My father died last year and for the last year my contacts with my sister were problem free.
Why do you think your contacts with your sister in the last year were problem free? Any theories? I'm just trying to understand your situation to offer better support.
Now my nephew is in crisis, my mother can't stop crying and my sister has once again cut me off and I once again feel that my heart is breaking.
I am sorry to hear this leonberlin. Can you tell us more about why your heart is breaking? Are you particularly close to your nephew? Or is your heart breaking for your sister or your mother?
Do you think there is a pattern to when your sister "cuts you off"?
My friends feel I should cut contact with my sister (she will start calling again at some point) but that is hard since my mother is still living.
I'm not clear on the connection between your sister and your mother...do they live together? Do they talk and behave as 1 unit? Are they a "package" so that if you communicate with one, you must also be on good terms with the other? (If yes, are you familiar with the Karpman triangle, and/or emotional enmeshment?)
You mention living in Europe, whilst the rest of the family is in the US. I can imagine that the advantage to this are that you have physical distance from their drama, and thus space to live your own life. It's probably more peaceful than being in the eye of the tornado. Are there disadvantages you are concerned about?
Everytime he screws up they rescue him so he is not only dealing with BPD, he's also dealing with the fact that he truly doesn't understand consequences.
Their rescuing is enabling his screwups to continue. Why would he stop if he's never given the opportunity to learn and grow from his own mistakes? Other people always fix it for him. It is a difficult thing to let someone we love learn from their own mistakes, and not rush in to rescue. Maybe their not capable of
not rescuing, because his mistakes reflect badly on them? Does that fit?
Let us know how we can best help.