. My opinion is that a visit itself is the gift. In my family, kids tend to get too many gifts as it is, and they have come to expect gifts sometimes. When that happens, I have the sense that gifts become transactional, as if love is being bought. Sometimes the gifts become a distraction in my opinion. Anyway, I guess I try to show that my gift is one of love and attention, and I think the children have come to appreciate that. If I were in your situation, I might say something like, Please don't feel the need to bring a gift, we'd just like to see you.
Now with BPD, I've found that holidays and celebrations tend to be very high-stress times. The topic of gifts has come up on these boards from time to time. Sometimes it appears that gift-giving is used as a means of manipulation and control. Sometimes, the pwBPD will become upset about a gift, because they feel shortchanged or insulted in some way. If you turn the situation around and are talking about a pwBPD giving a gift to another family member, the recipient's reaction could set them off, for example if they didn't seem grateful enough. If others are receiving gifts and appear joyful, then it's easy for the pwBPD to feel left out and insanely jealous, because the pwBPD is reminded of how unhappy she really is. So I guess my general advice would be to try to limit gift exchanges with as few people as possible when the pwBPD is around.
|