Guest guest Posted August 24, 2005 Report Share Posted August 24, 2005 --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > Now that I am reading about BPD, and becoming aware of how sick > she really is. I mean I would say that everytime I go around her > and the bizarre things would come out of her mouth, but then I > forget. > > You know, I literally, forget a week later if I don't write it > down. WHat is that? Does anyone else do that? I think most of us KOs have experienced our psyches protecting us from a reality that was too painful to process. Sometimes we " forget " (actually repress) impossible-seeming or unbearably-painful memories, or sometimes we remember the facts but repress our feelings about them. When I first started with my therpist I think I shocked her by describing the most horrific, soul-destroying experiences in a calm, rational, detached and very intellectual way. This might be a pattern that began when you were a child and it was the only way you could live with your nada and not go completely crazy yourself. I expect that as you continue to educate yourself about BP, and are able to normalize your experiences by understanding them and sharing them with us, you'll find that this improves. If you can call remembering all the " crazy nada assertions " an improvement, that is! But you may also find that as you stop forgetting the crazy things your mom is saying, you will realise that they are causing you even more distress than you are consciously aware of right now. I fear this may be connected to your position of material dependence on her. It's a horrible thing, to be dependent on, and therefore vulnerable to, someone who's irrational and thus unreliable and unpredictable. Could it be that some part of your brain is protecting you from the sheer awful uncertainty of that? The REAL truth is that you are actually MUCH safer now than when you didn't know about your mom's BP. You have supports and resources and options that you didn't have before, both for dealing with her and for taking care of yourself and your own family. Hugs, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2005 Report Share Posted August 24, 2005 Hi , You wrote: You know, I literally, forget a week later if I don't write it down. WHat is that? Does anyone else do that? , with everything that you wrote, forgetting is a blessing and a survival skill! It would be wonderful if we all could permanently forget our nadas and everything they ever did to us and be truly free! Zap my brain pleeeeassee! Hugs, Lula ____________________________________________________ Start your day with Yahoo! - make it your home page http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 24, 2005 Report Share Posted August 24, 2005 > hello everyone, > > I still have not responded to my BP Mom (still can't call her nada very easily I guess). ****Don't worry about this. You don't have to call her nada at all. Just figure out what you need to do to work through all of this. I used to use nada all the time. Now I sometimes use the word mother. I won't question myself on this....it is what is happening naturally for me, and I'm willing to go with that. Have been reading SWOE, which is helpful. Brings up more memories, but I am trying to focus on what I can do now. In a way, it makes me feel like I am being mean to her because she is sick, ****She is sick - but being nice to her won't help her get better. Most of our guilt is a carryover from when we believed that we really were responsible for our parent's unhappiness. We should not feel guilty for taking care of ourselves or for removing ourselves from an abusive situation! and I am ignoring her without explaining to her what I am upset about. Right now, I feel like that is what I need to do in order to take care of me though. ****You don't need to explain it to her. She knows. Her rationalization, projection, etc, cannot completed cover up even in her mind what is happening. I believe she knows because of how she treated your daughter and that your daughter left and went home to you. She just doesn't know how to cover it up, or twist it into something else....but with enough time, she will be able to do this. I hope this is not too harsh for you. I know she is your mother, and you may feel protective of her as you hear someone else criticize her. I am basing my thoughts on similar situations I had with my own nada. > I placed the ASSERTIVE BILL OF RIGHTS on my fridge, I like that. I'm going to share it with the whole family. > > Day before yesterday, nada sent 2 emails, acting like nothing, all about money and reminding me of things I need to do. ****sounds like she is trying to reconnect without dealing with the problem. This is typical too. If she can restore everything to the previous relationship, she will be happy - you and your daughter will not, and both of you will probably feel invalidated. I felt a complete invasion of my privacy. But, she owns my house, and this remodel is not 100% complete, and she is my landlord, and needs to pay for 1 or 2 of the things she was asking me about, so I have to respond and interact to a certain point. She asked me a bunch of questions said to me " I'm trying to eliminate unneccary costs " . I didn't want to respond at all, so instead I just said, " do what you need to do " . ****Good way to handle the situation. Do the minimum that you need to do in dealing with your 'landlord'. > > I feel this whole thing started a couple of weeks ago, when I told her I had decided not to allow her to purchase a brand new computer for my children. I sent her detailed letter. She was going to buy him a desk for his bedroom. Last weekend, he found a desk at a yard sale for $5, and he set it all up and really likes it. He was all excited about it, and asked if he could call her up to tell her about it. The next day I asked how it went (bc my kids have not been having contact w/her either). He was not on the phone very long at all. He told me she didn't say much at all, only that 'if I would still let her, she was willing to buy them both computers for there rooms.'.........Of course he wants a computer in his room very badly, but he isn't going to say so. It's like he is in the middle between some kind of power struggle between me and my BP mom. Maybe I should just let her buy the damned computers? I don't know. I never know. I just feel like my life is not in my control. ****You can take steps to feel more in control. It is difficult when you want things for your children, and you mother is so willing to provide things. However, there are usually strings attached, and you mother may in the future want to start yanking those strings! This is another case of doing what you think is the best for you and your children (not what is best for your mother). As you start to figure out where you want to go with your mother in a new relationship (contact, no contact, partial contact), you can start guiding your children as well into a new relationship. All of you have the right to protect and take care of yourselves and not be abused by her. Being your mother and their grandmother DOES NOT give her the right to abuse you! > > Yesterday she came by to pick up her weedeater and I did not want to see or talk to her. Dh went outside, and he told me that she thought we were mad at her bc she had a drink (?) at the reception. He said he told her that she cannot talk to dd the way that she did, and that she acted all confused. ****She may have already changed in her mind the memory of the interaction between her and your daughter. I think someone with BPD can do this very quickly. They are so upset over what happened, but cannot handle the fact that they had any responsibility - so in a blink of an eye, in their mind, the situation gets changed so they can deal with it - usually by blaming someone else's actions as the cause of the incident. I wish I could've heard the conversation so I knew exactly what was said. Oh, I don't even know what it matters. I already knew she would deny it. He said she was acting like a victim. ****Yep, they can play the victim role so very, very well. I know they believe it, but I still think that most with BPD get at least an occasional glimpse of the truth of some situations. So, at least now she knows I am staying away from her because of her treatment of my daughter. > > I was afraid to send her a letter or anything, because in the past when I have done this, it has opened me up for an attack from her. And, I just don't want to deal with her insanity right now. I think eventually I will get to a point where I feel strong enough to deal with this. My daughter seems disappointed that I haven't said something though. At first she didn't want me to go and talk to her Grandnada, because she was afraid we'd get into a fight, now, she is upset bc I haven't talked to her. ****Is your daughter old enough to understand an explanation that tells her that you are taking time to think about how to handle this situation, as you know it will be a big change in your relationsip with her grandmother, and you think you should take time to make sure you are doing the right thing? > > I don't want to talk to, see her, or have any contact with her at all. But, at the same time I miss her a lot (* & *%#@?!), and feel like I am hurting her or making her angry by doing what I need to do to take care of myself and my kids. *****You may be 'hurting' her and making her angry. BUT - ask if you think is is reasonable for someone, especially a grandmother, to be hurt and angry when someone is taking care of and protecting her grandchildren. What about the hurt she did to your daughter? See - we were really brainwashed into just considering the 'hurt' our BP parent experienced, while the hurt they placed on others (even ourselves) was ignored. If a reasonable and normal family member treats someone badly, they will go and apologize to that person. They will be concerned and upset that they hurt someone else. A person with BPD cannot empathize, and so all they focus on is their own hurt - and look to blame someone. It's only been less than 2 weeks. This does not seem normal to me. Is it normal for a 41 year old woman with a life of her own to 'miss her abusive invalidating Mommy' who just verbally attacked her 12 year old daughter in such an awful way? ****It can be normal. You are just starting to deal with these issues. You have had years of conditioning where you accepted that what your mother did was okay, and you probably were willing to accept it to keep a relationship with her. I did something very similar. There is something wrong with me. I do not feel normal. ****What you are feeling is normal - for the situation you are in! You are probably sad and upset because of how your daughter was treated. You are dealing with conflicting emotions regarding how you feel about your mother. You have financial and medical issues to deal with. Don't you think this is a great deal of problems to have to handle at one time? I mean, this is pathetic. ****The only thing that may be pathetic is the fact that you did not have a mother who loved you unconditionally and helped you grow and develop, instead of making you her caretaker. I think you are being too hard on yourself. Which is why I am trying to talk to a therapist or something, but that isn't very hopeful either. because the only place I can go here is this one place where they take medicare. I made a bunch of phone calls yesterday > > I was thinking of finding a therapist to help me, but I don't want to go back to the place I left a year ago, bc I feel I went as far as I could with what they had to offer. I had the head therapist (leader of DBT team)-for years, and she was well informed of my situation and never clued me in that I was dealing with a BP Mom - I guess she never recognized the fact. But, I was reading SWOE about 1 year ago, and the light bulb went off. I had read about BPD before, because I have studied many personality disorders and other (most) mental illnesses out of a passionate interest due to family history I guess (I am also a genealogist), but I had just not connected any to nada. I don't know why I didn't except that she is the High functioning BP, and I've bought into the illusion that she is well, even though I've been profoundly affected by her illness and abusive behavior. Her faky public persona literally makes my stomach turn. I can't hardly stand to be around her because of this facet. I can tell on the telephone if she has company by the tone in her voice. Yuk! *****Many of us on this list have written about experience strong physical aversions to being around our BP parent. These are signals our body is sending to us, and we have to listen to them. Our BP parent has driven much of our natural and normal instincts out of us - but our body still warns us that all is not well. > > Right now I am realizing how much I disacossiate in her presence, or used to anyway. Check this out, me and the kids used to go to my parents house for dinner almost every night (my stepdad is a wonderful cook). Within the last 2 years sometime, this has become painful for me. I would literally feel sick at the dinner table and could feel myself disacciating, and would have to get up and leave the room, because I could not deal with the interactions at the table (my parents with my children). It felt like I was dreaming. Isn't that weird. ****Not weird at all. This is probably how you reacted as a child as well....there was no way to get away from her physically, so you disassociated in order to get away. I did the very same thing. This was a big factor in my decision to finally go no contact. I could no longer deal with the disassociation and physical reactions I had when i was with my nada. I had worked very hard to get over fleas and make a good life for myself, and I didn't want to give my nada even a few hours where I would revert to this other behavior. So, I began to learn how to cook, and we started to have dinner at home, and at first that was hard, because I barely knew how to cook, but now we rarely eat over there, and I enjoy cooking, and we love having meals at home, and I can't believe I did that all those years. Oh my God, I can't believe it! ****Again - most of us have felt the same about certain situations. When we finally start to see our past with our BP parent in the light of how their illness has affected our life, we are surprised, to say the least. > I think she is really unhappy over this change, and may be part of her increased efforts at manipulation and control of me. ****Yes - everytime we make a change, someone with BP can very easily feel threatened, and she will make efforts to get us to return to our previous actions. Now that I am reading about BPD, and becoming aware of how sick she really is. I mean I would say that everytime I go around her and the bizarre things would come out of her mouth, but then I forget. > > You know, I literally, forget a week later if I don't write it down. WHat is that? Does anyone else do that? > ****Just a thought, cause this has also happened to me. I was conditioned to just accept my nada's bizarre behavior and statements. Also, some things were hurtful and painful, and so i wanted to forget them. It is probably one of our coping mechanisms. Hope you are feeling a bit better by the time you read this response. Take care, Sylvia > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 25, 2005 Report Share Posted August 25, 2005 Hi , You asked, >>>>>You know, I literally, forget a week later if I don't write it down. What is that? Does anyone else do that? >>>> I believe that for some of us it is a survival technique. In my situation, Nada has always " minimized " the situations that would come up, sometimes going so far as to try and convince me that it would be my imagination or that I'm too sensitive. (yuck) and then go into this victim mode she has down pat... It seems that to get through this sort of junk some of us tend to " let it slide " out of memory, because it's became easier over many years to do this, than to confront them. My Nada's memory changes from one heart beat to the next. I always felt out of the loop and would question myself on what I thought was going on, HUH! wonder why??!! lol I came across some of my old journals that I've kept over the years and as I read through them it occured to me how 99% of them were filled with pain. From being a victim to a BPD person. Over half of the stories I had forgotten, stories of Nada hijinks that caused great pain and my attempts to understand and finally my surrender to her....(this is all before I learned about BPD) I also have two siblings with BPD as well, so I can really understand my surrendering! What struck me was how much of it I had dealt with, how much hurt I had been in, my attempts to " fix " these things and how I had to " forget " just to continue having them in my life. After learning about BPD, I went back to these journals and re read them and allowed myself to be angry. NO forgetting this time! I allowed myself to face the facts and the part I, unknowingly, played in allowing them to do this to me. I took away their power over me. It's been since Jan. 6th of 2000 since I've been around those unhealthy people. I care about them but over time, the feelings of FOG have lifted. I'm out from under that thumb. FOG is fear, obligation and guilt. SWOE and UNDERSTANDING THE BORDERLINE MOTHER, are two books I have on my shelf that are getting worn out, but were and still are, a god send to me. Those books helped me put things in order, helped me understand not only where they are in all of this, but where I stand as well. I now KNOW, that I have the power over what I will allow into my life because there isn't anyone on this entire planet who knows me as well as I do, I can take care of me best. Your at the beginning of this , I can really understand you feelings about missing your mother, Its a hard time for us all. For me it was the realization that the mother I missed was the dream one I had carried around with me wrapped up in all my hopes. When I started facing the facts and the truth of her condition, those hopes fell away and the dream mother was gone. That was what caused me to hurt, the healthy letting go. Give yourself all the time you need, . You have a husband who is standing beside you in this and this list to come to when that darn self doubt rears it's ugly head. Take care of you!... Warm thoughts to you, wrote: hello everyone, I still have not responded to my BP Mom (still can't call her nada very easily I guess). Have been reading SWOE, which is helpful. Brings up more memories, but I am trying to focus on what I can do now. In a way, it makes me feel like I am being mean to her because she is sick, and I am ignoring her without explaining to her what I am upset about. Right now, I feel like that is what I need to do in order to take care of me though. I placed the ASSERTIVE BILL OF RIGHTS on my fridge, I like that. I'm going to share it with the whole family. Day before yesterday, nada sent 2 emails, acting like nothing, all about money and reminding me of things I need to do. I felt a complete invasion of my privacy. But, she owns my house, and this remodel is not 100% complete, and she is my landlord, and needs to pay for 1 or 2 of the things she was asking me about, so I have to respond and interact to a certain point. She asked me a bunch of questions said to me " I'm trying to eliminate unneccary costs " . I didn't want to respond at all, so instead I just said, " do what you need to do " . I feel this whole thing started a couple of weeks ago, when I told her I had decided not to allow her to purchase a brand new computer for my children. I sent her detailed letter. She was going to buy him a desk for his bedroom. Last weekend, he found a desk at a yard sale for $5, and he set it all up and really likes it. He was all excited about it, and asked if he could call her up to tell her about it. The next day I asked how it went (bc my kids have not been having contact w/her either). He was not on the phone very long at all. He told me she didn't say much at all, only that 'if I would still let her, she was willing to buy them both computers for there rooms.'.........Of course he wants a computer in his room very badly, but he isn't going to say so. It's like he is in the middle between some kind of power struggle between me and my BP mom. Maybe I should just let her buy the damned computers? I don't know. I never know. I just feel like my life is not in my control. Yesterday she came by to pick up her weedeater and I did not want to see or talk to her. Dh went outside, and he told me that she thought we were mad at her bc she had a drink (?) at the reception. He said he told her that she cannot talk to dd the way that she did, and that she acted all confused. I wish I could've heard the conversation so I knew exactly what was said. Oh, I don't even know what it matters. I already knew she would deny it. He said she was acting like a victim. So, at least now she knows I am staying away from her because of her treatment of my daughter. I was afraid to send her a letter or anything, because in the past when I have done this, it has opened me up for an attack from her. And, I just don't want to deal with her insanity right now. I think eventually I will get to a point where I feel strong enough to deal with this. My daughter seems disappointed that I haven't said something though. At first she didn't want me to go and talk to her Grandnada, because she was afraid we'd get into a fight, now, she is upset bc I haven't talked to her. I don't want to talk to, see her, or have any contact with her at all. But, at the same time I miss her a lot (* & *%#@?!), and feel like I am hurting her or making her angry by doing what I need to do to take care of myself and my kids. It's only been less than 2 weeks. This does not seem normal to me. Is it normal for a 41 year old woman with a life of her own to 'miss her abusive invalidating Mommy' who just verbally attacked her 12 year old daughter in such an awful way? There is something wrong with me. I do not feel normal. I mean, this is pathetic. Which is why I am trying to talk to a therapist or something, but that isn't very hopeful either. because the only place I can go here is this one place where they take medicare. I made a bunch of phone calls yesterday I was thinking of finding a therapist to help me, but I don't want to go back to the place I left a year ago, bc I feel I went as far as I could with what they had to offer. I had the head therapist (leader of DBT team)-for years, and she was well informed of my situation and never clued me in that I was dealing with a BP Mom - I guess she never recognized the fact. But, I was reading SWOE about 1 year ago, and the light bulb went off. I had read about BPD before, because I have studied many personality disorders and other (most) mental illnesses out of a passionate interest due to family history I guess (I am also a genealogist), but I had just not connected any to nada. I don't know why I didn't except that she is the High functioning BP, and I've bought into the illusion that she is well, even though I've been profoundly affected by her illness and abusive behavior. Her faky public persona literally makes my stomach turn. I can't hardly stand to be around her because of this facet. I can tell on the telephone if she has company by the tone in her voice. Yuk! Right now I am realizing how much I disacossiate in her presence, or used to anyway. Check this out, me and the kids used to go to my parents house for dinner almost every night (my stepdad is a wonderful cook). Within the last 2 years sometime, this has become painful for me. I would literally feel sick at the dinner table and could feel myself disacciating, and would have to get up and leave the room, because I could not deal with the interactions at the table (my parents with my children). It felt like I was dreaming. Isn't that weird. So, I began to learn how to cook, and we started to have dinner at home, and at first that was hard, because I barely knew how to cook, but now we rarely eat over there, and I enjoy cooking, and we love having meals at home, and I can't believe I did that all those years. Oh my God, I can't believe it! I think she is really unhappy over this change, and may be part of her increased efforts at manipulation and control of me. Now that I am reading about BPD, and becoming aware of how sick she really is. I mean I would say that everytime I go around her and the bizarre things would come out of her mouth, but then I forget. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 26, 2005 Report Share Posted August 26, 2005 Hey , Thanks for sharing all of this. I'm sure many people who read it will feel better because you had the courage to share this part of your story so frankly on such a deep personal level. It strikes me that so many of us KOs have had the experience of being labelled " mentally ill " when what we actually are is " mentally wounded " . (And WHY is that medicine makes that distinction in terms of physical illness vs injury but not for mental illness vs injury anyway?) But now you know, and your healing process is progressing amazingly. I see so much development of your insight and understanding in just the short time since you joined the list. It is absolutely normal to be totally overwhelmed with grief during this part of your journey. It is an unavoidable part of healing...letting our dreams of ever having " real mothers " die. I think that for both of us, this is especially hard because our nadas were so high-functioning in the outside world, and that makes it hard to get our heads around how messed up they were in their family lives. But you are facing this with great courage. I am so proud of you! Hugs, --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > Hi , > I didn't get a chance to respond to your last note to me previously & I had > wanted to. > I was in therapy for years, and also experienced this form of detachment > from my emotions thing you describe for years (not true any longer, although > I still can I think) in early sobriety (my sponsors made me do 4th steps > over because I did not cry), in therapy, etc.,. Today, I am feeling all > the emotions, including some anger over the fact that my therapist never > clued in to the fact that my nada had a BPD. I was in therapy for years, > trying to get help for muself, to figure out what was wrong with me so I > could get better at doing life, and the primary topic was often my struggle > with this over dependent enmeshed and abusive relationship with nada. My > therapist was the head counselor of the DBT team. After 5 years of therapy, > I think they pretty much decided the only way they could help me was through > DBT, essentially labeling me as BP (because yes, I admitted I had traits of > BP), without coming out and saying so, if you will. But, I absolutely > refused to allow them to diagnosed me BPD. And, when I tried the DBT group > the first time, I quit after a few weeks, because I knew I did not belong > there (I did not identify with the others in there at all). My actual > diagnosis is Bipolar depression (I don't even know if that is correct now, > but I do know that I have had recurrent episodes of depression, particularly > having to do with hormones - giving birth, and the antidepressants I was put > on made me worse in many ways.). For years I believed I was " crazy " , > " mentall ill " , and searched for what my problem was so I could start to live > in the solution. Well, why wouldn't I believe this, this is what nada told > me ever time I expressed an emotion with her, or said something that > disagreed with her version of reality (she would scream at me or look at me > in disgust and say " you are crazy " ), this is frightening to a child. This > is what happened in me in my adolescence. I didn't believe her, I believed > it was her not me (so I thought). But, I now realize that this parental > mirroring had an effect upon me whether I realized it or not (like > brainwashing). I eventually got to a place where I did the DBT course > because I realized that was my therapists forte, and I may as well take > advantage of it, it really didn't matter whether I had BP or not, the point > was was that I was willing to change and to grow, and to pick up new life > skills wherever I could find them. Who was right and who was wrong was > beside the point. So, I did and took what I could from it. But, > unfortunately with the treatment team there everthing did turn out to be a > power struggle with them. I completed the year of DBT, and then they > interceded and attempted not to acknowledge I had completed it or give me my > " diploma " in group. It was quite sick. I think the other group members > were unhappy with there power tactic control methods as well, as far as I > could tell. It was reminiscent of growing up in the land of OZ if you ask > me. All very triggering. Which btw, is what led me to realize and become > aware that my BP mother had BPD at all. > After one year of DBT and these power struggles with this TX team was > engaging in, I became aware that my Mother had BPD, that was one year ago. > > The point being, that it angers me that I could be in therapy for so long to > get help for myself on my own accord, be completely honest with these so > called professionals (spefically trained to treat BPD), and they did not > even clue in to the fact that my nada had BPD!!!!!#$%#@Oolh. > > I look at my life, and I realize I have been surrounded by people with or > affected by this disorder throughout. Today, I run from people who seem to > have it, in order to protect myself. I want to learn how to set healthy > boundaries instead. Avoidance, isolating, as it says in SWOE fear and > anxiety is not the same as helplessness (yea!). I have felt helpless and > hopeless for too long. I have been trying to get help and found none. I > have found more help in this group just by reading everybody's situations > and identying and getting honest feedback and validation from all of you, > than I got from nearly a decade of therapy. > > Yesterday I bought the SWOE workbook and began that. I am desperate to do > what I can to change what I can so my life can improve. I've known for a > very long time I can't change anyone else. But, I have felt trapped, stuck, > and helpless and hopeless. Not knowing what else to do. SWOE said > avoidance is also taking an action (I hadn't thought of it like that), and > this action has been making me ill - that's what I have beeen doing for > years. Until quite recently, I've begun taking actions which make me feel > like a mean person as someone said (but I am actually setting healthy > boundaries, and taking responsibility for me, for the first time, I think). > It's empowering, but frightening at the same time. > > wrote: > > It's a horrible thing, to be dependent on, and therefore vulnerable > > to, someone who's irrational and thus unreliable and unpredictable. > > Yes, that is what I am in the process of realizing - I have been taking time > to allow this to really sink in. I've never really done this before. > Sometimes the grief overwhelms me. > > It's like this, I had to explain it to my son last night. He was irritated > with me for saying " is that really happening " about something I percieved, > which I am aware that I do quite often. > This was the example that I gave to him, which helped him to truly > understand why I doubt my own perceptions so much. When you grow up and you > are a little kid, and every day you wake up excited and happy and thrilled > to be alive, and you say " Look Mommy today the sky is blue " , and in response > to your observation your are told " no, , the sky is not blue (even > though you can see clearly that it is), the sky is grey " , or you wake up and > you say " Mommy I feel sad today " , and you are told, " you aren't sad, you are > happy, and everything is fine " , for example, maybe? And, the other parent > (Dad), is absolutely unavailable as a mirror at all (you can't even get his > attention), but you try desparetely anyway. The message you get growing up > is > I do not exist > I am unimportant > what I think, feel, and want is not important and real > > I believed I had a perfect childhood until I was 25 years old. In > otherwords I believed the lie presented to me, that I was brainwashed and > programmed to believe. My nada was so good at pretending and faking that > not even she could convince me it was all a lie, when she decided it was > over. I clung to the fantasy she had presented, the false reality, false > family, false father, false mother, all images and not reality, etc., When I > was 25, the image began to crack. > > But, I think I will always need to double check my own perceptions of > reality from time to time. And, I can accept this without judging me. > > > > > > > > --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > >> Now that I am reading about BPD, and becoming aware of how sick > >> she really is. I mean I would say that everytime I go around her > >> and the bizarre things would come out of her mouth, but then I > >> forget. > >> > >> You know, I literally, forget a week later if I don't write it > >> down. WHat is that? Does anyone else do that? > > > > wrote: > > I think most of us KOs have experienced our psyches protecting us from > > a reality that was too painful to process. Sometimes we " forget " > > (actually repress) impossible-seeming or unbearably-painful memories, > > or sometimes we remember the facts but repress our feelings about > > them. When I first started with my therpist I think I shocked her by > > describing the most horrific, soul-destroying experiences in a calm, > > rational, detached and very intellectual way. > > > > This might be a pattern that began when you were a child and it was > > the only way you could live with your nada and not go completely crazy > > yourself. I expect that as you continue to educate yourself about BP, > > and are able to normalize your experiences by understanding them and > > sharing them with us, you'll find that this improves. If you can call > > remembering all the " crazy nada assertions " an improvement, that is! > > > > But you may also find that as you stop forgetting the crazy things > > your mom is saying, you will realise that they are causing you even > > more distress than you are consciously aware of right now. I fear > > this may be connected to your position of material dependence on her. > > Could it be that some part of your brain is protecting you from the > > sheer awful uncertainty of that? > > > > The REAL truth is that you are actually MUCH safer now than when you > > didn't know about your mom's BP. You have supports and resources and > > options that you didn't have before, both for dealing with her and for > > taking care of yourself and your own family. > > > > Hugs, > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > 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 August 30, 2005 Report Share Posted August 30, 2005 , I don't often find myself in the position of saying - screX the therapy - but that is where I find myself when reading about your experiences. From what I read, you are a very intelligent and insightful person. And it is to your credit that you recognize that in yourself. And I can see where that has made it difficult to deal with people who are both NOT intelligent and insightful, but who ARE in positions to affect your life. I am so glad that you were able to recognize the truth in the situations you were in. You are an example of one of my favorite quotations: " This above all: To thine own self be true and it must follow as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man. " Shakespeare In regard to acceptance - I have come to understand it as what needs to be done before I can make a real change in my situation. I had to accept that I was abused as a child before I could make the change to protecting myself from further abuse. Until I 'accepted' what happened, I was still trying to turn the nightmare into a pleasant dream, and I couldn't do that - because I wasn't being true to myself! Perhaps your experience reflects that the acceptance of the bipolar diagnosis wasn't right because that wasn't the problem you were really dealing with? Our heart of hearts seems to know, even when our mind - and everyone else - says differently. Your story is a remarkable one. Thanks for sharing it with us. Sylvia > Hi , > Thank you for all of your loving support and I really appreciate your > insight & wisdom. > Your nada & mine seem to be a lot alike. > > Have other KO's really had similar experiences? Because for some reason I > feel like I am the only one. And, I feel a lot of fear, doubt, anger, (and > possibly shame), around this. My 12 step program, teaches me that > " acceptance it the answer to all my problems " (which, btw, I disagree with > now, because some things should not be accepted maybe), so when I was > diagnosed with Bipolar disorder, the solution to me, seemed to be simply one > of acceptance, and start living in the solution. But, reality turned out > not to be so simple. That was 7 years ago, and I have now come to the > conclusion, that I may not have any " disorder " whatever (except that I am a > recovery alcoholic, and I have a history of depression/anxiety/PMS), that I > do not have to accept any label. I am doing better today, on less > medication and with no therapist, than I've done in much of life, finally, > and I think it is from self -empowerment. Not allowing others, whether it > is my Mother (nada), my boyfriend, friends, sponsors, or the mental health > system, to define my reality for me and dictate what I need. I have had a > tendency to trust others, to look for those others for answers to my > problems & life, and accept what is mirrored back at me as fact (childish), > not taking responsibility for my life, expecting others to do for me what I > should do for myself. I am not beating myself up for that, it's just what > it is. Seeing it is the first step in changing it. > I have finally been learning how to care for myself, and taking > responsibility for myself for the first time, through empowering myself, by > taking my own power and identifying what my needs and wants are. I really > like the SWOE workbook, because it is going to help me in this area a lot, > it's excellent so far. > It has been very hard to do this, because I have been groomed to be > dependent upon others since birth. I am highly intelligent and emotionally > sensitive (both traits of the gifted I have recently learned), so my mind > automatically searches for solutions and sees incongruencies. I have a > difficult time with injustice, and find it to be a highly emotionally > charged experience. But, I also look for solutions in such situations, this > is my nature. And, what I have found, is that many other people, > particularly those in what is percieved to be authoritative positions (such > as a treatement team, one example), are not conducive to such suggestions, > no matter how gently they come. All people come with there own issues. I > have always been a hopeful, foolish optimist, very naive, and highly > sensitive person. > I've become very hurt due to my inherent nature, and now I tend to isolate > because of it. But, I am learning (late), some things I probably should've > learned about the world in adolescence, and that is that not all people are > nice or trustworthy. > What I percieve as an asset, is perceivced as a liability in certain > situations. And, this seems to be what happened with my DBT experience (I > was somewhat scapegoated by some of the therapists on the team who had me > stigmatized and labeled and misidentified by their own biases and judgements > & I was highly aware of it, but at the same time unable to do anything about > it). Extremely painful situation for me, especially considering the fact, > that I had accomplished so much personal growth in my life under much > duress, and had not given up (this is the period when I empowered myself > from being labeled as " mentally ill " to being a consumer/survivor in > recovery, self-empowering myself and bucking the system - the best thing I > could've done for myself, and key to my recovery, because I was dying > psychologically & emotionally prior to this), and I did it for me (sheer > survival) and no one else, and they were now refusing to acknowledge my > personal accomplishment, as they had all the other group members. No big > deal (this is how I have always acted though, see?). So, instead of doing > that, I mustered the courage to say something instead, to take > responsibility for my thoughts and feelings. It didn't change anything > though. It was already a fact. The fact being that this Mental Health tx > team had basicly treated me in the same manner my nada had treated me much > of my life. The feelings I experienced were so reminiscent! > It seemed like they were BPD, not I. They were all so controlling of > me. I was learning all of the skills so quickly and easily, because I > already used many of them. My problem was that I had been affected by many > people who have personality disorders in my own life, including BPD, NPD, > and APD (family, friends, boyfriends). No one was recognizing this fact, > except for me. They talked about invalidating environments all the time in > DBT, while providing one for me, which triggered me, because I was raised by > a nada & fada, who were both invalidating, and not capable of mirroring > properly. > Now I know this must've been what my Higher Power wanted me to find out, > because this is what my experience was that led me to discover that my > Mother had a personality disorder (which I could not see until all of this > happened in therapy, this is what it took, this was the end result). Yes, > after one year, and all of that work, and the final result was that they did > not recognize my accomplishment of completing DBT, that was when something > clicked. It was all very painful. > So, I was then reading SWOE, and that's when it hit me like a ton of > bricks, that my Mom fit nearly all the criteria of BPD, some of them very > strongly. I could not believe I hadn't noticed before. It was so weird, I > could barely believe it. > My new therapist barely acknowledged my discovery that my mother had BPD > or the fact that she had screwed up (she somehow turned it around and made > it my fault?)........so I quit therapy, and said this isn't going to work > for me anymore. That was almost a year ago. That was the beginning of my > real recovery, I think, one defined by self-empowerment. > ...... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 31, 2005 Report Share Posted August 31, 2005 : Listen to Sylvia! Being a KO is a huge piece of the puzzle; we're talking massive, ongoing trauma here. I don't think there's any way your clinical picture could be remotely accurate without taking this, and the inevitable resulting complex PTSD symptoms, fully into account. Sylvia: This is a wonderful response. I so admire the way you " cut to the chase " and say what needs to be said in such a clear, loving, and helpful way. (I want to be you when I grow up!) Hugs, --- " smhtrain2 " <smhtrain2@y...> wrote: > , > > I don't often find myself in the position of saying - screX the > therapy - but that is where I find myself when reading about your > experiences. > > From what I read, you are a very intelligent and insightful person. > And it is to your credit that you recognize that in yourself. And I > can see where that has made it difficult to deal with people who are > both NOT intelligent and insightful, but who ARE in positions to > affect your life. I am so glad that you were able to recognize the > truth in the situations you were in. You are an example of one of my > favorite quotations: > > " This above all: To thine own self be true and it must follow as the > night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man. " > Shakespeare > > In regard to acceptance - I have come to understand it as what needs > to be done before I can make a real change in my situation. I had to > accept that I was abused as a child before I could make the change to > protecting myself from further abuse. Until I 'accepted' what > happened, I was still trying to turn the nightmare into a pleasant > dream, and I couldn't do that - because I wasn't being true to > myself! > > Perhaps your experience reflects that the acceptance of the bipolar > diagnosis wasn't right because that wasn't the problem you were > really dealing with? Our heart of hearts seems to know, even when > our mind - and everyone else - says differently. > > Your story is a remarkable one. Thanks for sharing it with us. > > Sylvia > > > > > > Hi , > > Thank you for all of your loving support and I really appreciate > your > > insight & wisdom. > > Your nada & mine seem to be a lot alike. > > > > Have other KO's really had similar experiences? Because for some > reason I > > feel like I am the only one. And, I feel a lot of fear, doubt, > anger, (and > > possibly shame), around this. My 12 step program, teaches me that > > " acceptance it the answer to all my problems " (which, btw, I > disagree with > > now, because some things should not be accepted maybe), so when I > was > > diagnosed with Bipolar disorder, the solution to me, seemed to be > simply one > > of acceptance, and start living in the solution. But, reality > turned out > > not to be so simple. That was 7 years ago, and I have now come to > the > > conclusion, that I may not have any " disorder " whatever (except > that I am a > > recovery alcoholic, and I have a history of > depression/anxiety/PMS), that I > > do not have to accept any label. I am doing better today, on less > > medication and with no therapist, than I've done in much of life, > finally, > > and I think it is from self -empowerment. Not allowing others, > whether it > > is my Mother (nada), my boyfriend, friends, sponsors, or the mental > health > > system, to define my reality for me and dictate what I need. I > have had a > > tendency to trust others, to look for those others for answers to > my > > problems & life, and accept what is mirrored back at me as fact > (childish), > > not taking responsibility for my life, expecting others to do for > me what I > > should do for myself. I am not beating myself up for that, it's > just what > > it is. Seeing it is the first step in changing it. > > I have finally been learning how to care for myself, and > taking > > responsibility for myself for the first time, through empowering > myself, by > > taking my own power and identifying what my needs and wants are. I > really > > like the SWOE workbook, because it is going to help me in this area > a lot, > > it's excellent so far. > > It has been very hard to do this, because I have been groomed to be > > dependent upon others since birth. I am highly intelligent and > emotionally > > sensitive (both traits of the gifted I have recently learned), so > my mind > > automatically searches for solutions and sees incongruencies. I > have a > > difficult time with injustice, and find it to be a highly > emotionally > > charged experience. But, I also look for solutions in such > situations, this > > is my nature. And, what I have found, is that many other people, > > particularly those in what is percieved to be authoritative > positions (such > > as a treatement team, one example), are not conducive to such > suggestions, > > no matter how gently they come. All people come with there own > issues. I > > have always been a hopeful, foolish optimist, very naive, and > highly > > sensitive person. > > I've become very hurt due to my inherent nature, and now I tend to > isolate > > because of it. But, I am learning (late), some things I probably > should've > > learned about the world in adolescence, and that is that not all > people are > > nice or trustworthy. > > What I percieve as an asset, is perceivced as a liability in > certain > > situations. And, this seems to be what happened with my DBT > experience (I > > was somewhat scapegoated by some of the therapists on the team who > had me > > stigmatized and labeled and misidentified by their own biases and > judgements > > & I was highly aware of it, but at the same time unable to do > anything about > > it). Extremely painful situation for me, especially considering > the fact, > > that I had accomplished so much personal growth in my life under > much > > duress, and had not given up (this is the period when I empowered > myself > > from being labeled as " mentally ill " to being a consumer/survivor > in > > recovery, self-empowering myself and bucking the system - the best > thing I > > could've done for myself, and key to my recovery, because I was > dying > > psychologically & emotionally prior to this), and I did it for me > (sheer > > survival) and no one else, and they were now refusing to > acknowledge my > > personal accomplishment, as they had all the other group members. > No big > > deal (this is how I have always acted though, see?). So, instead > of doing > > that, I mustered the courage to say something instead, to take > > responsibility for my thoughts and feelings. It didn't change > anything > > though. It was already a fact. The fact being that this Mental > Health tx > > team had basicly treated me in the same manner my nada had treated > me much > > of my life. The feelings I experienced were so reminiscent! > > It seemed like they were BPD, not I. They were all so > controlling of > > me. I was learning all of the skills so quickly and easily, > because I > > already used many of them. My problem was that I had been affected > by many > > people who have personality disorders in my own life, including > BPD, NPD, > > and APD (family, friends, boyfriends). No one was recognizing this > fact, > > except for me. They talked about invalidating environments all the > time in > > DBT, while providing one for me, which triggered me, because I was > raised by > > a nada & fada, who were both invalidating, and not capable of > mirroring > > properly. > > Now I know this must've been what my Higher Power wanted me to > find out, > > because this is what my experience was that led me to discover that > my > > Mother had a personality disorder (which I could not see until all > of this > > happened in therapy, this is what it took, this was the end > result). Yes, > > after one year, and all of that work, and the final result was that > they did > > not recognize my accomplishment of completing DBT, that was when > something > > clicked. It was all very painful. > > So, I was then reading SWOE, and that's when it hit me like a > ton of > > bricks, that my Mom fit nearly all the criteria of BPD, some of > them very > > strongly. I could not believe I hadn't noticed before. It was so > weird, I > > could barely believe it. > > My new therapist barely acknowledged my discovery that my > mother had BPD > > or the fact that she had screwed up (she somehow turned it around > and made > > it my fault?)........so I quit therapy, and said this isn't going > to work > > for me anymore. That was almost a year ago. That was the > beginning of my > > real recovery, I think, one defined by self-empowerment. > > > ..... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 31, 2005 Report Share Posted August 31, 2005 Hi again , Just wanted to add that you might find some validation and practical help in Elaine Aron's book " The Highly Sensitive Person " . I think you and I may be much alike in this respect...and it makes all the " KO stuff " a double-whammy. Hugs, --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > Hi , > Thank you for all of your loving support and I really appreciate your > insight & wisdom. > Your nada & mine seem to be a lot alike. > > Have other KO's really had similar experiences? Because for some reason I > feel like I am the only one. And, I feel a lot of fear, doubt, anger, (and > possibly shame), around this. My 12 step program, teaches me that > " acceptance it the answer to all my problems " (which, btw, I disagree with > now, because some things should not be accepted maybe), so when I was > diagnosed with Bipolar disorder, the solution to me, seemed to be simply one > of acceptance, and start living in the solution. But, reality turned out > not to be so simple. That was 7 years ago, and I have now come to the > conclusion, that I may not have any " disorder " whatever (except that I am a > recovery alcoholic, and I have a history of depression/anxiety/PMS), that I > do not have to accept any label. I am doing better today, on less > medication and with no therapist, than I've done in much of life, finally, > and I think it is from self -empowerment. Not allowing others, whether it > is my Mother (nada), my boyfriend, friends, sponsors, or the mental health > system, to define my reality for me and dictate what I need. I have had a > tendency to trust others, to look for those others for answers to my > problems & life, and accept what is mirrored back at me as fact (childish), > not taking responsibility for my life, expecting others to do for me what I > should do for myself. I am not beating myself up for that, it's just what > it is. Seeing it is the first step in changing it. > I have finally been learning how to care for myself, and taking > responsibility for myself for the first time, through empowering myself, by > taking my own power and identifying what my needs and wants are. I really > like the SWOE workbook, because it is going to help me in this area a lot, > it's excellent so far. > It has been very hard to do this, because I have been groomed to be > dependent upon others since birth. I am highly intelligent and emotionally > sensitive (both traits of the gifted I have recently learned), so my mind > automatically searches for solutions and sees incongruencies. I have a > difficult time with injustice, and find it to be a highly emotionally > charged experience. But, I also look for solutions in such situations, this > is my nature. And, what I have found, is that many other people, > particularly those in what is percieved to be authoritative positions (such > as a treatement team, one example), are not conducive to such suggestions, > no matter how gently they come. All people come with there own issues. I > have always been a hopeful, foolish optimist, very naive, and highly > sensitive person. > I've become very hurt due to my inherent nature, and now I tend to isolate > because of it. But, I am learning (late), some things I probably should've > learned about the world in adolescence, and that is that not all people are > nice or trustworthy. > What I percieve as an asset, is perceivced as a liability in certain > situations. And, this seems to be what happened with my DBT experience (I > was somewhat scapegoated by some of the therapists on the team who had me > stigmatized and labeled and misidentified by their own biases and judgements > & I was highly aware of it, but at the same time unable to do anything about > it). Extremely painful situation for me, especially considering the fact, > that I had accomplished so much personal growth in my life under much > duress, and had not given up (this is the period when I empowered myself > from being labeled as " mentally ill " to being a consumer/survivor in > recovery, self-empowering myself and bucking the system - the best thing I > could've done for myself, and key to my recovery, because I was dying > psychologically & emotionally prior to this), and I did it for me (sheer > survival) and no one else, and they were now refusing to acknowledge my > personal accomplishment, as they had all the other group members. No big > deal (this is how I have always acted though, see?). So, instead of doing > that, I mustered the courage to say something instead, to take > responsibility for my thoughts and feelings. It didn't change anything > though. It was already a fact. The fact being that this Mental Health tx > team had basicly treated me in the same manner my nada had treated me much > of my life. The feelings I experienced were so reminiscent! > It seemed like they were BPD, not I. They were all so controlling of > me. I was learning all of the skills so quickly and easily, because I > already used many of them. My problem was that I had been affected by many > people who have personality disorders in my own life, including BPD, NPD, > and APD (family, friends, boyfriends). No one was recognizing this fact, > except for me. They talked about invalidating environments all the time in > DBT, while providing one for me, which triggered me, because I was raised by > a nada & fada, who were both invalidating, and not capable of mirroring > properly. > Now I know this must've been what my Higher Power wanted me to find out, > because this is what my experience was that led me to discover that my > Mother had a personality disorder (which I could not see until all of this > happened in therapy, this is what it took, this was the end result). Yes, > after one year, and all of that work, and the final result was that they did > not recognize my accomplishment of completing DBT, that was when something > clicked. It was all very painful. > So, I was then reading SWOE, and that's when it hit me like a ton of > bricks, that my Mom fit nearly all the criteria of BPD, some of them very > strongly. I could not believe I hadn't noticed before. It was so weird, I > could barely believe it. > My new therapist barely acknowledged my discovery that my mother had BPD > or the fact that she had screwed up (she somehow turned it around and made > it my fault?)........so I quit therapy, and said this isn't going to work > for me anymore. That was almost a year ago. That was the beginning of my > real recovery, I think, one defined by self-empowerment. > > wrote: > > It strikes me that so many of us KOs have had the experience of > > being labelled " mentally ill " when what we actually are is " mentally > > wounded " . (And WHY is that medicine makes that distinction in terms > > of physical illness vs injury but not for mental illness vs injury > > anyway?) > > > > But now you know, and your healing process is progressing > > amazingly. I see so much development of your insight and > > understanding in just the short time since you joined the list. > > > > It is absolutely normal to be totally overwhelmed with grief during > > this part of your journey. It is an unavoidable part of > > healing...letting our dreams of ever having " real mothers " die. > > > > This is good to know. I guess that means it will pass too. > > > I think that for both of us, this is especially hard because our > > nadas were so high-functioning in the outside world, and that makes > > it hard to get our heads around how messed up they were in their > > family lives. > > > > Yep. My Mom hired my AA sponsor, and they get along so well. I have no one > to talk to about this > really, except dh. He is the only one who really gets it. But, he is also > affected. But, now I have this group, and I am so grateful for that. > > > But you are facing this with great courage. I am so proud of you! > > Thanks again for all your loving support . It means so much to me > right now. It give me strength and courage to walk through each day. > > > > > Hugs, > > > > > > --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > >> Hi , > >> I didn't get a chance to respond to your last note to me > > previously & I had > >> wanted to. > >> I was in therapy for years, and also experienced this form of > > detachment > >> from my emotions thing you describe for years (not true any > > longer, although > >> I still can I think) in early sobriety (my sponsors made me do 4th > > steps > >> over because I did not cry), in therapy, etc.,. Today, I am > > feeling all > >> the emotions, including some anger over the fact that my therapist > > never > >> clued in to the fact that my nada had a BPD. I was in therapy > > for years, > >> trying to get help for muself, to figure out what was wrong with > > me so I > >> could get better at doing life, and the primary topic was often my > > struggle > >> with this over dependent enmeshed and abusive relationship with > > nada. My > >> therapist was the head counselor of the DBT team. After 5 years > > of therapy, > >> I think they pretty much decided the only way they could help me > > was through > >> DBT, essentially labeling me as BP (because yes, I admitted I had > > traits of > >> BP), without coming out and saying so, if you will. But, I > > absolutely > >> refused to allow them to diagnosed me BPD. And, when I tried the > > DBT group > >> the first time, I quit after a few weeks, because I knew I did not > > belong > >> there (I did not identify with the others in there at all). My > > actual > >> diagnosis is Bipolar depression (I don't even know if that is > > correct now, > >> but I do know that I have had recurrent episodes of depression, > > particularly > >> having to do with hormones - giving birth, and the antidepressants > > I was put > >> on made me worse in many ways.). For years I believed I > > was " crazy " , > >> " mentall ill " , and searched for what my problem was so I could > > start to live > >> in the solution. Well, why wouldn't I believe this, this is what > > nada told > >> me ever time I expressed an emotion with her, or said something > > that > >> disagreed with her version of reality (she would scream at me or > > look at me > >> in disgust and say " you are crazy " ), this is frightening to a > > child. This > >> is what happened in me in my adolescence. I didn't believe her, I > > believed > >> it was her not me (so I thought). But, I now realize that this > > parental > >> mirroring had an effect upon me whether I realized it or not (like > >> brainwashing). I eventually got to a place where I did the DBT > > course > >> because I realized that was my therapists forte, and I may as well > > take > >> advantage of it, it really didn't matter whether I had BP or not, > > the point > >> was was that I was willing to change and to grow, and to pick up > > new life > >> skills wherever I could find them. Who was right and who was > > wrong was > >> beside the point. So, I did and took what I could from it. But, > >> unfortunately with the treatment team there everthing did turn out > > to be a > >> power struggle with them. I completed the year of DBT, and then > > they > >> interceded and attempted not to acknowledge I had completed it or > > give me my > >> " diploma " in group. It was quite sick. I think the other group > > members > >> were unhappy with there power tactic control methods as well, as > > far as I > >> could tell. It was reminiscent of growing up in the land of OZ if > > you ask > >> me. All very triggering. Which btw, is what led me to realize > > and become > >> aware that my BP mother had BPD at all. > >> After one year of DBT and these power struggles with this TX team > > was > >> engaging in, I became aware that my Mother had BPD, that was one > > year ago. > >> > >> The point being, that it angers me that I could be in therapy for > > so long to > >> get help for myself on my own accord, be completely honest with > > these so > >> called professionals (spefically trained to treat BPD), and they > > did not > >> even clue in to the fact that my nada had BPD!!!!!#$%#@Oolh. > >> > >> I look at my life, and I realize I have been surrounded by people > > with or > >> affected by this disorder throughout. Today, I run from people > > who seem to > >> have it, in order to protect myself. I want to learn how to set > > healthy > >> boundaries instead. Avoidance, isolating, as it says in SWOE fear > > and > >> anxiety is not the same as helplessness (yea!). I have felt > > helpless and > >> hopeless for too long. I have been trying to get help and found > > none. I > >> have found more help in this group just by reading everybody's > > situations > >> and identying and getting honest feedback and validation from all > > of you, > >> than I got from nearly a decade of therapy. > >> > >> Yesterday I bought the SWOE workbook and began that. I am > > desperate to do > >> what I can to change what I can so my life can improve. I've > > known for a > >> very long time I can't change anyone else. But, I have felt > > trapped, stuck, > >> and helpless and hopeless. Not knowing what else to do. SWOE > > said > >> avoidance is also taking an action (I hadn't thought of it like > > that), and > >> this action has been making me ill - that's what I have beeen > > doing for > >> years. Until quite recently, I've begun taking actions which make > > me feel > >> like a mean person as someone said (but I am actually setting > > healthy > >> boundaries, and taking responsibility for me, for the first time, > > I think). > >> It's empowering, but frightening at the same time. > >> > >> wrote: > >> > It's a horrible thing, to be dependent on, and therefore > > vulnerable > >> > to, someone who's irrational and thus unreliable and > > unpredictable. > >> > >> Yes, that is what I am in the process of realizing - I have been > > taking time > >> to allow this to really sink in. I've never really done this > > before. > >> Sometimes the grief overwhelms me. > >> > >> It's like this, I had to explain it to my son last night. He was > > irritated > >> with me for saying " is that really happening " about something I > > percieved, > >> which I am aware that I do quite often. > >> This was the example that I gave to him, which helped him to truly > >> understand why I doubt my own perceptions so much. When you grow > > up and you > >> are a little kid, and every day you wake up excited and happy and > > thrilled > >> to be alive, and you say " Look Mommy today the sky is blue " , and > > in response > >> to your observation your are told " no, , the sky is not blue > > (even > >> though you can see clearly that it is), the sky is grey " , or you > > wake up and > >> you say " Mommy I feel sad today " , and you are told, " you aren't > > sad, you are > >> happy, and everything is fine " , for example, maybe? And, the > > other parent > >> (Dad), is absolutely unavailable as a mirror at all (you can't > > even get his > >> attention), but you try desparetely anyway. The message you get > > growing up > >> is > >> I do not exist > >> I am unimportant > >> what I think, feel, and want is not important and real > >> > >> I believed I had a perfect childhood until I was 25 years old. In > >> otherwords I believed the lie presented to me, that I was > > brainwashed and > >> programmed to believe. My nada was so good at pretending and > > faking that > >> not even she could convince me it was all a lie, when she decided > > it was > >> over. I clung to the fantasy she had presented, the false > > reality, false > >> family, false father, false mother, all images and not reality, > > etc., When I > >> was 25, the image began to crack. > >> > >> But, I think I will always need to double check my own perceptions > > of > >> reality from time to time. And, I can accept this without judging > > me. > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > >> >> Now that I am reading about BPD, and becoming aware of how sick > >> >> she really is. I mean I would say that everytime I go around > > her > >> >> and the bizarre things would come out of her mouth, but then I > >> >> forget. > >> >> > >> >> You know, I literally, forget a week later if I don't write it > >> >> down. WHat is that? Does anyone else do that? > >> > > >> > >> wrote: > >> > I think most of us KOs have experienced our psyches protecting > > us from > >> > a reality that was too painful to process. Sometimes we " forget " > >> > (actually repress) impossible-seeming or unbearably-painful > > memories, > >> > or sometimes we remember the facts but repress our feelings about > >> > them. When I first started with my therpist I think I shocked > > her by > >> > describing the most horrific, soul-destroying experiences in a > > calm, > >> > rational, detached and very intellectual way. > >> > > >> > This might be a pattern that began when you were a child and it > > was > >> > the only way you could live with your nada and not go completely > > crazy > >> > yourself. I expect that as you continue to educate yourself > > about BP, > >> > and are able to normalize your experiences by understanding them > > and > >> > sharing them with us, you'll find that this improves. If you > > can call > >> > remembering all the " crazy nada assertions " an improvement, that > > is! > >> > > >> > But you may also find that as you stop forgetting the crazy > > things > >> > your mom is saying, you will realise that they are causing you > > even > >> > more distress than you are consciously aware of right now. I > > fear > >> > this may be connected to your position of material dependence on > > her. > >> > Could it be that some part of your brain is protecting you from > > the > >> > sheer awful uncertainty of that? > >> > > >> > The REAL truth is that you are actually MUCH safer now than when > > you > >> > didn't know about your mom's BP. You have supports and > > resources and > >> > options that you didn't have before, both for dealing with her > > and for > >> > taking care of yourself and your own family. > >> > > >> > Hugs, > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> > 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 September 1, 2005 Report Share Posted September 1, 2005 Since I posted that I have discovered that she also has very nice website, which she didn't when I first discovered her several years ago. www.hsperson.com Hugs, --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > I've heard of that book. I'm going to see if our library has a copy. > thanks for the tip , your an angel:-) > > Re: nada update > > > > Hi again , > > > > Just wanted to add that you might find some validation and practical > > help in Elaine Aron's book " The Highly Sensitive Person " . I think > > you and I may be much alike in this respect...and it makes all > > the " KO stuff " a double-whammy. > > > > Hugs, > > > > > > --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > >> Hi , > >> Thank you for all of your loving support and I really appreciate > > your > >> insight & wisdom. > >> Your nada & mine seem to be a lot alike. > >> > >> Have other KO's really had similar experiences? Because for some > > reason I > >> feel like I am the only one. And, I feel a lot of fear, doubt, > > anger, (and > >> possibly shame), around this. My 12 step program, teaches me that > >> " acceptance it the answer to all my problems " (which, btw, I > > disagree with > >> now, because some things should not be accepted maybe), so when I > > was > >> diagnosed with Bipolar disorder, the solution to me, seemed to be > > simply one > >> of acceptance, and start living in the solution. But, reality > > turned out > >> not to be so simple. That was 7 years ago, and I have now come to > > the > >> conclusion, that I may not have any " disorder " whatever (except > > that I am a > >> recovery alcoholic, and I have a history of > > depression/anxiety/PMS), that I > >> do not have to accept any label. I am doing better today, on less > >> medication and with no therapist, than I've done in much of life, > > finally, > >> and I think it is from self -empowerment. Not allowing others, > > whether it > >> is my Mother (nada), my boyfriend, friends, sponsors, or the mental > > health > >> system, to define my reality for me and dictate what I need. I > > have had a > >> tendency to trust others, to look for those others for answers to > > my > >> problems & life, and accept what is mirrored back at me as fact > > (childish), > >> not taking responsibility for my life, expecting others to do for > > me what I > >> should do for myself. I am not beating myself up for that, it's > > just what > >> it is. Seeing it is the first step in changing it. > >> I have finally been learning how to care for myself, and > > taking > >> responsibility for myself for the first time, through empowering > > myself, by > >> taking my own power and identifying what my needs and wants are. I > > really > >> like the SWOE workbook, because it is going to help me in this area > > a lot, > >> it's excellent so far. > >> It has been very hard to do this, because I have been groomed to be > >> dependent upon others since birth. I am highly intelligent and > > emotionally > >> sensitive (both traits of the gifted I have recently learned), so > > my mind > >> automatically searches for solutions and sees incongruencies. I > > have a > >> difficult time with injustice, and find it to be a highly > > emotionally > >> charged experience. But, I also look for solutions in such > > situations, this > >> is my nature. And, what I have found, is that many other people, > >> particularly those in what is percieved to be authoritative > > positions (such > >> as a treatement team, one example), are not conducive to such > > suggestions, > >> no matter how gently they come. All people come with there own > > issues. I > >> have always been a hopeful, foolish optimist, very naive, and > > highly > >> sensitive person. > >> I've become very hurt due to my inherent nature, and now I tend to > > isolate > >> because of it. But, I am learning (late), some things I probably > > should've > >> learned about the world in adolescence, and that is that not all > > people are > >> nice or trustworthy. > >> What I percieve as an asset, is perceivced as a liability in > > certain > >> situations. And, this seems to be what happened with my DBT > > experience (I > >> was somewhat scapegoated by some of the therapists on the team who > > had me > >> stigmatized and labeled and misidentified by their own biases and > > judgements > >> & I was highly aware of it, but at the same time unable to do > > anything about > >> it). Extremely painful situation for me, especially considering > > the fact, > >> that I had accomplished so much personal growth in my life under > > much > >> duress, and had not given up (this is the period when I empowered > > myself > >> from being labeled as " mentally ill " to being a consumer/survivor > > in > >> recovery, self-empowering myself and bucking the system - the best > > thing I > >> could've done for myself, and key to my recovery, because I was > > dying > >> psychologically & emotionally prior to this), and I did it for me > > (sheer > >> survival) and no one else, and they were now refusing to > > acknowledge my > >> personal accomplishment, as they had all the other group members. > > No big > >> deal (this is how I have always acted though, see?). So, instead > > of doing > >> that, I mustered the courage to say something instead, to take > >> responsibility for my thoughts and feelings. It didn't change > > anything > >> though. It was already a fact. The fact being that this Mental > > Health tx > >> team had basicly treated me in the same manner my nada had treated > > me much > >> of my life. The feelings I experienced were so reminiscent! > >> It seemed like they were BPD, not I. They were all so > > controlling of > >> me. I was learning all of the skills so quickly and easily, > > because I > >> already used many of them. My problem was that I had been affected > > by many > >> people who have personality disorders in my own life, including > > BPD, NPD, > >> and APD (family, friends, boyfriends). No one was recognizing this > > fact, > >> except for me. They talked about invalidating environments all the > > time in > >> DBT, while providing one for me, which triggered me, because I was > > raised by > >> a nada & fada, who were both invalidating, and not capable of > > mirroring > >> properly. > >> Now I know this must've been what my Higher Power wanted me to > > find out, > >> because this is what my experience was that led me to discover that > > my > >> Mother had a personality disorder (which I could not see until all > > of this > >> happened in therapy, this is what it took, this was the end > > result). Yes, > >> after one year, and all of that work, and the final result was that > > they did > >> not recognize my accomplishment of completing DBT, that was when > > something > >> clicked. It was all very painful. > >> So, I was then reading SWOE, and that's when it hit me like a > > ton of > >> bricks, that my Mom fit nearly all the criteria of BPD, some of > > them very > >> strongly. I could not believe I hadn't noticed before. It was so > > weird, I > >> could barely believe it. > >> My new therapist barely acknowledged my discovery that my > > mother had BPD > >> or the fact that she had screwed up (she somehow turned it around > > and made > >> it my fault?)........so I quit therapy, and said this isn't going > > to work > >> for me anymore. That was almost a year ago. That was the > > beginning of my > >> real recovery, I think, one defined by self-empowerment. > >> > >> wrote: > >> > It strikes me that so many of us KOs have had the experience of > >> > being labelled " mentally ill " when what we actually are > > is " mentally > >> > wounded " . (And WHY is that medicine makes that distinction in > > terms > >> > of physical illness vs injury but not for mental illness vs injury > >> > anyway?) > >> > > >> > But now you know, and your healing process is progressing > >> > amazingly. I see so much development of your insight and > >> > understanding in just the short time since you joined the list. > >> > > >> > It is absolutely normal to be totally overwhelmed with grief > > during > >> > this part of your journey. It is an unavoidable part of > >> > healing...letting our dreams of ever having " real mothers " die. > >> > > >> > >> This is good to know. I guess that means it will pass too. > >> > >> > I think that for both of us, this is especially hard because our > >> > nadas were so high-functioning in the outside world, and that > > makes > >> > it hard to get our heads around how messed up they were in their > >> > family lives. > >> > > >> > >> Yep. My Mom hired my AA sponsor, and they get along so well. I > > have no one > >> to talk to about this > >> really, except dh. He is the only one who really gets it. But, he > > is also > >> affected. But, now I have this group, and I am so grateful for > > that. > >> > >> > But you are facing this with great courage. I am so proud of you! > >> > >> Thanks again for all your loving support . It means so much > > to me > >> right now. It give me strength and courage to walk through each > > day. > >> > >> > > >> > Hugs, > >> > > >> > > >> > --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > >> >> Hi , > >> >> I didn't get a chance to respond to your last note to me > >> > previously & I had > >> >> wanted to. > >> >> I was in therapy for years, and also experienced this form of > >> > detachment > >> >> from my emotions thing you describe for years (not true any > >> > longer, although > >> >> I still can I think) in early sobriety (my sponsors made me do > > 4th > >> > steps > >> >> over because I did not cry), in therapy, etc.,. Today, I am > >> > feeling all > >> >> the emotions, including some anger over the fact that my > > therapist > >> > never > >> >> clued in to the fact that my nada had a BPD. I was in therapy > >> > for years, > >> >> trying to get help for muself, to figure out what was wrong with > >> > me so I > >> >> could get better at doing life, and the primary topic was often > > my > >> > struggle > >> >> with this over dependent enmeshed and abusive relationship with > >> > nada. My > >> >> therapist was the head counselor of the DBT team. After 5 years > >> > of therapy, > >> >> I think they pretty much decided the only way they could help me > >> > was through > >> >> DBT, essentially labeling me as BP (because yes, I admitted I had > >> > traits of > >> >> BP), without coming out and saying so, if you will. But, I > >> > absolutely > >> >> refused to allow them to diagnosed me BPD. And, when I tried the > >> > DBT group > >> >> the first time, I quit after a few weeks, because I knew I did > > not > >> > belong > >> >> there (I did not identify with the others in there at all). My > >> > actual > >> >> diagnosis is Bipolar depression (I don't even know if that is > >> > correct now, > >> >> but I do know that I have had recurrent episodes of depression, > >> > particularly > >> >> having to do with hormones - giving birth, and the > > antidepressants > >> > I was put > >> >> on made me worse in many ways.). For years I believed I > >> > was " crazy " , > >> >> " mentall ill " , and searched for what my problem was so I could > >> > start to live > >> >> in the solution. Well, why wouldn't I believe this, this is > > what > >> > nada told > >> >> me ever time I expressed an emotion with her, or said something > >> > that > >> >> disagreed with her version of reality (she would scream at me or > >> > look at me > >> >> in disgust and say " you are crazy " ), this is frightening to a > >> > child. This > >> >> is what happened in me in my adolescence. I didn't believe her, > > I > >> > believed > >> >> it was her not me (so I thought). But, I now realize that this > >> > parental > >> >> mirroring had an effect upon me whether I realized it or not > > (like > >> >> brainwashing). I eventually got to a place where I did the DBT > >> > course > >> >> because I realized that was my therapists forte, and I may as > > well > >> > take > >> >> advantage of it, it really didn't matter whether I had BP or not, > >> > the point > >> >> was was that I was willing to change and to grow, and to pick up > >> > new life > >> >> skills wherever I could find them. Who was right and who was > >> > wrong was > >> >> beside the point. So, I did and took what I could from it. But, > >> >> unfortunately with the treatment team there everthing did turn > > out > >> > to be a > >> >> power struggle with them. I completed the year of DBT, and then > >> > they > >> >> interceded and attempted not to acknowledge I had completed it or > >> > give me my > >> >> " diploma " in group. It was quite sick. I think the other group > >> > members > >> >> were unhappy with there power tactic control methods as well, as > >> > far as I > >> >> could tell. It was reminiscent of growing up in the land of OZ > > if > >> > you ask > >> >> me. All very triggering. Which btw, is what led me to realize > >> > and become > >> >> aware that my BP mother had BPD at all. > >> >> After one year of DBT and these power struggles with this TX team > >> > was > >> >> engaging in, I became aware that my Mother had BPD, that was one > >> > year ago. > >> >> > >> >> The point being, that it angers me that I could be in therapy for > >> > so long to > >> >> get help for myself on my own accord, be completely honest with > >> > these so > >> >> called professionals (spefically trained to treat BPD), and they > >> > did not > >> >> even clue in to the fact that my nada had BPD!!!!!#$%#@Oolh. > >> >> > >> >> I look at my life, and I realize I have been surrounded by people > >> > with or > >> >> affected by this disorder throughout. Today, I run from people > >> > who seem to > >> >> have it, in order to protect myself. I want to learn how to set > >> > healthy > >> >> boundaries instead. Avoidance, isolating, as it says in SWOE > > fear > >> > and > >> >> anxiety is not the same as helplessness (yea!). I have felt > >> > helpless and > >> >> hopeless for too long. I have been trying to get help and found > >> > none. I > >> >> have found more help in this group just by reading everybody's > >> > situations > >> >> and identying and getting honest feedback and validation from all > >> > of you, > >> >> than I got from nearly a decade of therapy. > >> >> > >> >> Yesterday I bought the SWOE workbook and began that. I am > >> > desperate to do > >> >> what I can to change what I can so my life can improve. I've > >> > known for a > >> >> very long time I can't change anyone else. But, I have felt > >> > trapped, stuck, > >> >> and helpless and hopeless. Not knowing what else to do. SWOE > >> > said > >> >> avoidance is also taking an action (I hadn't thought of it like > >> > that), and > >> >> this action has been making me ill - that's what I have beeen > >> > doing for > >> >> years. Until quite recently, I've begun taking actions which > > make > >> > me feel > >> >> like a mean person as someone said (but I am actually setting > >> > healthy > >> >> boundaries, and taking responsibility for me, for the first time, > >> > I think). > >> >> It's empowering, but frightening at the same time. > >> >> > >> >> wrote: > >> >> > It's a horrible thing, to be dependent on, and therefore > >> > vulnerable > >> >> > to, someone who's irrational and thus unreliable and > >> > unpredictable. > >> >> > >> >> Yes, that is what I am in the process of realizing - I have been > >> > taking time > >> >> to allow this to really sink in. I've never really done this > >> > before. > >> >> Sometimes the grief overwhelms me. > >> >> > >> >> It's like this, I had to explain it to my son last night. He was > >> > irritated > >> >> with me for saying " is that really happening " about something I > >> > percieved, > >> >> which I am aware that I do quite often. > >> >> This was the example that I gave to him, which helped him to > > truly > >> >> understand why I doubt my own perceptions so much. When you grow > >> > up and you > >> >> are a little kid, and every day you wake up excited and happy and > >> > thrilled > >> >> to be alive, and you say " Look Mommy today the sky is blue " , and > >> > in response > >> >> to your observation your are told " no, , the sky is not blue > >> > (even > >> >> though you can see clearly that it is), the sky is grey " , or you > >> > wake up and > >> >> you say " Mommy I feel sad today " , and you are told, " you aren't > >> > sad, you are > >> >> happy, and everything is fine " , for example, maybe? And, the > >> > other parent > >> >> (Dad), is absolutely unavailable as a mirror at all (you can't > >> > even get his > >> >> attention), but you try desparetely anyway. The message you get > >> > growing up > >> >> is > >> >> I do not exist > >> >> I am unimportant > >> >> what I think, feel, and want is not important and real > >> >> > >> >> I believed I had a perfect childhood until I was 25 years old. > > In > >> >> otherwords I believed the lie presented to me, that I was > >> > brainwashed and > >> >> programmed to believe. My nada was so good at pretending and > >> > faking that > >> >> not even she could convince me it was all a lie, when she decided > >> > it was > >> >> over. I clung to the fantasy she had presented, the false > >> > reality, false > >> >> family, false father, false mother, all images and not reality, > >> > etc., When I > >> >> was 25, the image began to crack. > >> >> > >> >> But, I think I will always need to double check my own > > perceptions > >> > of > >> >> reality from time to time. And, I can accept this without > > judging > >> > me. > >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > --- " " <kthielen@k...> wrote: > >> >> >> Now that I am reading about BPD, and becoming aware of how > > sick > >> >> >> she really is. I mean I would say that everytime I go around > >> > her > >> >> >> and the bizarre things would come out of her mouth, but then I > >> >> >> forget. > >> >> >> > >> >> >> You know, I literally, forget a week later if I don't write it > >> >> >> down. WHat is that? Does anyone else do that? > >> >> > > >> >> > >> >> wrote: > >> >> > I think most of us KOs have experienced our psyches protecting > >> > us from > >> >> > a reality that was too painful to process. Sometimes > > we " forget " > >> >> > (actually repress) impossible-seeming or unbearably-painful > >> > memories, > >> >> > or sometimes we remember the facts but repress our feelings > > about > >> >> > them. When I first started with my therpist I think I shocked > >> > her by > >> >> > describing the most horrific, soul-destroying experiences in a > >> > calm, > >> >> > rational, detached and very intellectual way. > >> >> > > >> >> > This might be a pattern that began when you were a child and it > >> > was > >> >> > the only way you could live with your nada and not go > > completely > >> > crazy > >> >> > yourself. I expect that as you continue to educate yourself > >> > about BP, > >> >> > and are able to normalize your experiences by understanding > > them > >> > and > >> >> > sharing them with us, you'll find that this improves. If you > >> > can call > >> >> > remembering all the " crazy nada assertions " an improvement, > > that > >> > is! > >> >> > > >> >> > But you may also find that as you stop forgetting the crazy > >> > things > >> >> > your mom is saying, you will realise that they are causing you > >> > even > >> >> > more distress than you are consciously aware of right now. I > >> > fear > >> >> > this may be connected to your position of material dependence > > on > >> > her. > >> >> > Could it be that some part of your brain is protecting you from > >> > the > >> >> > sheer awful uncertainty of that? > >> >> > > >> >> > The REAL truth is that you are actually MUCH safer now than > > when > >> > you > >> >> > didn't know about your mom's BP. You have supports and > >> > resources and > >> >> > options that you didn't have before, both for dealing with her > >> > and for > >> >> > taking care of yourself and your own family. > >> >> > > >> >> > Hugs, > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > > >> >> > 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...
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