Hi there bpdmom!
I feel for you, I really do. Marvellous news your daughter is engaging with Dbt!
The thing that is most difficult is that she is fully aware of how 'abusive' (her term) she has been to me.
It seems she is feeling very guilty. She loves you and she hurts when you hurt.
That it is 'because of her' (her wording) that I need to seek out support and guidance
Yes, you are hurting and you sensibly seek out support. This is demonstrating to her how a responsible adult takes care of themselves. I think this is a valuable lesson for her to see.
Her view is that she’s the cause. The truth is that she isn’t responsible for how you react to her. The problem is yours and you are “owning” it and seeking help. Getting the balance right between showing confidence and strength whilst opening ourselves by showing we are vulnerable is a tricky thing. I think this is where the problem lies right now. At 19, my DS just wouldn’t have had the emotional maturity and what he needed most (and what I didn’t provide...can you feel my guilt here?) is steadying. When I wobbled, he wobbled.
This is one of the most difficult cycles to interrupt in this whole journey, I feel. I am pained watching the added pain that my daughter feels watching me in pain... and the cycle continues.
One day your daughter hopefully will feel a lot less guilty as she matures and accepts her limitations. Right now, she’s really judging herself and giving herself a hard time. I wonder if you can nudge her thinking along by demonstrating behaviours you would like to see in her. She can be more gentle with herself...a good lesson to learn? That she can be confident that, whilst you do have problems (and that’s life!), you’ll be OK because you’re working them out...that the bpd situation has been a catalyst to change for the better. Trying to become more stoic, I don’t mean less emotional, but I do mean stronger and more resilient in the face of problems and, yes, it can be done with a smile and good humour.
Remembering, we can’t change others but we can change how we react to them in the hope they “warm” to other ways of thinking. You can re-write this situation through humour to lighten things.
How’s your support going...are you seeing progress and feeling better about yourself? I mention this to perhaps widen you’re reflection of your current situation. Perhaps your daughter can see but not verbalise her concerns; her feelings = truth.
LP