hello Boogie -
For me, validation is a skill. Like playing golf or music. The more I do it, the better I become at it. I didn't find it to be intuitive at all.
Like Cat Familiar mentioned being invalidating (even inadvertently) out weighs the ability to be validating by a factor of about 10 to 1. according to the experts.
what I learned about validation was that it was not possible to validate my way out of an argument or a dysregulation. at that point the validation was too late. pwBPD (and most people really) do better in a highly validating environment when its applied consistently. and not in the middle of an emotionally tense moment.
finding the validation target is often difficult. and not what we think it is. when my partner was upset and starting to vent if I said "I would feel upset too" that would push her into a dysregulation because she felt patronized, and placated. Especially if it wasn't true. My partner did get upset about things that wouldn't have bothered me at all and she knew it.
Simply saying “That makes sense” or even “Ok” or “I would feel upset too” is met with “You always say that followed by an adolescent mimicking “Ok” several times is common.
anything that came near to the "There, There, Dear" was best avoided for my partner. I found that she did better with validating questions. what she wanted was space to vent. what I wanted was for the dysregulation to be over. a validating question is something like "what do you think should happen here?"
and that's where it gets even trickier... for my partner she wanted to vent and she wanted me to FIX her problem. often I didn't think it was a problem or I didn't think it was my problem to fix. then I had to take validation to the next step. ask if she wanted help trouble shooting how she could fix or respond to whatever was going on. often she thought the problem was me. I often got "you aren't trying hard enough". which was a much more difficult conversation to have. I remember one conversation at the kitchen table where she told me it wasn't enough for me to say I understood that she was upset but that I needed to do something about it. and I replied that I didn't think that was true in this case, that it just was what it was. this was opening the door to some pretty high level communication skills. way beyond the simple validation tools.
make any sense?