Guest guest Posted July 21, 2010 Report Share Posted July 21, 2010 - Clearly, she organized these writings and left them where you'd find them. It's like she left a little prosecutor standing in her living room, waving " evidence " of your awful mistreatment of her around. It represents her warped view of life, but your reaction to it (anger, and the urge to refute every statement) - is using up YOUR energy and making your husband and daughter ticked off as well. So I'd ask this - is there any clinical value to this? If you showed it to a therapist or her doctor, would it help to solidify the decision to keep her in the nursing home for the rest of her life? If you showed it to your therapist (if you have one), would it have any value in explaining what you're dealing with and helping you work through the process of healing yourself? If so, fine. Put the damned thing in a fire safe or a cardboard box, tape it up so you don't keep getting the urge to read it, and hold it for future use as " evidence " of your mother's madness and your own wounds. But realize that if you do use it, you're going to feel compelled to defend yourself and your family against every one of her crazy accusations. She's already in a nursing home, diagnosed with dementia. Everybody around her is convinced she's not functioning with a working brain. You don't have to prove to anybody that she's crazy - it's done. Nobody is going to argue that she should be let out or that you should have to " serve " her any more. Therefore, I'm thinking you don't really need to keep the evidence - again, the exception would be if you are in therapy and feel the need to " prove " to your therapist just how crazy she was. There is no prosecutor. You don't have to defend yourself. What are the chances of you, or anybody else in your family, really writing a play or using this notebook in a creative way? If you've got a real opportunity to use it, fine. But if it's just going to sit in the garage, festering, then I'd say get rid of it. Have a ceremony - get your husband and daughter, start a fire, feed the pages in, and state that you are letting go of your mother's madness and its hold over you. > > > > That is my question. > > My dad died in 2004 and my mother went even further off the deep end, as > > Nadas are prone to doing when they are " abandoned " by someone's death. She > > relied on him for everything - I felt she had him trained, and to be honest, > > I thought she was bone idle for the last 10 years or so of his life. > > I knew she was a narcissist, but didn't know about bpd, and although I now > > realize she was a high-functioning bpd my entire life, I was so enmeshed > > that it wasn't until I was in my 40s that I began to realize she had major > > problems. > > For a long time I thought she had dementia, which she does now have, but > > looking back I realize it was just the bpd getting worse as she aged - she > > became very hermity-waify. > > After my dad died she started writing him letters. In the world of normals > > this could be a sweet and poignant project. But no - the letters were a > > litany of how bad her life was. > > In 2007 she took an overdose hoping to die, and as I have said before, > > told everyone who would listen that it was because she and I didn't > > " interact " enough. And again, for those of you who don't remember me saying this (I > > think I have :-) ) I was recovering from a traumatic and life-altering > > injury at the time, and was a little busy with the wheelchair and rehab to be > > doing much " interacting " with anyone. > > Fast forward to four months ago. She went into a nursing home due to > > advancing dementia. While working on her condo getting it ready to rent (still > > not done - it's hard for me to be there), I " found " a binder full of these > > letters. > > They were left in a clearly visible place in the living room where they > > would surely be found. > > Well I started reading them, and was appalled. They are filled with vitriol > > and gaslighting about what I did and didn't do, and what my husband and > > daughter did and didn't do. > > An example: She writes about not being at our home for the entire year of > > 2005. Um, gee. I guess I hallucinated all the holiday and birthday parties? > > The final page in the book was a suicide note explaining why our treatment > > of her made her need to kill herself. > > Thank God nobody else found these - I have no idea what their reaction > > would be. It is entirely plausible that someone reading them would believe all > > the insanity and think I am a really horrible person. > > > > Anyway, my question is this: I have only skimmed the letters. My daughter > > read a lot of them, which infuriated her. Although she says they'd make a > > great one-woman play - with background scenes of what really happened being > > shown while the woman read the letters out loud. > > > > My daughter says I should not read them - we still have them out in the > > garage. My husband says I should destroy them - he read some that accused him > > of things he didn't do, and he is royally peeved. I am not sure. Should I > > read them or burn them? Will reading them help cement in my spirit that she > > is truly insane and help me come to terms with it? > > Or will reading them further damage me and cause even more pain to my > > already wounded spirit? Like many KOs I struggle with dysthymia. Will it make > > it worse? > > > > What would you do? > > > > I'm open to anything and everything you want to tell me about this - I am > > leaning toward not. So if you think not, please convince me to destroy these > > d*mn letters. > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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