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SusKellett42

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What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Child
Relationship status: Yes
Posts: 3


« on: March 05, 2023, 04:42:56 PM »

My 17 yo daughter has been affirmatively diagnosed with BPD traits by three different psychiatrists now. She is charming, intelligent and seems to really be a 'breath of fresh air' to her counsellors, because ANYTHING she tells them, they believe. The first time this happened was when she was twelve. She told her counsellor we were kicking her out. This did not happen. WOULD not happen. Luckily the counsellor's supervisor got to the 'report' first and called my husband and I in for a meeting, where my daughter clarified she was worried it 'could' happen.
The second time was when she was 16. She ran away from home - first and only time - and took herself to the hospital. She told them she was 'covered in burns' from home. This was an extra shock because not only did the nurses believe her and chart this - NO ONE CHECKED until I got there and demanded they strip her and check her head to toe. Obviously I didn't believe there were burns, but also if there were...please treat her! THERE WERE NO BURNS.
Then this last week - another emotional rollercoaster - she accused her boyfriend, who is an amazing, stand-up young man, of S.A. The worst kind. She had details. I'm ashamed to admit I believed her at first (again - she had details). We went to her counsellor and her counsellor believed her and wanted to file a police report. By now a couple days had gone by and some things weren't sitting right. The story had changed a bit, her behaviour was odd in certain ways. Finally six days later she totally recanted and said she just misunderstood the entire situation - they hadn't even had sex the day in question.
Today she is moody, demanding, snapping at everybody, and of course I'm her usual target.
I. AM. SPENT.
I have an autoimmune disorder and I have had a fever since mid-November. I had a spontaneous coronary artery dissection that caused a heart attack in April. I have a younger son I am trying to parent. And a marriage I love...
I. AM. SPENT.
And she simply doesn't care. It is ALL ABOUT HER.
That's all. I'm venting. I don't know what to do.
Yes, I've been to counselling myself, and it's good - but I hold the boundaries, I hold the line...it's still exhausting and so completely sad and devastating.
« Last Edit: March 05, 2023, 04:49:23 PM by SusKellett42 » Logged
Our objective is to better understand the struggles our child faces and to learn the skills to improve our relationship and provide a supportive environment and also improve on our own emotional responses, attitudes and effectiveness as a family leaders
kells76
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Gender: Female
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Romantic partner’s ex
Posts: 3246



« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2023, 10:45:18 AM »

Hi SusKellet42, welcome. You're in a place that understands how exhausting it is to have a pwBPD in your life. The extra layer of it being your child is so difficult. And when your BPD child seems to pull the wool over the eyes of professionals... really frustrating.

I hear the impact your D17 is having on you and the rest of your family. Is your son younger than her?

How are your relationships with the rest of your family members (your spouse, your parents, your siblings, etc)? Are others supportive/insightful/understanding, or have some of them "taken sides"?

How close to 18 is she?

Post/vent/journal as much as you need to, and let us know how we can be here for you in all of this.

-kells76
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SusKellett42

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What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Child
Relationship status: Yes
Posts: 3


« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2023, 12:38:37 PM »

Thank you for the reply.
My daughter turns 18 at the end of the summer, and my son is 14. I have an incredible husband and really supportive parents, but my parents live out of town. My brother-in-law is in town and also really supportive. NO FRIENDS know about this, however. I guess we all feel a level of shame and still shock? Is that possible after this many years?
I also have a great therapist that I go to from time to time who is phenomenal.
No one has taken sides, everybody who knows just feels badly and doesn't know what to do. Except my mom when there's an incident - she gets mad and protective over me, but then she calms down. She loves her granddaughter.
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kells76
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Gender: Female
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Romantic partner’s ex
Posts: 3246



« Reply #3 on: March 07, 2023, 11:31:29 AM »

Hi again SusKellet42;

Thank you for the reply.
My daughter turns 18 at the end of the summer, and my son is 14. I have an incredible husband and really supportive parents, but my parents live out of town. My brother-in-law is in town and also really supportive. NO FRIENDS know about this, however. I guess we all feel a level of shame and still shock? Is that possible after this many years?
I also have a great therapist that I go to from time to time who is phenomenal.
No one has taken sides, everybody who knows just feels badly and doesn't know what to do. Except my mom when there's an incident - she gets mad and protective over me, but then she calms down. She loves her granddaughter.

That's good to hear that your H, BIL, and parents are supportive. It also makes sense that you don't necessarily bring it up with friends. People who don't see the traits and behaviors frequently don't always understand how serious and impactful it is. Like you said, your D17 can be so charming, and that's probably what people in more distant relationships with her see. The disorder of BPD often shows up more strongly the closer the relationship is... so yeah, you and your family are getting hammered.

It's very possible to continue to feel shame and shock. In a way, because the trauma and chaos and unpredictability of BPD have been ongoing for you guys over the years, you've never really had an "end" to the traumatic experience. It just keeps going. So it's not like surviving an earthquake, or car accident, etc, where there was a definitive end to the traumatic experience, and you can process it from beginning to end. I know that what I experience from dealing with my H's kids' mom (many BPD traits) and stepdad (many NPD traits) is a sense of ongoing trauma -- their toxicity continues to bleed over into my life, and as long as we are coparenting (the kids aren't adults yet), I cannot stop it. There is no endpoint yet to their intrusion. So, I find myself hypervigilant, and counting down to when both kids are over 18.

Your mom's response sounds natural, yet it's good that she loves your D17, too, and isn't ultimately taking sides.

How is your D17's relationship with her? How about with other family members?

And has D17 made any comments about college/job plans, moving out, etc? Does she have motivation to strike out on her own, or live elsewhere?

Coming up with a transition plan for having her live elsewhere could be positive for both of you. Having more distance in the relationship has helped some parents with BPD children -- if there's a family member she gets along with okay, maybe she could live there when she turns 18. Or, if she's motivated to go to college, that could provide more space, too.

It is OK to reach the end of a season with parenting your child, and transition to being the parent of a young adult child. Your role in her life will change, and may be less involved. She may live elsewhere. You may decide to redirect a lot of the effort and energy you'd devoted to her, to your son, and that can be a normal thing that happens in many families.

Or, if she is cooperative enough, and given that right now she's still a minor, you may look into more intensive treatment programs.

Lots of directions to go, all of which can be OK.

Glad to hear, too, that you have a good therapist -- that makes a huge difference! Was your T one of the professionals who suspected your D had BPD?

-kells76
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