Guest guest Posted January 2, 2011 Report Share Posted January 2, 2011 I just wanted to say thank you for having a group like this! I happened into it from the website for the new book on the subject. I cannot believe there are so many other adult children of BPO parents. Many of you can probably relate to the sense of isolation; I grew up the only child of a widow who was the " black sheep " of the family. She had moved 100 miles away from her family of origin, and kept me isolated from my father's family (as well as from any other adult who showed any caring interest in me). Sound familiar, anyone? So when I stumbled across this group, I just couldn't believe it. Other people who have " parented " their own parents while growing up? My mother was never diagnosed, because she avoided at all costs any sort of psychiatric or psychological help offered. No head-shrinkers for her--there was nothing wrong with her. They were the crazy ones. I therefore lived through her constant cycle of boyfriends, new friends, friends-becoming-enemies overnight, job losses, angry outbursts that could be nothing or turn into hour-long tirades, accusations, verbal and emotional abuse. Emotional neglect until she was lonely and needed affection or a shoulder to cry on. Verbal cruelty until she needed something to brag about, so I'd be transformed into the perfect daughter. Her agoraphobia, fear of being alone, and several suicide attempts. Her impulsivity and lack of judgment extended to her health; she was a highly non-compliant diabetic, had had multiple back surgeries, smoked, and was grossly obese, as well as depressed (again she disagreed with her doctor on this one, he was just being stupid). I'd like to say that I found the strength to create healthy boundaries for myself and enforced them with my nada, but the truth is I was rescued by her untimely death at 53. Her own bad choices had done her in. I still wish I could say that I was sorry she was gone. I don't feel bitter or angry anymore (years of therapy), but I will never know if I could have stood up to her. When she died, I was a broken human being, unable to even say the word no to someone without experiencing guilt and fear. BPD is a disorder, but what is the name for our disorder? Anyway, I've come a long way since her death. I can trust people (to a healthy degree), can feel connected to others without people-pleasing, I can make decisions without hearing a million differing opinions telling me I'm WRONG again. I've even gotten to the point where I can look at the way I perceive the world and not feel like its all outside of my ability to accept, or change, if I choose. I can see the ways that I am and not instantly affix her face there. I am happy to have found others with similar experiences because it makes me feel like less of a freak. I have deliberately avoided talking about the years 0-18 with anyone unless I've known them for years, because I am still afraid that they wouldn't believe some of the crazy stories, or wouldn't understand the impact of those experiences. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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