Guest guest Posted July 11, 2010 Report Share Posted July 11, 2010 Is that article in an earlier post? I'm just curius because somteism I wonder if some of them are truly a mental disease and some is truly poorly learned behaviours that nobody can get through to them that those behaviours are inappropriate. I think the sooners those behaviours are taught to be inappropriate the better, for example you catch a kid with borderline symptoms as they start and teach them appropporiate behaviours, their outcome is oging to be a lto different than my nada who got away with her behaviours for over 30 years before anyone ever tried to correct her and say no more of your abusive idiotness. Subject: article on BP and brain and facial expression To: WTOAdultChildren1 Date: Saturday, July 10, 2010, 11:51 AM  Randi posted that article about the disease process in BP s and it was marvelous. It really provided a great insight into how thier brains work. It helps you understand that perhaps the stubborness and manipulations and crazy making are not things they can help. There is, perhaps, greater hope with each new understanding that they can be treated successfully. We can understand, and maybe separate our anger at their actions and emotions from anger at the person inside. I m not saying we excuse what they do. Nor am I saying for an instant that we should stop doing what we need to do in order to be safe and sane, and to help our own healing along. I just note that perhaps our nagging question, " Are they evil to do what the do? " is a bit better answer, maybe. They are truly, truly mentally ill. Some may be evil and some may be good under it all. But we can understand that perhaps, under all this madness, is a good and caring person , who is our mother, who just never made it out. Maybe that makes the realities a bit easier for us. And I never give up hope. My mom died still deeply symptomatic. But I hold out hope. If the caring community can help BP s to cope, and become healthier, many kids dealing right now with what we endured may have a chance to avoid our pain. So, hope. Doug Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2010 Report Share Posted July 11, 2010 I don't think there's any question that some of their behaviors are learned but I think the problem is far greater than them not understanding that their behavior is inapparopriate. I don't think that simply teaching them that there are better behaviors that are more appropriate will fix the real problem but if it is certainly a start, where it is possible. Whether it is even possible or not in most cases is questionable. BPD is not caused by young people being allowed to get away with bad behavior, although it is probably allowed to get worse when the bad behavior is tolerated. I think that attempting to teach them better behavior often just results in them leaving home. I know my nada got married at 17 to escape from her mother's attempts to control her behavior. I think they leave relationships and marriages if their partner refuses to put up with their behavior too. That's why they so commonly end up with dish-rag spouses who put up with their behavior. I think that BPD is an issue with the wiring in the brain causing them to think in a way that is very foreign to the rest of us. Because they don't think the same, their actions are different. Their bad behavior is an outgrowth of their way of thinking. If you feel threatened by other people going about their business and acting normally, then you're going to react in ways to minimize the threats. They feel threatened, Their emotions are out of control. They react in ways that let them feel less threatened or more in control or that provide an outlet for their negative emotions or whatever else makes them feel better. If you start young enough, you can probabaly teach them better ways to react to some extent, but I think that what's really needed is a way to rewire their thinking so that they don't have the out of control feelings that make them want to act that way to start with. Some of what's being done now may help with that, especially if started young enough. As more research is done and a better understanding about what is different in their brains is developed, better therapies will hopefully be developed too. Whatever comes along, I imagine that the younger the patients are when it is started, the better chance of success it will have. Teaching new ways of thinking works better when people are young. At 09:51 AM 07/11/2010 proflaf1 wrote: >Is that article in an earlier post? I'm just curius because >somteism I wonder if some of them are truly a mental disease >and some is truly poorly learned behaviours that nobody can get >through to them that those behaviours are inappropriate. I >think the sooners those behaviours are taught to be >inappropriate the better, for example you catch a kid with >borderline symptoms as they start and teach them appropporiate >behaviours, their outcome is oging to be a lto different than >my nada who got away with her behaviours for over 30 years >before anyone ever tried to correct her and say no more of your >abusive idiotness. -- Katrina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2010 Report Share Posted July 11, 2010 Amen! > > Randi posted that article about the disease process in BP s and it was marvelous. It really provided a great insight into how thier brains work. > > It helps you understand that perhaps the stubborness and manipulations and crazy making are not things they can help. There is, perhaps, greater hope with each new understanding that they can be treated successfully. We can understand, and maybe separate our anger at their actions and emotions from anger at the person inside. > > I m not saying we excuse what they do. Nor am I saying for an instant that we should stop doing what we need to do in order to be safe and sane, and to help our own healing along. > > I just note that perhaps our nagging question, " Are they evil to do what the do? " is a bit better answer, maybe. They are truly, truly mentally ill. Some may be evil and some may be good under it all. > > But we can understand that perhaps, under all this madness, is a good and caring person , who is our mother, who just never made it out. > > Maybe that makes the realities a bit easier for us. And I never give up hope. My mom died still deeply symptomatic. But I hold out hope. If the caring community can help BP s to cope, and become healthier, many kids dealing right now with what we endured may have a chance to avoid our pain. > > So, hope. > > Doug > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2010 Report Share Posted July 11, 2010 I've wondered about this too...everyone, grand parents, aunts, uncles and my father allowed nada to act anyway she wanted. Her whole life she was never held accountable for her actions/words, and every one of them always was there to save her...I always wondered if everyone put their foot down and refused to accept her bad behavior, she'd have to change!! Jackie Is that article in an earlier post? I'm just curius because somteism I wonder if some of them are truly a mental disease and some is truly poorly learned behaviours that nobody can get through to them that those behaviours are inappropriate. I think the sooners those behaviours are taught to be inappropriate the better, for example you catch a kid with borderline symptoms as they start and teach them appropporiate behaviours, their outcome is oging to be a lto different than my nada who got away with her behaviours for over 30 years before anyone ever tried to correct her and say no more of your abusive idiotness. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2010 Report Share Posted July 11, 2010 I agree totally, if my dad gave her the choice to either change her behavior found out about what she did to his family, correct that and told her you will stop acting like an asshole or we will all leave you alone she would either change or be in the position she is in now where she is completely alone except her friends because she alienated so many other people. Subject: Re: article on BP and brain and facial expression To: WTOAdultChildren1 Date: Sunday, July 11, 2010, 12:52 PM  I've wondered about this too...everyone, grand parents, aunts, uncles and my father allowed nada to act anyway she wanted. Her whole life she was never held accountable for her actions/words, and every one of them always was there to save her...I always wondered if everyone put their foot down and refused to accept her bad behavior, she'd have to change!! Jackie Is that article in an earlier post? I'm just curius because somteism I wonder if some of them are truly a mental disease and some is truly poorly learned behaviours that nobody can get through to them that those behaviours are inappropriate. I think the sooners those behaviours are taught to be inappropriate the better, for example you catch a kid with borderline symptoms as they start and teach them appropporiate behaviours, their outcome is oging to be a lto different than my nada who got away with her behaviours for over 30 years before anyone ever tried to correct her and say no more of your abusive idiotness. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2010 Report Share Posted July 11, 2010 Yes it is, sorry. Message #114387 of 114626 Sex and BPD, The Science of BPD posted by Randi. You can search for it by message number and find it. I think, as with many things, there is no clean, neat answer. I believe there must be some degree of disease or disorder involved. Perhaps it is true, however, that the learned behaviors may make the difference in a high and low functioning BP? BPD is, perhaps, analogous to autism. Autistic people have difficulty in picking up social clues, and in communicating. BP s, it seems, pick up some of those clues with a hieghtened sensitivity that makes them for all practical purposes blind to them, and others, not at all. The analogy does translate to this: with autistic children, the earlier and the more determined the training and intervention, the better life outcome they will have. With borderlnes , I m sure the same is true. Unfortunately for KO s, by the time we encounter them, they are adults and have several decades of bad re inforcement. Doug > > From: doug883@... doug883@... > Subject: article on BP and brain and facial expression > To: WTOAdultChildren1 > Date: Saturday, July 10, 2010, 11:51 AM > > > > > > > > Â > > > > > > > > > > Randi posted that article about the disease process in BP s and it was marvelous. It really provided a great insight into how thier brains work. > > > > It helps you understand that perhaps the stubborness and manipulations and crazy making are not things they can help. There is, perhaps, greater hope with each new understanding that they can be treated successfully. We can understand, and maybe separate our anger at their actions and emotions from anger at the person inside. > > > > I m not saying we excuse what they do. Nor am I saying for an instant that we should stop doing what we need to do in order to be safe and sane, and to help our own healing along. > > > > I just note that perhaps our nagging question, " Are they evil to do what the do? " is a bit better answer, maybe. They are truly, truly mentally ill. Some may be evil and some may be good under it all. > > > > But we can understand that perhaps, under all this madness, is a good and caring person , who is our mother, who just never made it out. > > > > Maybe that makes the realities a bit easier for us. And I never give up hope. My mom died still deeply symptomatic. But I hold out hope. If the caring community can help BP s to cope, and become healthier, many kids dealing right now with what we endured may have a chance to avoid our pain. > > > > So, hope. > > > > Doug > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 13, 2010 Report Share Posted July 13, 2010 Good points here. >Is that article in an earlier post? I'm just curius because >somteism I wonder if some of them are truly a mental disease >and some is truly poorly learned behaviours that nobody can get >through to them that those behaviours are inappropriate. I >think the sooners those behaviours are taught to be >inappropriate the better, for example you catch a kid with >borderline symptoms as they start and teach them appropporiate >behaviours, their outcome is oging to be a lto different than >my nada who got away with her behaviours for over 30 years >before anyone ever tried to correct her and say no more of your >abusive idiotness. -- Katrina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 14, 2010 Report Share Posted July 14, 2010 my nada is capable of controling herself in public....she rarely ever has tantrums or rages where anyone other then her family can see her...she never treats outsiders badly, she only treats her family horrible, everyone else she is sickening sweet to Jackie I don't think there's any question that some of their behaviors are learned but I think the problem is far greater than them not understanding that their behavior is inapparopriate. I don't think that simply teaching them that there are better behaviors that are more appropriate will fix the real problem but if it is certainly a start, where it is possible. Whether it is even possible or not in most cases is questionable. BPD is not caused by young people being allowed to get away with bad behavior, although it is probably allowed to get worse when the bad behavior is tolerated. I think that attempting to teach them better behavior often just results in them leaving home. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 I have pondered this so much because my mother could be SO normal around other people. I mean, a schizophrenic can't control their behavior in certain instances, so how can a BPD if it is a brain disorder? That's a rhetorical question, but I ask myself all the time. I think BPD is so complicated and on such varying scales. In the Surviving the Borderline Parent book, one thing the author says is that when she gets up to talk about BPD, she has to take 30 minutes just to explain what it is. I think about my mothers tantrums and manipulation and it really does seem like she never emotionally matured beyond 8 or 10 years old. Like she just stopped progressing emotionally and psychologically. I liken people with BPD to children...emotionally anyway....because they never learned the proper skills to deal with disappointment, with someone disagreeing with them. My 8 year old believes in santa clause and my 12 year old told him santa wasn't real (and yeah, I later talked to him and asked him not to tell him that). But my 8 year old doesn't believe him anyway and stood going, " you are lying! that's not true " This is very much how I see BPD's. Like little kids. Obviously, little kids are still developing and learning, and you'd expect adults to know how to act and react, but I honestly do believe there is a brain abnormality going on despite the fact that at times they seem to be able to control it. That's how I see it anyway --- I'm obviously no therapist! Re: article on BP and brain and facial expression my nada is capable of controling herself in public....she rarely ever has tantrums or rages where anyone other then her family can see her...she never treats outsiders badly, she only treats her family horrible, everyone else she is sickening sweet to Jackie I don't think there's any question that some of their behaviors are learned but I think the problem is far greater than them not understanding that their behavior is inapparopriate. I don't think that simply teaching them that there are better behaviors that are more appropriate will fix the real problem but if it is certainly a start, where it is possible. Whether it is even possible or not in most cases is questionable. BPD is not caused by young people being allowed to get away with bad behavior, although it is probably allowed to get worse when the bad behavior is tolerated. I think that attempting to teach them better behavior often just results in them leaving home. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 Long before I knew what BPD was I was describing my nada as having the emotional maturity of a three year-old with a teenager's raging hormones. The results of that combination have been pretty disasterous in multiple ways. I don't think BPD is about not being able to control actions. I think it is about the ability to decide how to act being broken. The more emotional connection they have to the situation, the more problems they have with deciding how to act. At 09:07 AM 07/15/2010 Hummingbird1298@... wrote: >I have pondered this so much because my mother could be SO >normal around other people. I mean, a schizophrenic can't >control their behavior in certain instances, so how can a BPD >if it is a brain disorder? That's a rhetorical question, but I >ask myself all the time. > >I think BPD is so complicated and on such varying scales. In >the Surviving the Borderline Parent book, one thing the author >says is that when she gets up to talk about BPD, she has to >take 30 minutes just to explain what it is. > >I think about my mothers tantrums and manipulation and it >really does seem like she never emotionally matured beyond 8 or >10 years old. Like she just stopped progressing emotionally and >psychologically. > >I liken people with BPD to children...emotionally >anyway....because they never learned the proper skills to deal >with disappointment, with someone disagreeing with them. > >My 8 year old believes in santa clause and my 12 year old told >him santa wasn't real (and yeah, I later talked to him and >asked him not to tell him that). But my 8 year old doesn't >believe him anyway and stood going, " you are lying! that's not >true " > >This is very much how I see BPD's. Like little >kids. Obviously, little kids are still developing and >learning, and you'd expect adults to know how to act and react, >but I honestly do believe there is a brain abnormality going on >despite the fact that at times they seem to be able to control >it. > >That's how I see it anyway --- I'm obviously no therapist! > -- Katrina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 Perhaps. I'm just not so sure they can control how they react because they do have a brain abnormality. I could be wrong about this, but from what I understand about BPD, and they're learning more and more about it, their brains have actually developed differently either based on genetics of environmental factors. Maybe it's safer for me to believe my mother couldn't help herself because if I think she could, then that means she chose to be a crappy mother to me...and that sucks really bad. I told my therapist last night that I believe people with BPD need intervention, much like addicts...especially when children are involved. Someone needs to step in and first and foremost, protect the children and force the BPD person to get help. If they refuse help, the children still need protecting and that means they don't get access to the children without supervision. Re: article on BP and brain and facial expression Long before I knew what BPD was I was describing my nada as having the emotional maturity of a three year-old with a teenager's raging hormones. The results of that combination have been pretty disasterous in multiple ways. I don't think BPD is about not being able to control actions. I think it is about the ability to decide how to act being broken. The more emotional connection they have to the situation, the more problems they have with deciding how to act. At 09:07 AM 07/15/2010 Hummingbird1298@... wrote: >I have pondered this so much because my mother could be SO >normal around other people. I mean, a schizophrenic can't >control their behavior in certain instances, so how can a BPD >if it is a brain disorder? That's a rhetorical question, but I >ask myself all the time. > >I think BPD is so complicated and on such varying scales. In >the Surviving the Borderline Parent book, one thing the author >says is that when she gets up to talk about BPD, she has to >take 30 minutes just to explain what it is. > >I think about my mothers tantrums and manipulation and it >really does seem like she never emotionally matured beyond 8 or >10 years old. Like she just stopped progressing emotionally and >psychologically. > >I liken people with BPD to children...emotionally >anyway....because they never learned the proper skills to deal >with disappointment, with someone disagreeing with them. > >My 8 year old believes in santa clause and my 12 year old told >him santa wasn't real (and yeah, I later talked to him and >asked him not to tell him that). But my 8 year old doesn't >believe him anyway and stood going, " you are lying! that's not >true " > >This is very much how I see BPD's. Like little >kids. Obviously, little kids are still developing and >learning, and you'd expect adults to know how to act and react, >but I honestly do believe there is a brain abnormality going on >despite the fact that at times they seem to be able to control >it. > >That's how I see it anyway --- I'm obviously no therapist! > -- Katrina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 you many not be a therapist, but you have a great handle on this!! Jackie I have pondered this so much because my mother could be SO normal around other people. I mean, a schizophrenic can't control their behavior in certain instances, so how can a BPD if it is a brain disorder? That's a rhetorical question, but I ask myself all the time. I think BPD is so complicated and on such varying scales. In the Surviving the Borderline Parent book, one thing the author says is that when she gets up to talk about BPD, she has to take 30 minutes just to explain what it is. I think about my mothers tantrums and manipulation and it really does seem like she never emotionally matured beyond 8 or 10 years old. Like she just stopped progressing emotionally and psychologically. I liken people with BPD to children...emotionally anyway....because they never learned the proper skills to deal with disappointment, with someone disagreeing with them. My 8 year old believes in santa clause and my 12 year old told him santa wasn't real (and yeah, I later talked to him and asked him not to tell him that). But my 8 year old doesn't believe him anyway and stood going, " you are lying! that's not true " This is very much how I see BPD's. Like little kids. Obviously, little kids are still developing and learning, and you'd expect adults to know how to act and react, but I honestly do believe there is a brain abnormality going on despite the fact that at times they seem to be able to control it. That's how I see it anyway --- I'm obviously no therapist! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 I mostly agree. I don't think they choose to be crappy mothers as such. I don't think they even realize they're being crappy mothers. I think their problems are at a much lower level than that. A lot of them really seem to believe that they're good parents. BPD makes them think that the things they choose to do to us are right and justifiable. They choose to do terrible and abusive things to us, but they do so because they believe they should act that way, not because they want to be terrible mothers. We know they're capable of not treating people badly because they manage to treat strangers perfectly well, but as far as I can see, they're not capable of being rational in how they decide how to treat people. Once emotion enters the decision, their decision-making ability goes haywire. At 09:50 AM 07/15/2010 Hummingbird1298@... wrote: >Perhaps. I'm just not so sure they can control how they react >because they do have a brain abnormality. I could be wrong >about this, but from what I understand about BPD, and they're >learning more and more about it, their brains have actually >developed differently either based on genetics of environmental >factors. > >Maybe it's safer for me to believe my mother couldn't help >herself because if I think she could, then that means she chose >to be a crappy mother to me...and that sucks really bad. > >I told my therapist last night that I believe people with BPD >need intervention, much like addicts...especially when children >are involved. Someone needs to step in and first and foremost, >protect the children and force the BPD person to get help. If >they refuse help, the children still need protecting and that >means they don't get access to the children without >supervision. > > > Re: article on BP and brain and >facial expression > > >Long before I knew what BPD was I was describing my nada as >having the emotional maturity of a three year-old with a >teenager's raging hormones. The results of that combination >have >been pretty disasterous in multiple ways. > >I don't think BPD is about not being able to control actions. I > >think it is about the ability to decide how to act being >broken. >The more emotional connection they have to the situation, the >more problems they have with deciding how to act. -- Katrina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 except when you SEE your nada treating someone elses child the way she should have treated you but never did, what else is there to think ?? My nada is a great mother to neighborhood kids...but she doesn't have to spend much time with them like she did with her own kids...and none of us were " bad " kids..all but 2 were very easy kids..but she's sweet, generous to other peoples kids, and not to her own...my nada chose to treat us like crap, she chose to be a bully, and hurtful/hateful towards her own children...she chose to deny them things just for the fun of it ! Jackie Maybe it's safer for me to believe my mother couldn't help herself because if I think she could, then that means she chose to be a crappy mother to me...and that sucks really bad. I told my therapist last night that I believe people with BPD need intervention, much like addicts...especially when children are involved. Someone needs to step in and first and foremost, protect the children and force the BPD person to get help. If they refuse help, the children still need protecting and that means they don't get access to the children without supervision. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 Yes, I agree with that. I wonder if deep down, though, they know they're bad mothers because shortly before my mother died (and she knew she was nearing the end), she asked me and my sister if we thought she had been a good mother. I believe, finally, things began to set in and she had some regrets. It makes me sad and relieved. If only she had had those regrets many years before. Re: article on BP and brain and >facial expression > > >Long before I knew what BPD was I was describing my nada as >having the emotional maturity of a three year-old with a >teenager's raging hormones. The results of that combination >have >been pretty disasterous in multiple ways. > >I don't think BPD is about not being able to control actions. I > >think it is about the ability to decide how to act being >broken. >The more emotional connection they have to the situation, the >more problems they have with deciding how to act. -- Katrina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 My mother did this when I was older. She would call people I had gone to high school with or had at one time been friends and befriend them and be there for them. Because when she died, people approached me to tell me my mother was their 'best friend.' People my age. I wanted to scream, " WELL YOU WERENT THE ONE SHE ABUSED DUMBASS! " Re: article on BP and brain and facial expression except when you SEE your nada treating someone elses child the way she should have treated you but never did, what else is there to think ?? My nada is a great mother to neighborhood kids...but she doesn't have to spend much time with them like she did with her own kids...and none of us were " bad " kids..all but 2 were very easy kids..but she's sweet, generous to other peoples kids, and not to her own...my nada chose to treat us like crap, she chose to be a bully, and hurtful/hateful towards her own children...she chose to deny them things just for the fun of it ! Jackie Maybe it's safer for me to believe my mother couldn't help herself because if I think she could, then that means she chose to be a crappy mother to me...and that sucks really bad. I told my therapist last night that I believe people with BPD need intervention, much like addicts...especially when children are involved. Someone needs to step in and first and foremost, protect the children and force the BPD person to get help. If they refuse help, the children still need protecting and that means they don't get access to the children without supervision. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 Last year my nada started getting together with one of my sister's former friends from high school. This was several years after my sister had dropped the friendship while in college because the former friend was just too needy and clingy and tended to make up stories. What possible good reason could there be for my nada to befriend a young lady forty years younger than her with whom she has nothing in common? At 10:27 AM 07/15/2010 Hummingbird1298@... wrote: >My mother did this when I was older. She would call people I >had gone to high school with or had at one time been friends >and befriend them and be there for them. Because when she died, >people approached me to tell me my mother was their 'best >friend.' People my age. I wanted to scream, " WELL YOU WERENT >THE ONE SHE ABUSED DUMBASS! " -- Katrina Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 See this is what I don't understand. My nada is the same way. Capable of controlling the behavior in public. She is an adult child of an alcoholic so I don't know if that is what teaches them. But to me, when they are capable of controlling it, it makes them have narcissistic personality disorder instead of borderline personality disorder. Â Can anyone tell me the difference? Thanks in advance. Subject: Re: article on BP and brain and facial expression To: WTOAdultChildren1 Date: Wednesday, July 14, 2010, 1:42 PM Â my nada is capable of controling herself in public....she rarely ever has tantrums or rages where anyone other then her family can see her...she never treats outsiders badly, she only treats her family horrible, everyone else she is sickening sweet to Jackie I don't think there's any question that some of their behaviors are learned but I think the problem is far greater than them not understanding that their behavior is inapparopriate. I don't think that simply teaching them that there are better behaviors that are more appropriate will fix the real problem but if it is certainly a start, where it is possible. Whether it is even possible or not in most cases is questionable. BPD is not caused by young people being allowed to get away with bad behavior, although it is probably allowed to get worse when the bad behavior is tolerated. I think that attempting to teach them better behavior often just results in them leaving home. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 I don't know the entire difference, but I do know that a lot, A LOT of people with BPD also have NPD. My therapist and I discussed this last night (I apparently had a good 2-hour session last night, lol). I do think that BPD's know what they're doing is wrong. I just don't know that they can help themselves when they cross over the 'borderline' and become more psychotic than not. Re: article on BP and brain and facial expression To: WTOAdultChildren1 Date: Wednesday, July 14, 2010, 1:42 PM my nada is capable of controling herself in public....she rarely ever has tantrums or rages where anyone other then her family can see her...she never treats outsiders badly, she only treats her family horrible, everyone else she is sickening sweet to Jackie I don't think there's any question that some of their behaviors are learned but I think the problem is far greater than them not understanding that their behavior is inapparopriate. I don't think that simply teaching them that there are better behaviors that are more appropriate will fix the real problem but if it is certainly a start, where it is possible. Whether it is even possible or not in most cases is questionable. BPD is not caused by young people being allowed to get away with bad behavior, although it is probably allowed to get worse when the bad behavior is tolerated. I think that attempting to teach them better behavior often just results in them leaving home. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 I dont get angry at the people who come to me and tell me my mother is a wonderful, kind loving person...I just pity them because I know she's fooled them. it does make me sad that nada IS so nice and kind towards outsiders and has never shown any kindness/sweetnes toward her own family... Jackie My mother did this when I was older. She would call people I had gone to high school with or had at one time been friends and befriend them and be there for them. Because when she died, people approached me to tell me my mother was their 'best friend.' People my age. I wanted to scream, " WELL YOU WERENT THE ONE SHE ABUSED DUMBASS! " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 15, 2010 Report Share Posted July 15, 2010 my nada is both...as well as being a bully in circumstances that doest fit into any of the personality disorders...my therapist said my nada actually enjoys being a bully !! Jackie I don't know the entire difference, but I do know that a lot, A LOT of people with BPD also have NPD. My therapist and I discussed this last night (I apparently had a good 2-hour session last night, lol). I do think that BPD's know what they're doing is wrong. I just don't know that they can help themselves when they cross over the 'borderline' and become more psychotic than not. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 16, 2010 Report Share Posted July 16, 2010 I know...sickeningly sweet acting to everyone else. But, difficult at home. I really do see my mother as a child. And I really do think that she has a sincere, sweet side. Intermixed with manipulations, and the like. But, she also has a sweet phoney side that she uses to just get her way and impress people. However, I have noticed that her persona changes by who she spent the day with. And I think part of that is her lack of a " constant feeling of self. " If you don't know who your self is, how can you act the part? For, example after spending a day with my curt, narcissistic sister my mother came home feeling very full of herself and answering in a curt tone of voice. And I've noticed that she sometimes takes on ways, and expressions that I say and etc... after being with me. She will suddenly be trying to get my attention through paying attention to things I like...such as my cat and trying to tell me it is starving...and to come here and feed it. She also becomes very dependent, clingy and needy after spending several hours with me and won't leave me alone. Like she is afraid or something. > > I dont get angry at the people who come to me and tell me my mother is a > wonderful, kind loving person...I just pity them because I know she's > fooled them. it does make me sad that nada IS so nice and kind towards > outsiders and has never shown any kindness/sweetnes toward her own > family... > > Jackie > > > > > My mother did this when I was older. She would call people I had gone to > high school with or had at one time been friends and befriend them and be > there for them. Because when she died, people approached me to tell me my > mother was their 'best friend.' People my age. I wanted to scream, " WELL YOU > WERENT THE ONE SHE ABUSED DUMBASS! " > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 17, 2010 Report Share Posted July 17, 2010 my nada is and never has been never clingy at least not with me...thank goodness !! Jackie I know...sickeningly sweet acting to everyone else. But, difficult at home. I really do see my mother as a child. And I really do think that she has a sincere, sweet side. Intermixed with manipulations, and the like. But, she also has a sweet phoney side that she uses to just get her way and impress people. However, I have noticed that her persona changes by who she spent the day with. And I think part of that is her lack of a " constant feeling of self. " If you don't know who your self is, how can you act the part? For, example after spending a day with my curt, narcissistic sister my mother came home feeling very full of herself and answering in a curt tone of voice. And I've noticed that she sometimes takes on ways, and expressions that I say and etc... after being with me. She will suddenly be trying to get my attention through paying attention to things I like...such as my cat and trying to tell me it is starving...and to come here and feed it. She also becomes very dependent, clingy and needy after spending several hours with me and won't leave me alone. Like she is afraid or something. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 17, 2010 Report Share Posted July 17, 2010 My mother was clingy in a bad way. The demanding, have to talk to me 5 times a day clingy. And if I didn't answer when she called, she hung up and called right back. Repeatedly. She'd do it for 2 hours if she had to until I answered. Didn't matter that I had told her I had a 1:00 doctor appt...she was calling at 1:20, demanding I give her an update on what the doctor was saying. If I didn't answer, she'd leave pitiful messages about how I wasn't welcome at her funeral and how I didn't care if she lived or died or how much I was 'stressing' her because she couldn't hear my voice and " all she asked was to hear my voice " ...which wasn't true..she demanded I sit on the phone with her for hours. Then she'd call my husband and give him hell because I didn't answer. She didn't care if he was at work. She'd call his secretary and say she had an emergency. This would all take place in a matter of minutes. She did it to my sister too. She almost got my sister fired from her job it was so bad. And I didn't live near her, thank God, but my sister did and if my sister didn't answer, she would just in the car and drive to her work or to her house. It was really, really over the top. Re: Re: article on BP and brain and facial expression my nada is and never has been never clingy at least not with me...thank goodness !! Jackie I know...sickeningly sweet acting to everyone else. But, difficult at home. I really do see my mother as a child. And I really do think that she has a sincere, sweet side. Intermixed with manipulations, and the like. But, she also has a sweet phoney side that she uses to just get her way and impress people. However, I have noticed that her persona changes by who she spent the day with. And I think part of that is her lack of a " constant feeling of self. " If you don't know who your self is, how can you act the part? For, example after spending a day with my curt, narcissistic sister my mother came home feeling very full of herself and answering in a curt tone of voice. And I've noticed that she sometimes takes on ways, and expressions that I say and etc... after being with me. She will suddenly be trying to get my attention through paying attention to things I like...such as my cat and trying to tell me it is starving...and to come here and feed it. She also becomes very dependent, clingy and needy after spending several hours with me and won't leave me alone. Like she is afraid or something. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 18, 2010 Report Share Posted July 18, 2010 That's sad. I think they honestly don't know sometimes if they are a good mother. And it's like they blank out at times during life. > > >Perhaps. I'm just not so sure they can control how they react > >because they do have a brain abnormality. I could be wrong > >about this, but from what I understand about BPD, and they're > >learning more and more about it, their brains have actually > >developed differently either based on genetics of environmental > >factors. > > > >Maybe it's safer for me to believe my mother couldn't help > >herself because if I think she could, then that means she chose > >to be a crappy mother to me...and that sucks really bad. > > > >I told my therapist last night that I believe people with BPD > >need intervention, much like addicts...especially when children > >are involved. Someone needs to step in and first and foremost, > >protect the children and force the BPD person to get help. If > >they refuse help, the children still need protecting and that > >means they don't get access to the children without > >supervision. > > > > > > Re: article on BP and brain and > >facial expression > > > > > >Long before I knew what BPD was I was describing my nada as > >having the emotional maturity of a three year-old with a > >teenager's raging hormones. The results of that combination > >have > >been pretty disasterous in multiple ways. > > > >I don't think BPD is about not being able to control actions. I > > > >think it is about the ability to decide how to act being > >broken. > >The more emotional connection they have to the situation, the > >more problems they have with deciding how to act. > > -- > Katrina > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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