Guest guest Posted July 28, 2004 Report Share Posted July 28, 2004 Hello Otwoma, that sounds really rotten! It must have been terrible to have a friend turn on you like that. Someone I knew at university claimed to have a stepdaughter who was a BP, but after a while started acting very oddly, and I just couldn't believe her anymore. I thought she might have had Bpd or such herself. It left a very sour taste in the mouth, especially since she was quite a close friend at the time. I know what you mean about the sudden splitting thing - I was a good kid until we moved to Australia when I was 14, and almost overnight I turned, in my mother's eyes, into a fiend from hell. I have a bare bones support via occasional letters and chats with my grandma, who always tried to emind me that I was a teenager and it was ok to feel confused and all over the place... but that was about it. I was completely cut off from my family and friends, and had a very hard time learning the language and social customs well enough so that I could fit in with the other kids at school. My mother must have had a hellish time too, but she took it out on me far too often. And my stepfather, after a while, started to take her side in the arguments and tell me not to upset my mother. I can understand why he did that, I am an adult now, but at the time the isolation was horrendous. It was kind of odd, reading the all-good / no-good section in the " borderline mother " book - I found bits I could relate to on both sides. I used to think that since my mother was so nice to me when I was little, my childhood wasn't all that bad... but both sides left a nasty legacy. It sounds like you've come a long way in dealing with the " fleas " and choosing to live your life. It's good to see! Take care D > Dear Velvet, > This is a long answer, but you asked .I was the " good " kid who got split to bad when I got a scholarship and left home. I thought the problem was my father's drinking and ended up in an Adult Child group. I went to group for three years and got on with my life. My husband and I were teaching in a study abroad program and a non traditional student signed up for my husband's class. We became friends. She moved a block away from us and she was in our lives almost everyday. She became a friend/daughter. She did student teaching in a men's federal prison and then she graduated. We took her to Thailand on a research trip and began to notice very strange behaviors. That was two years ago. > Since then, we have had little contact with her. She avoids us. If the behaviors were not so extreme I would just say we grew apart, but there was major projecting, raging, etc. and she moved in with her lesbian student teaching professor. (Previously, she had been in a very strict religion (Brethren) and actually gave her gay sister a very hard time about living a gay life. I knew she was BP, but did not know what it meant. I started to read and began to realize that both of my parents were BP. I realized that she had become the BP in my life that replaced them as they had recently died. > Now, I try to keep up with this list. I try to recognize fleas in myself. I work on dealing with my BP at work in the best way I can. I try to get a lot of excercise and since I am an artist, I try to find time to do my work. Now two years later, I miss the hole my pseudo friend left, but I have filled it with as mant positive things as I can. I am better because of the experience, but I went through many sleepless nights worrying about her. Take care. > Otwoma Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2004 Report Share Posted July 28, 2004 Hello Velvet, So many of us here have stories much like mine. If they were always terrible to us, sooner or later, we'd leave. If they were generally nice to us, we'd be happy. The love/hate thing keeps people sucked in. So thank goodness for this site. Understanding what we are dealing with is very helpful. Venting helps too. Just like any other addition, we are never not venerable to BPs. My greatest fear is that when either my husband or I die, my pseudo friend will come back to victimize the one who is left. I think because there were the two of us, we could support each other. Take care. Otwoma velvetgranat@... wrote: Hello Otwoma, that sounds really rotten! It must have been terrible to have a friend turn on you like that. Someone I knew at university claimed to have a stepdaughter who was a BP, but after a while started acting very oddly, and I just couldn't believe her anymore. I thought she might have had Bpd or such herself. It left a very sour taste in the mouth, especially since she was quite a close friend at the time. I know what you mean about the sudden splitting thing - I was a good kid until we moved to Australia when I was 14, and almost overnight I turned, in my mother's eyes, into a fiend from hell. I have a bare bones support via occasional letters and chats with my grandma, who always tried to emind me that I was a teenager and it was ok to feel confused and all over the place... but that was about it. I was completely cut off from my family and friends, and had a very hard time learning the language and social customs well enough so that I could fit in with the other kids at school. My mother must have had a hellish time too, but she took it out on me far too often. And my stepfather, after a while, started to take her side in the arguments and tell me not to upset my mother. I can understand why he did that, I am an adult now, but at the time the isolation was horrendous. It was kind of odd, reading the all-good / no-good section in the " borderline mother " book - I found bits I could relate to on both sides. I used to think that since my mother was so nice to me when I was little, my childhood wasn't all that bad... but both sides left a nasty legacy. It sounds like you've come a long way in dealing with the " fleas " and choosing to live your life. It's good to see! Take care D > Dear Velvet, > This is a long answer, but you asked .I was the " good " kid who got split to bad when I got a scholarship and left home. I thought the problem was my father's drinking and ended up in an Adult Child group. I went to group for three years and got on with my life. My husband and I were teaching in a study abroad program and a non traditional student signed up for my husband's class. We became friends. She moved a block away from us and she was in our lives almost everyday. She became a friend/daughter. She did student teaching in a men's federal prison and then she graduated. We took her to Thailand on a research trip and began to notice very strange behaviors. That was two years ago. > Since then, we have had little contact with her. She avoids us. If the behaviors were not so extreme I would just say we grew apart, but there was major projecting, raging, etc. and she moved in with her lesbian student teaching professor. (Previously, she had been in a very strict religion (Brethren) and actually gave her gay sister a very hard time about living a gay life. I knew she was BP, but did not know what it meant. I started to read and began to realize that both of my parents were BP. I realized that she had become the BP in my life that replaced them as they had recently died. > Now, I try to keep up with this list. I try to recognize fleas in myself. I work on dealing with my BP at work in the best way I can. I try to get a lot of excercise and since I am an artist, I try to find time to do my work. Now two years later, I miss the hole my pseudo friend left, but I have filled it with as mant positive things as I can. I am better because of the experience, but I went through many sleepless nights worrying about her. Take care. > Otwoma Send questions and/or concerns to ModOasis-owner " Stop Walking on Eggshells, " a primer for non-BPs, can be ordered via 1-888-35-SHELL () and for the table of contents, go to: http://www.BPDCentral.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 2004 Report Share Posted July 30, 2004 Hello Otwoma, It's a bit like that, isn't it?.. It would be so much easier to deal with the loved ones with BPD, if they were just nasty. There wouldn't be the bewildering " turns " and lighting-strike rages, alternating with the " nice " mother/ father / whatever. I think it's that changeability that scarred me among the worst traits in my mothers makeup. And yes, you are right- an abusive relationship is an addiction, and damn hard to leave! I truly hope that that friend of yours won't come back, since you are so uncomfortable with the idea! TBH, knowing what bpd is like, I actually doubt that she might - you and your husband may well be the greatest fiends in her books. I am sorry if thats too presumptious of me to say... I guess I find it almost a relief that BPs might think of me as a fiend - it's not a comfortable thought, of course, but I can deal with it. After all, that makes me too scary to be approached by them, right? Yeah, it's twisted logic, but it works for me... Take care D > Hello Velvet, > So many of us here have stories much like mine. If they were always terrible to us, sooner or later, we'd leave. If they were generally nice to us, we'd be happy. The love/hate thing keeps people sucked in. So thank goodness for this site. Understanding what we are dealing with is very helpful. Venting helps too. Just like any other addition, we are never not venerable to BPs. My greatest fear is that when either my husband or I die, my pseudo friend will come back to victimize the one who is left. I think because there were the two of us, we could support each other. Take care. > Otwoma > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 2004 Report Share Posted July 30, 2004 Dear Velvet, Yes, I admit it. My husband and I were FIENDS! We were persued by our pseudo friend and then FORCED her to eat dinner with us. Then, we actually HELPED her study so she could raise her grades. Having higher grades, ENABLED her to get a high profile appontment to the university governance board. Next, we PAID her tuition for a class abroad that I taught. We bought a new home and she had her own ROOM equal exactly to the size of our son's room. Then, we MADE her equal to our son in our will. Lastly, we GAVE her a trip to Thailand as a graduation present. Yup. WE WERE FIENDS! Seriously, I have a hard time thinking that we were anything but wonderful to this person. We did it because she acted like we were the parents she wished she had. We did it because she was fun and witty. She even had friends who accused us of trying to get her to have a threesome with us, when we never even thought about that or considered it in any way. I now think that was really what she was thinking coming from such a twisted background. I think just having a couple treat you so well wasn't enough because NOTHING IS EVER ENOUGH FOR THESE PEOPLE. Tatoo that on every nons brain, and we will all be better for it. Take care. Otwoma velvetgranat@... wrote: Hello Otwoma, It's a bit like that, isn't it?.. It would be so much easier to deal with the loved ones with BPD, if they were just nasty. There wouldn't be the bewildering " turns " and lighting-strike rages, alternating with the " nice " mother/ father / whatever. I think it's that changeability that scarred me among the worst traits in my mothers makeup. And yes, you are right- an abusive relationship is an addiction, and damn hard to leave! I truly hope that that friend of yours won't come back, since you are so uncomfortable with the idea! TBH, knowing what bpd is like, I actually doubt that she might - you and your husband may well be the greatest fiends in her books. I am sorry if thats too presumptious of me to say... I guess I find it almost a relief that BPs might think of me as a fiend - it's not a comfortable thought, of course, but I can deal with it. After all, that makes me too scary to be approached by them, right? Yeah, it's twisted logic, but it works for me... Take care D > Hello Velvet, > So many of us here have stories much like mine. If they were always terrible to us, sooner or later, we'd leave. If they were generally nice to us, we'd be happy. The love/hate thing keeps people sucked in. So thank goodness for this site. Understanding what we are dealing with is very helpful. Venting helps too. Just like any other addition, we are never not venerable to BPs. My greatest fear is that when either my husband or I die, my pseudo friend will come back to victimize the one who is left. I think because there were the two of us, we could support each other. Take care. > Otwoma > Send questions and/or concerns to ModOasis-owner " Stop Walking on Eggshells, " a primer for non-BPs, can be ordered via 1-888-35-SHELL () and for the table of contents, go to: http://www.BPDCentral.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 30, 2004 Report Share Posted July 30, 2004 I think in our case it was a mix of her projection, distortion and sexual confusion. We were very upset when she told us what her " friends " said. Our pseudo friend wanted to tell me about the past sexual abuse, and I just couldn't bear hearing it. She got angry with me over that. Take care. Otwoma sexystarshine79@... wrote: I wonder if these bizzare and innapropriate sexual ideas are a common BPD trait? My mother always gets such nasty ideas. She once accussed my step father of wanted to masterbate with my baby sisters underwear! Then she had INSANE ideas that I and the middle daughter would seduce him away or that we really wanted to sleep with him if given the chance!!! Ugh. Hello, not wanting any penis that has been near my MOTHER! EVER!!! And he would never want his step kids that way, he is a pretty honorable and decent human . But thats the way she thinks. she really believes that everyone just wants to have sex with everyone on the planet! No one is innocent in her book. In a message dated 7/30/2004 7:44:25 AM Eastern Daylight Time, otwoma2002@... writes: She even had friends who accused us of trying to get her to have a threesome with us, when we never even thought about that or considered it in any way. I now think that was really what she was thinking coming from such a twisted background. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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