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CC43
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« Reply #1 on: December 26, 2025, 09:10:40 AM » |
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Hi there,
You've come to the right place. If you read these boards, I think you'll see many common themes and issues.
Though it's sad that your BPD daughter left home angry, maybe it's not such a bad thing for you and the rest of the family to enjoy some peace. While I know you worry constantly about your daughter and probably feel bad about a fractured relationship, it sounds to me like you need to recharge. Your daughter is probably blaming you for all her woes, which is a typical maladaptive coping mechanism with BPD. If your daughter says she doesn't feel "safe" not coming home (when reality is that home has always been safe for her), that's a reflection of her victim narrative. It might even be projection--deep down, she's afraid that she's going to lash out or possibly hurt herself in your home. I bet she's telling others she was abused and kicked out of your home, trying to convince herself and the world that she's a victim of your abuse, when the reality is that she's the abuser and she's the one who left. Personally, I think the victim mindset is the worst part of BPD, because it renders her powerless. When's she's determined to blame others, she thinks others have to change--not her--and she's resistant to therapy which could really help her.
I agree with you that starting a romantic relationship isn't ideal when your daughter's priority probably should be therapy right now. I have an adult BPD stepdaughter who entered into a seriously dysfunctional period at around your daughter's age. She thought because she was an adult, she could do whatever she wanted whenever she wanted. But I think because of BPD, her priororities were all mixed up, and she seemed almost clueless about how the "real world" works (e.g. living within a budget, having to manage time, having to defer gratification, needing to act civilly towards others, having to manage conflicts in a healthy way). Worse, her notion of identity was very tenuous, meaning she didn't seem to know who she was, what she liked/disliked, who her real friends were, what her strengths were, etc. She wanted closeness but hated everyone. She wanted romance but wasn't attracted to anyone. She wanted to feel beautiful but didn't take care of her health/hygiene and dressed like a slob. She wanted to do things but didn't make any effort. Anyway, my thinking is that a person isn't really ready for an intense romantic relationship, let alone living with a significant other, if she hasn't really figured out herself first, or how to function semi-independently. It seems to me that relying on someone else to prop her up is destined to fail.
If it were up to me, I think the natural progression for learning to live with BPD is (1) therapy; (2) establishing healthy routines (eating decent meals, sleeping at night, regular exercise, cleaning one's living space, taking medications as prescribed; (3) rekindling friendships with peers (but not addicts/abusers); (4) resuming adult commitments like studies or work--initially part-time and building up gradually to a meaningful routine; and only then (5) romantic relationships. I say romance comes last because steps 1-4 help solidify a healthier routine, "normalcy" in functioning plus a much stronger sense of self. I'm not sure where "semi-independent living" fits in this progression. I think it could work for your adult daughter to live with you, but in my opinion she would need to progress through each step, while treating you nicely. If she's high-functioning, she might be able to handle living in her own apartment, possibly with a roommate. But I don't think she could do any of that successfully until she masters steps 1 and 2. Trying to "launch" without a decent foundation is setting her up to fail. That includes enrolling in college full-time in my opinion.
In your post you didn't mention if your daughter was in college or working. If she were able to take some classes or hold down a job, even if it were very part-time or just for a few days, I think that's a positive sign. She's showing that she's able to manage her emotions somewhat, and that she has potential to function in the "real world," which is promising in my opinion. But if she's shacking up with a guy, sitting around all day doing nothing, possibly taking illicit substances, my guess is that the "honeymoon" will be over soon. Chances are she'll appear back on your doorstep. I think that's a great time to reset and establish firm guidelines if she decides to live with you again, should she choose to do that, and you choose to allow it. She's an adult now, and she'd be welcome in your home, provided that she follow your rules. But if she doesn't follow them and acts abusively in your household, I think you need to be ready to kick her out. If you can't bear to do that, I'm sorry to say I think you shouldn't let her back in. Letting her back in while allowing her to be abusive is only prolonging the status quo of despair and dysfunction. Your daughter is young, she can turn her life around with therapy. If you enable her to continue with the status quo, you are prolonging the dysfunction, not only for her, but also for your entire family. Trust me, I went through it.
I think your therapist is on the right track about allowing your daughter to face the consequences of her own decisions. You see, I think that BPD makes your daughter a slow learner in some ways. If you over-function for her and save her from real-world consequences, she learns to blame YOU. Sadly, no matter how much you explain things to her, and try to teach her how the world works, she just can't listen because of all the emotional baggage. I think she needs to experience things herself, sometimes multiple times. A good example is living with a roommate. She needs to learn that if she's a slob, mean or stealing/destroying belongings, she risks getting kicked out. If you rush in to save her, she'll never learn that lesson.
Anyway, you ask if you should leave town. I don't think you should do that unless you truly belive you have a better opportunity elsewhere. If you left just because of your daughter, then that feels to me like she's running your life, not you. Once again that feels like YOU are bearing the consequences of your daughter's choices, not her. If your daughter threatens you, call the police. If you see your daughter in public, I think you smile and wave, and wait to see if she approaches you. If she ignores you, fine. If she does something mean, I'd say, just be still or turn away slowly and pretend you're not affected. She wants to get a rise out of you, but don't let her. If several months go by and you don't hear from your daughter, though that's sad, you can feel proud that she's exerting her independence, and she's showing you that she's learning to function as an independent adult.
Hope that perspective helps.
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