Although not surprised by diagnosis I am now trying to figure how to navigate moving forward
Our adult son still lives at home and I am unsure how to be empathetic but still hold boundaries such as having a job etc
Hi Karate and welcome! I'm very sorry you're going through this but a diagnosis is certainly a good step in the right direction.
Being empathetic and placing boundaries are two different things that sort of work together for the good of your child. The boundaries are the rules every child is required to follow- if you don't clean your room, you don't get ice cream after dinner. If you yell at your parents, you're going to be grounded for the weekend. That sort of stuff.
But with BPD in the mix, the boundaries tend to work differently because we're human and we love our kids. So we say no ice cream after dinner if you don't clean your room, the kid refuses to clean, gives 153 reasons why its your fault, and then we give them ice cream just to shut them up. Because of mental illness, they develop a learned behavior that manipulation and rebellion produces the same results as doing the right thing...so why try at all?
The problem is that when this happens at earlier stages, the rebellion becomes entitlement...you've always given in before, so you'll give in now because you owe me! That's where you're at now. You were a good parent, tried to love your kid and do the right thing, and to avoid conflict the boundaries were always shifting based on behavior. I did this...every parent here did this...because we believed that love would conquer all. In this case though, it unfortunately doesn't.
Boundaries at 23 aren't necessarily about ice cream after dinner...they're about what we'd expect out of a 23 year old adult. If he's not working and contributing, then a fair boundary would be to help extensively around the house- cut the lawn, do the dishes, take out all the trash, clean the house, etc. Or he can get a job...or he can move out. That's three fair options for a 23 year old and he can choose whatever makes him happy.
The same can be said for how he treats family. What's acceptable at 23 and what's not? He needs to learn these lessons in order to lessen the effects of mental illness. Structure and routine are good for him, it provides stability.
The empathy you mentioned relates to his feelings. If he's sad, cheer him up. If he's angry, calm him down. If he wants to talk something out, then listen. But we don't say, "You don't have to work this month because you're sad today." Being there for him does not mean we throw away the boundaries that all of us have to live by...it makes those boundaries all the more important for him to have a successful life.
Make sense?