Hi again Jacinth
Any wisdom from parents who have learned to make their own needs as important as the BPD would be greatly appreciated.
I guess it was my own realisation that I was actually behaving like a crazy person. My friends got so fed up of me, my story never changed, and they of course didn't unserstand why I tried so very hard all the time. My family stopped asking too. I sought support for myself and this was my first step; it was an anonymous group of mothers with adult kids with drug problems. This would have been about 5 years ago. I gave up on trying to change my son and started to see that it was wasted energy trying to do so.
It took me another 2 years to see that I had to work on myself, work on finding and doing things that made me happy. When crisis hit and my DS got his first dx as BPD I found this forum. But my own journey to live my life well had started beforehand as I chose to go back to college as a mature student to do art. When my hands are busy and I'm problem solving I'm happy!
Leaving my DS to get on with his own life and never offering advice or judgment has not been easy. The combination of working on myself, being on this forum and learning new skills and techniques and being ever mindful where the responsibility lies for his problems has changed my life.
I now demonstrate to my DS how I take care of myself. This is the greatest lesson to my family I can offer. It's not selfish, I'm a good mother. I put myself first and if I can emotionally support him then I do.
What sort of things did you used to enjoy when you were younger Jacinth?
LP