Guest guest Posted April 14, 2006 Report Share Posted April 14, 2006 Has anyone else noticed that Munchausen syndrome is very common with BPD and/or NPD? They are perpetually suffering some sort of illness, or so they think, sometimes I seriously think they create/fake the symptoms so that people will pay them attention. Send instant messages to your online friends http://au.messenger.yahoo.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 , MY nada seems more inclined toward Munchausen-by-proxy (and exploiting the considerable illness -- kidney failure and diabetes from age 4 -- that I would have had anyway). Fun explaining to your nephrologist and renal social worker that you caught nada salting your food (a non-no when you're on dialysis. - (thankfully I was able to move out of nada/dishrag's house, get a pancreas/kidney transplant, and am now packing with my boyfriend for our move to Seattle, which is almost as far away from here as I can get and still be in the continental US) > > Has anyone else noticed that Munchausen syndrome is very common with BPD > and/or NPD? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 I wondered about Munchausen syndrome and BPD. In the later years of my teenage life, the only time my mom was remotely nice to me, as in sweet and kind and loving, was when I was sick. Maybe because she felt more in control, I don't know. She demands, even now, that I come home immediately when I'm ill, despite the fact that I'm 600 miles away, in college, and have my own life. I wonder how much that relates to the fact that I suffer with an autoimmune disorder and chronic fatigue now that I'm an adult. I'm sure the stress doesn't help either. > > Has anyone else noticed that Munchausen syndrome is very common with BPD > and/or NPD? They are perpetually suffering some sort of illness, or so they > think, sometimes I seriously think they create/fake the symptoms so that > people will pay them attention. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 I'm 50 years old, and looking back over all the years I've been struggling with my mom's dysfunctional behavior, one of the most prominent aspects was her desire for control. Things were peachy when I was a charming, compliant child. When adolescence rolled around, however, I was dumbfounded by her hostility, accusations and general nastiness. I believe her desperate need for control is manifested by a couple of things. In conversations now, she consistently refers back to sweet, soppy, overly sentimental scenes from my early childhood, even manufacturing details that never occurred, or that she misunderstood. I believe this is because she longs for the days when SHE was the MOTHER...the all-knowing, all-seeing, all-controlling dispenser of all things good. The other symptom was, just as you've described, her rare displays of loving concern when I was ill or injured. It set me up to unconsciously learn to capitalize on the sick role. It was only when I left home and married a non-BP, wonderful husband, that I was able to stop seeking loving attention by being sick or hurt. Even now, when she's 82 and I'm 50 (the charming child left far behind!) she tries to coo over and mother me when I'm ill. It makes me unreasonably furius, and I don't share my rare illnesses often with her. My advice is to just keep it to yourself if you can, tough it out at college and skip the 600 mile journey. For my mom, anyway, it wasn't about genuine concern. It was an affirmation that she was in control. > > > > Has anyone else noticed that Munchausen syndrome is very common with BPD > > and/or NPD? They are perpetually suffering some sort of illness, or > so they > > think, sometimes I seriously think they create/fake the symptoms so that > > people will pay them attention. > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 >I wonder how much that relates to the fact that I suffer with an >autoimmune disorder and chronic fatigue now that I'm an adult. I'm >sure the stress doesn't help either. Many of the people who post here have talked about various autoimmune diseases. I read somewhere (sorry, can't remember where) that if a child is born into a very stressful situation and the stress continues it somehow affects the development of the brain and the person becomes more apt to have autoimmune problems. I have tons of allergies, (I always say I was just sent to the wrong planet) asthma, and now the past 5 years or so I have Type 2 diabetes. All of these are autoimmune diseases. And I was born into a very high stress home. My sister says my mom was very ill when I was born. Looking back my sister thinks she suffered from post-partem depression. She said she had a crazy look in her eyes at the time. She tells me I cried continuously for the first while and that she, not my mother, was the one who rocked me for hours on end trying to get me to sleep. There is probably a good chance that your autoimmune disorder comes from early stress in your life. Dee Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 Yeah I did notice that. Good point. > > Has anyone else noticed that Munchausen syndrome is very common with BPD > and/or NPD? They are perpetually suffering some sort of illness, or so they > think, sometimes I seriously think they create/fake the symptoms so that > people will pay them attention. > > > > > > Send instant messages to your online friends http://au.messenger.yahoo.com > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 , I know that someone mentioned to me that this was the topic of an old thread but when I searched for it I didn't find a lot. I have noticed that when my nada is sick, she complains incessantly as if she was the only one who ever experienced pain. When the rest of us are sick, she is absolutely heartless, doesn't notice and makes unreasonable demands on us. Like the time when she made me carry all of my heavy stuff and boxes right after I'd just had malaria!!!!! WTF? You'd think she could have had one of my huge brothers or my dad help me even if she didn't want to. She didn't seem to care that I should have been hospitalized and wasn't, that just the day before I had been shaking and twitching with fever and dehydration and that just getting up made me lightheaded to the point that I had to sit down every few minutes. URGH! I am, in fact, still pissed about that. When she catches a cold someone else in the family had, she'll try to argue that she is sicker than the rest of us were. Sigh. Trish > > Has anyone else noticed that Munchausen syndrome is very common with BPD > and/or NPD? They are perpetually suffering some sort of illness, or so they > think, sometimes I seriously think they create/fake the symptoms so that > people will pay them attention. > > > > > > Send instant messages to your online friends http://au.messenger.yahoo.com > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2006 Report Share Posted April 15, 2006 > > I'm 50 years old, and looking back over all the years I've been >struggling with my mom's dysfunctional behavior, one of the most >prominent aspects was her desire for control. Things were peachy >when I was a charming, compliant child. When adolescence rolled >around, however, I was dumbfounded by her hostility, accusations and >general nastiness. You have just described my life too. It was when I started to have a mind of my own in adolescence that the drama began for me. If I saw it before I don't remember. But suddenly, I was constantly hurting her deeply. She wasn't so much of a hostile person or a witch, but she had a master's degree in guilt. If we disagreed, she was never happy til I was in tears. My sweet elderly grandmother, who was with us for 3 months of each year, would take me aside and reassure me that it wasn't me. She would say my mother was going through a rough time. (Menopause I guess). My mother's main thing in life was control and for a while I had that flea too. I realize looking back that I was too forceful and controlling with my children some of the time. It has been such a relief to recognize that and make the necessary changes I needed to. I have talked with each of my children and made apology to them. They have been very forgiving and we all share a better relationship with each other as a result. My mom at 96 is still trying to maintain control of all of us. Yes, her children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren (of which there are now 60). I think in some ways she is enmeshed with us all and feels responsible to see that we don't do something stupid. It drives us crazy. She is also trying to keep control in her own life and there is very little she can control now. I think that is one of the main reasons she is so very unhappy now. Anyway, just wanted you to know that you have a parallel life experience with me in many respects. By the way I am 62 now. Dee Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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