Guest guest Posted May 16, 2006 Report Share Posted May 16, 2006 I think my mother is a little different than some because she doesn't scream and rage that way in anger. Her anger is very cold, calculated and brutal. Her screaming is from frustration at not getting her way and resembles a child's tantrum. The other thing is I started staying away as much as possible as soon as I could. I haven't lived in her home since the summer I turned 20 - after that I stayed at college in the summer. I did stay a month or so before my wedding, but had a car and stayed out of the house as much as possible. Her behavior then was so bizarre it boggled my mind. So I haven't been there to experience her behavior much as an adult. And I wasn't around or in contact with anyone when I went NC, so I didn't have to hear about that too much either. What I did hear was enough to reenforce my NC decision. My guess is her behavior would have escalated if I were around as I was pulling away from her. And that her patterns would have been more clear if I saw them as an adult. Not that the insight would be worth being around her. I don't know how I made the decision to go NC, or what gave me the strength to do it. But I think if I hadn't done it so definitively, and so young, things would have gotten very very ugly. fresabird > > Freasabird, I have seen the Jekyll and Hyde in a couple of different > ways with my nada. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 In a message dated 5/17/2006 4:54:00 P.M. Central Standard Time, smhtrain2@... writes: > The reason I determine that I shouldn't write on here anymore is because I am in limbo and think I've said too much or irritated people with what I write and I haven't any idea what it might be that I've said, then I think I don't know what boundaries are and I've always got my foot in my mouth, I've been too aggressive or too helpless or too complaining or too something and if I stick my foot out of the covers it will get cut off. Hey there....my foot is always in my mouth or I feel like it is. I even ask my hubby when we leave visiting my family if I embarrassed him in anyway. He always looks shocked that I even asked such a question. I think the way we were raised makes us feel like we say the wrong thing all the time. Please continue to post. Ignore people that you feel judge you too harshly then when you feel like it; if you feel like it, you can go back and read their comment when you are feeling stronger and ready to hear what they feel about your situation. Believe in yourself and don't expect to know or understand this complex bitter illness. Tonya Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Hi Kathleen, I check this board every day, although I am posting less and less. I just wanted to say that I don't remember reading anything that your posted that was too much or inappropriate. If anyone posts something inappropriate, they would be contacted by our list monitor. Sometimes, some of the posts do stir strong emotions in others, but I think that most of us try to be aware when that is happening. It is good practice for KOs to respectfully disagree with each other. This is a safe place to practice that skill. (Quite a different situation from when we would disagree with nada!) This is just a thought (and feel free to disagree!). Could some of the feelings you are expressing be due to how you were made to feel as a child when you said what was on your mind? I hope you will reconsider your decision about not posting. This is a very good place for a KO to be. Take care, Sylvia ........> > The reason I determine that I shouldn't write on here anymore is because I am in limbo and think I've said too much or irritated people with what I write and I haven't any idea what it might be that I've said, then I think I don't know what boundaries are and I've always got my foot in my mouth, I've been too aggressive or too helpless or too complaining or too something and if I stick my foot out of the covers it will get cut off. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 I read as much as my minimally-ADD mind could manage at one time. LOL! but I am glad you posted this. I have know for awhile that my nada had more than BPD, but I didn't know what else. Based on this article, I would venture to state she is also a sociopath. Whew...one more thing to take off of my to do list! hehe! The whole area of personality disorders seems confusing at best. There was a statement in this link about how they do overlap. I agree with what someone posted in reply to something else: It doesn't matter what it is called. We should not have had to suffer the abuse we did suffer. Thanks for putting this out there for us to consider. I always enjoy reading your posts. sylvia > > > > > > > > Anyone else deal with this? my mom is great when she is great but > > if > > > > she's ticked - WATCH OUT! How does this fit with the BP world of > > > Oz? > > > > > > > > ~AC~ > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > __________________________________________________ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 So the five are probably the various forms of personality disorder. Makes sense as when I read about the various ones I could see traits of three in particular in my nada - bpd, apd (antisocial or sociopath/psychopath) and a little narcisism (npd). Forgive me if you have mentioned this before, but have you read the book about bpd mothers? That behavior sounds very " hermit " like. I saw that some in my mother, but not that severe. Of course a lot of my childhood is a blur, so I don't think I would be able to look back and pinpoint a pattern to her " tantrums " other than the ones that were a direct reaction to me. The worst were when I had demonstrated my growing independence and would not bow to her wishes. The one I remember most was the day I told her she would never ever touch me again - that she could punish me by grounding etc. but she would never lay a hand on me again (age 10). She screamed and cried forever. Another was when she found a paper where I had written " I hate Mom " about a hundred times, covering the paper, even the margins. The funny thing was I had written it a year or two before she found it and forgotten about it. She was so mad, that she did not notice the handwriting was much younger than I was at the time. You are right, it doesn't matter what the diagnosis is, it matters how it has affected us. And what truly matters is what we are doing about it to get past it. The work we are doing to rise above our childhoods and move on as much as it is possible to do so. I'm new, so I have no idea what you may or may not have done to irritate anyone. I have enjoyed reading your posts, and learned from them. I hope I " see' you around here in the future. And by the way, if you ever irritated me, or I felt you overstepped a boundary somehow, I would tell you directly. If you read that into something I type that isn't direct, it means that what I mean to say and what is coming across is wrong. Let me know, and I willl clarify. Sometimes the written word can convey meaning that is not intended. I lived with too much thinly veiled criticism and manipulation as a kid. As an adult, I just don't play those type of games. And I don't take it personally when someone disagrees with something I say either. I have often learned the most from someone with a different opinion than mine. HTH fresabird > > Fresabird, the nada in my FOO has the five overlapping. This came from a counseling agency. I wasn't told what all of them were. BPD was verified. Hysteria, I'm sure although in true hysteria the person can't come out of it if say they were slapped across the face, but she could stop hers on a dime when she wanted to. Sociopath, psychopath, I don't know and don't care. The important thing is we had to live with it under any name. I was told that BPD is not genetic and that I didn't have it, but it feels like I do now. > > Is this at all familiar? Sometimes the screaming rages prefaced going out of the house. Not to relatives but other places. Church. Every Sunday. The only way she could go anywhere without losing it was spur-of-the-moment. If it was planned we probably wouldn't get there. I was older before I realized this. About two years ago she had to go 35 miles away to pay taxes. She moaned and complained that she did not want to go. It was winter, the wind was blowing hard and I had a small car, her health could not take it, etc. Flailing arms, pacing the floor. I did not want to take her out in it either, so I called the county seat for information and discovered we could do this over the phone. The only thing that I can figure out is that I must have said " Oh I'm so glad we don't have to go " with a child's intonation and that set her off. Now she wanted to get out of the house, she was deprived of going somewhere, she had to get out of the house, screaming, rage. Flailing arms, pacing the floor. > > The reason I determine that I shouldn't write on here anymore is because I am in limbo and think I've said too much or irritated people with what I write and I haven't any idea what it might be that I've said, then I think I don't know what boundaries are and I've always got my foot in my mouth, I've been too aggressive or too helpless or too complaining or too something and if I stick my foot out of the covers it will get cut off. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 I'll read it more tonight and send my thoughts. This whole area is something I have though a lot about, so I will be interested to see what they say. fresabird -- In WTOAdultChildren1 , Recovering Non-BP wrote: > > fresabird and All, > > What do you think of http://faculty.ncwc.edu/toconnor/428/428lect16.htm? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 Thank you and the others who responded. I am a quiet, low-key person, reading, study, writing, outdoors, walking, etc. Whenever we went anywhere nada and jealous brother would critique anything I said on the way home and it was usually wrong. We did not talk back as per upbringing at the time so I was not disrespectful. I was stuck in the house with her and it seems to me she screamed at me all day long. I was shy and fairly withdrawn when I was younger and when I talked it felt as though I was sticking out all over and was horribly loud and obnoxious. I would get overwhelmed by this feeling when actually I had barely made a dent in the atmosphere. It was distorted perspective on my part. I'm wondering if the BP has that, only opposite. Maybe the rages and screaming doesn't seem like anything at all to them. Re: Question for the group - the Jekyll and Hyde BP Hi Kathleen, I check this board every day, although I am posting less and less. I just wanted to say that I don't remember reading anything that your posted that was too much or inappropriate. If anyone posts something inappropriate, they would be contacted by our list monitor. Sometimes, some of the posts do stir strong emotions in others, but I think that most of us try to be aware when that is happening. It is good practice for KOs to respectfully disagree with each other. This is a safe place to practice that skill. (Quite a different situation from when we would disagree with nada!) This is just a thought (and feel free to disagree!). Could some of the feelings you are expressing be due to how you were made to feel as a child when you said what was on your mind? I hope you will reconsider your decision about not posting. This is a very good place for a KO to be. Take care, Sylvia .......> > The reason I determine that I shouldn't write on here anymore is because I am in limbo and think I've said too much or irritated people with what I write and I haven't any idea what it might be that I've said, then I think I don't know what boundaries are and I've always got my foot in my mouth, I've been too aggressive or too helpless or too complaining or too something and if I stick my foot out of the covers it will get cut off. Problems? Ask our friendly List Manager for help at @.... SEND HER ANY POSTS THAT CONCERN YOU; DO NOT Respond ON THE GROUP. To order the KO bible " Stop Walking on Eggshells, " call 888-35-SHELL () for your copy. We also refer to " Understanding the Borderline Mother " (Lawson) and " Surviving the Borderline Parent, " (Roth) which you can find at any bookstore. Welcome to the WTO community! From Randi Kreger, Owner BPDCentral, WTO Online Community and author SWOE and the SWOE Workbook. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 I'm glad you got a kick out of it! And 13 years - blows me away sometimes, but it feels good, really really good. By the way, it was truly the end of the wallpaper saga for me as I can't stand the stuff to this day. I have removed all I could in every house so far (7 as an adult) and part of what I loved about my current home - the prior owner had repainted every room. There is one border in the laundry room, and it is currently teaching me patience, as there are more important things to do, but it's day will come..... :^) fresabird > > Now it is my turn to laugh. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 18, 2006 Report Share Posted May 18, 2006 Ok, the kids are in bed and I had time to read this. Before I do, I have to ask you something. How should I refer to you at the beginning of a post? One Non-BP Recovering Man is kind of long. My guess is others here have come up with something, but every time I start to address you at the beginning of a post I am at a loss. What would you prefer? So here goes. Be forewarned, I am shooting from the hip so to speak, as my thoughts on this whole thing seem to be in flux as I learn more. And I tend to process things by writing sometimes, so I could disagree with myself tomorrow. I found the information in the article very very interesting. Especially all the different ways of dividing it out and classifying. This is the first time I have seen Sociopath listed as a subcategory of APD. I thought " sociaopath " was the kind of popularized term and apd was the current " medical " term for the same thing. All of the different ways the various disorders are split up are very interesting, and mind boggling at the same time. So far, I am leaning towards a continuam from higher functioning bpd where recovery is the most possible, sliding into the " witch " type bpd and on into apd (sociopath) with npd, hpd and other pds as kind of variations on the scale. Different focuses for the disorder. The other thing that struck me overall was how male focused everything is. Maybe I am sensitive to it after reading " When She Was Bad.... " but a lot of the criteria they are using are really " male " . No wonder more men are classified as sociopath/apd as the criteria in and of themselves are so focused on typical male behavior. If you took the same stuff and imposed social norms for females, and then social norms for a particular time period I think you could come up with different criteria. I wonder if the " witch " bpd woman is a different manifestation of the " sociopath " man. A lot of the critera seem to look a lot at " actions " rather than underlying attitudes/beliefs, reasoning. Which is really interesting since bpd is considered to some extent to be a more " female " disease. And the diagnosis for it seems to focus on out of control emotions, fear of abandonment etc. Here is a list that has more traits than " symptoms " from this article: Sense of entitlement; Unremorseful; Apathetic to others; Unconscionable behavior; Blameful of others; Manipulative and conning; Affectively cold; Disparate understanding; Socially irresponsible; Disregardful of obligations; Nonconforming to norms; Irresponsible Doesn't that seem a lot like npd? But then here is the list of " symptoms " : Glib and superficial charm; Grandiose sense of self-worth; Need for stimulation; Pathological lying; Conning and manipulativeness; Lack of remorse or guilt; Shallow affect; Callousness and lack of empathy; Parasitic lifestyle; Poor behavioral controls; Promiscuous sexual behavior; Early behavior problems; Lack of realistic, long-term goals; Impulsivity; Irresponsibility; Failure to accept responsibility for own actions; Many short-term marital relationships; Juvenile delinquency; Revocation of conditional release; Criminal versatility And I really noticed how later in the article they said that one of the things in a sociopath's background is a lack of a male role model. Does this apply to female sociopaths? Have researchers kind of accepted that women are not sociopaths and designed things accordingly? Another thing noted in the article was the notion that there were more sociopaths who were poor African American because most men in the prison population fit the apd criteria and there are so many more African American men there. They went on to say that a sociopath born into a rich white family might " eek out a living " in business or politics. My question would be how many CEO's have they checked for the criteria? It brings to mind something I have struggled with reading some of the research on women who sexually abuse girls. One of the studies, that is then cited over and over in subsequent studies, classifies female sex offenders in 3 categories (another early study cites 4). But these studies were based on interviewing women in prison for sex crimes. In a society that really doesn't acknowledge that this type of abuse even exists, can you imagine what these women must have done to be tried and convicted? No wonder one of the traits noted was " low intellect " , as well as " low socio-economic status " . DUH! As a friend in law enforcement once said - we rarely catch the smart ones. And they were all abused as kids - as are pretty much every criminal that is asked - sometimes true, but of course, you are asking someone who has proven themselves to be dishonest, so....... Another study used interviews with CPS, and documented abuse through them. There were more female abusers in single, poor black families. But the social workers admitted that their investigations are swayed by the socio-economic status of the family. And this type of abuse is often discovered in the course of investigating other allegations. So the basic premise of the studies is flawed from the get go if they really want to study female offenders. I have read some authors who totally acknowledge this, stating that they are giving a snapshot of the group they had to study, but others seem to be extrapolating to the general population from a handful of examples. And then their colleagues quote them and it continues. I know it would be hard if not impossible to get a clear picture of this type of stuff across the population, but to me, they need to more clearly define what the goal is first. Is apd considered a male thing or a human thing? And if it is a human thing, how might these traits manifest in women differently. Same thing with bpd. I don't think these types of disorders are going to turn out to be treatable with meds in the way that bipolar and schizophrenia are. In those cases, the patient has to make the choice to take the meds and whatever other treatment they need. But with personality disorders, the behavior seems to be driven more by a balance between personal choice, emotion (or lack thereof) and environment. I wonder if you could strip away the gender stuff, if you would see a similar mechanism behind it for an apd man and a bpd woman, and find a similar scale from more functional on down. Have you read " The Sociopath Next Door " . It was very interesting, as it gave real life examples. I felt towards the end that the author lost track of where she was going, but the descriptions were very very interesting. These are not the people that are in the studies. These are the people that create chaos all around us. " People of the Lie " approaches the same thing from a different angle. As for how all this relates to my mother, I'm so tired my eyelids are drooping, so I won't elaborate too much, but I think she falls somewhere on the scale more toward apd. According to a lot of the criteria, criminal activity is a prereq for the apd club. But I find it interesting that they assume incarceration. If they expand it to fit criminal activity that was never noticed, or prosecuted, there would be a lot more people in the category. And if they included child abuse as a crime, then a lot of bpd mothers, especially the witches, would fall right in line. Sorry this is so long, and probably disjointed. I don't have time to edit it, so if it is completely incoherent, feel free to delete. As you can tell, this is something I have thought a lot about, but not been able to pin much down. fresabird > fresabird and All, > > What do you think of http://faculty.ncwc.edu/toconnor/428/428lect16.htm? > It's about APD (Anti-social Personality Disorder) and similar stuff. > WARNING: it's NOT pleasant. It mentions BPD once. It could be disturbing > to read. It's also very informative. > > One Non-BP Recovering Man Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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