Guest guest Posted September 28, 2007 Report Share Posted September 28, 2007 I just wanted to thank ALL of you for responding and to let you know I'll reply soon - it's been a heck of a week, so I've only been able to read, but it has REALLY helped! - NT > > I've told parts of this story before, but it's probably way back in > the archives under my old username by now, so bear with me... > > I've been NC with nada for about 5 months now. When I was barely 2 > months pregnant, she decided to take the simple statement we gave our > whole family and a group of friends that we'd decided that we wanted a > few weeks to adjust to our new roles as parents at and around the time > of the birth without having to entertain out-of-town guests (but that > we'd love to have everyone at the baptism) and turn it into a > full-blown drama-filled rip-on-the-daughter festival. In truth, I > didn't want her involved in the first place, but in sending this > letter with a very small boundary enclosed (read: " we have decided > who'll be at the birth, but you are welcome to visit later " ), I > decided to give her the opportunity to have some involvement. I just > made it on my terms, because my primary job is to protect my son. > > Well, you know what happens when you try to do something on YOUR terms. > > Anyhow, so I've been NC for 5 months, and except for her sending a > couple more emails which were filtered into my trash bin and a > completely psycho incident where she created a fake persona with a > " child with genetic difficulties that passed away " to comment on my > blog in order to try to make me feel guilty (long story, and it was a > sick thing to do), I haven't had to deal with her. I was very sad > because I wasn't able to contact anyone else in my family either - she > controls all interactions - but eventually my father and I have > started talking, and so things are somewhat better. > > It was a very bad first few months of the pregnancy, though, and I > readily admit that I am both very much at peace with my decision to go > NC, and very angry with her for so obviously making my pregnancy about > her and her feelings. I'm struggling with that, but I'm working it out. > > Anyway, so she is unable to get access to my blog to read up on my > pregnancy progress, but my dad and - allegedly - my brother (I don't > quite believe this because I haven't heard from him since she went > crackers this time around) give her updates apparently. I don't really > care - I can't control what they do and don't want to, as long as I > don't have to hear from her. I have known the whole time that she was > probably squirming and going nuts that I was having this child and > that I did not need her there to run the show - or, more to the point, > she thinks I DO need her there to run the show and is pissed off that > I somehow think I have the right to deny her that. > > Again, as long as I haven't had to hear about it, I've just let it go. > I'm ready to move on. > > But I've known, and my therapist warned me of this, that as it gets > closer to the baby's birth, she will not be able to stay in the > background. She can't stand not being the center of attention for that > long, and she has been absolutely obsessed with the idea of my > children since long before I was even dating my husband (nearly a > decade before now). I have constant nightmares about her, and my DH > and I have a plan worked out for if and when she shows up at our door > uninvited (although she lives 1000 miles away, I just can't see her > letting this go). > > I had just, however, in the last couple of weeks started to relax. I > thought perhaps I was just being overly defensive and paranoid. I > started to feel a little more comfortable in the situation and in my > own skin, and was even able to send my dad a note to let him know that > we weren't rejecting him from our lives, but that we would also not > force him to choose between us and his wife - he was welcome in our > son's and our grandson's life in any capacity he wanted, but that he > knew there was one constraint on that (read: that my mom not be > involved), and that if that made his life too difficult, we would > understand if he were less involved than he otherwise might be. > > Well, my mom reads his email, and even if she didn't this time, he > does almost anything she wants anyway to keep his own peace, and so I > know he probably tells her almost everything anyway. That's fine - > again, I'd rather he didn't, but I don't feel the need to control > everyone else in my life, and I know that I take my own risks when I > give him information. > > And so yesterday, she finally couldn't take it anymore. First she > tried to call me from her cell phone - a number I don't know (but have > now blocked) - but didn't get a hold of me and didn't leave a message. > I wouldn't have even known it was her, except that my parents have a > cell phone family plan and the number is similar but not identical to > my father's... that and the fact that 5 minutes after she called my > house, she sent me an email from an account I'd never seen - her work > account (which wasn't yet filtered at the time) at her new job. Again, > here we see her working her way around any boundaries I try to > enforce. I tell her not to call or email, and she does it. So I block > her from calling or emailing, and she finds her way around that. There > is NO WAY I'd trust her around my child!!! She'd just ignore any > boundaries I set and try to raise him herself! (And badmouth me...) > > So, anyway, I was puzzled by this nicey-nicey email she sent at first, > not because I hadn't been expecting it, but because I couldn't really > tell quite why it bothered me so much. I wasn't tempted to respond, > however - I've let her have weeks of email conversations with my inbox > before without responding and seen how she can go from praise to rage > and back *all by herself*, so I know the other shoe will drop. But I > was puzzled by why it bothered me so much immediately (aside from it > being evidence of her completely ignoring my desire to never hear from > her again): > > ****** > > Subject: Can we please resolve our problems? > > NT, > > I'm VERY, very sad about the blowup that we had. I love you so much > and have been very concerned about your health and well being. I'm > always happy when your Dad or your brother gives me news about your > pregnancy. I understand that it is going to be a boy. > > I'm not going to go into long explanation again. I just want to have > a relationship with you. I cry a lot over what happened. My life > would be perfect if you were in it. > > Can we PLEASE bury the hatchet!! > > I love you, > > Mom > > ****** > > And then I realized... aside from being unsolicited, all it is is a > guilt trip. She takes no responsibility for anything she has done - > it's all about how SHE feels. How VERY sad she is. How VERY worried > she is (because I am not telling her every detail of my life, and she > feels entitled and out of control when I don't). (My health and > well-being are fine - I read somewhere that worry was the long > lead-line of control... it certainly isn't love all by itself, and for > my mom, it's control) She wants to let me know she's capable of being > happy, that she's benevolent, that she'll be a good grandmother if > I'll just get this damned chip off my shoulder. > > It wasn't a " blowup we had " - it was a total meltdown SHE had!!! > > The " long explanation " she's referring to is actually the initial > insane email she sent me when she found out I was pregnant letting me > know I was a terrible, unforgiving person, that I clearly wanted to > exclude my parents from my children's life and that I was going to be > a horrible parent by cheating my children, that I had abandoned my > brother and clearly hated him unfairly (I don't hate my brother at all > - it's just a side effect of how she'd split us in that week), that I > never tried to understand how anyone else felt (projection, anyone), > etc etc etc. That wasn't an explanation, it was a letter full of > insults, guilt, accusations and manipulation. She wasn't getting what > she wanted, she felt abandoned and rejected, so she wanted to make > sure I knew I'd be punished if I dared to do that. > > Her " long explanation " was a set of two hate-filled emails, one of > which I only skimmed before trashing it. She's just letting me know > she's not going to insult me in this letter and is therefore a nice > person who is entitled to what she wants from me. > > I can't believe she can be so awful, and then has the gall to tell me > none of it matters, she just wants a relationship with me. The NERVE > she has to tell me about how she cries all the time over this. Where > was SHE when I was crying myself to sleep and constantly devastated > after her antics after the pregnancy announcement? > > Why am I supposed to care that she's crying over a situation she created? > > Oh, right, I'm responsible for her happiness. The fact that she says > " [her] life would be perfect if were in it " just makes me sick - > her life is never perfect (no one's is), or even good. She's incapable > of being happy, and now she's shoveled her happiness off on me, as if > I am responsible for her feeling bad right now? > > I know what this letter is, I really do. Even if it looks " nice " on > the surface, note that there's no apology, no concern for how all of > this has made me feel, no promises to try to work to change her > behaviors. No, it's all either neutral and about " us " (which means I, > NT, did something wrong) or it's about her and how bad she feels. I'm > supposed to feel bad. > > And I'm supposed to look like the bad guy if I don't respond - she > did, after all, CC it to my father. > > I had just started to get myself straight, and now she's trying to > worm her way around my boundaries again. When that does not work - and > it will not - what I'm really worried about is the next step. > > The next step is the person who has told me repeatedly he can't be in > the middle of this, and I have absolutely not put him there this time > - my father. I have, instead of seeking validation and comfort from > him, avoided the topic at all except to assure him that I understand > that one side is forcing him to choose, and that I won't push back and > make him do that, but that my mother is permanently out of our lives. > But my dad wants peace in his own home. My father is always trying to > save my mother from her feelings, from her actions, from > responsibility. And he knows I love him and, in spite of growing anger > over him letting her abuse his kids all these years, he knows I do > value his opinion. What I'm afraid of is that he'll risk destroying > the tenuous relationship we've been able to rebuild after my mother's > meltdown by doing what he's always done - kindly telling me how my > mother is really hurting, how he knows her better than anyone (in > spite of the fact that he has never really had to see her in the role > of mother - he's always hidden in the basement and only come upstairs > to be The Law and punish the kids when she is angry and lies about > what her children have done), how she really wants the best for me and > to be involved in our child's life. > > There is some part of me that knows he will do this in spite of all of > his protestations that he won't be put in the middle. He will do it > because of my mother and me, I'm the one who can sympathize. I'm the > one who hates hurting someone or seeing someone hurt. I'm the one who, > in spite of my many, many faults, has a rational nice side that can be > appealed to. And he will try to do that, because he hates seeing her > hurt and it will make his life easier. > > And I am scared to death, because this time, I cannot do it. > > What can I say to that? He doesn't know what BPD is, how she is never > going to stop doing this, how this is not just some terrible > misunderstanding between two people who don't get each other. I am > certainly not going to explain that on the phone to him - he's in as > much denial as anyone (he had the opportunity and desire to leave the > relationship a couple of years ago, and instead opted to move into Oz > on a permanent basis, going into willful denial to a large extent), > and it would be a waste of what little emotional energy I have for this. > > I want to keep my dad in my life to some extent, at least - he's the > only family member outside of my husband I have right now, and while I > cannot depend on him, I do love him. But my mother will use any > conduit she can get right now, and I don't know how to tell him he > can't ask me to do what he will inevitably ask me to do without > sounding like the cruel, mean bitch my mother will inevitably accuse > me of being (can we say this has happened before? . > > And then there's whatever she does after that - she's going to smear > me get again to family and family friends. She'll go through a period > of painting me black to everyone. And then she'll try again. > > I cannot spend the rest of my life afraid of her next attempt to mess > my life up, or the next time she uses my dad as a proxy to do so, and > it's really wearing on me! I cannot deal with another round of > horrible nightmares about her, where I wake up moaning and screaming > and my husband wakes out of a deep sleep to comfort me. > > I'm in therapy, and my therapist is wonderful - this is obviously not > about not having someone to talk to. But do any of you who've been NC > for a while have any advice for putting that fear, that defensiveness, > that constant attempt to predict the future (which unfortunately > nearly always succeeds, and is only more horrible when it fails) on > the back burner? > > I'm not expecting it to go away, but I'd really like to find a way to > tell it " I recognize that I am afraid, and that is OK, so please go > sit in the corner now for a while and stop screaming to be heard... " > > Sorry for the long ranting post... it just seems like every time this > whole situation has cooled off enough for me to finally start feeling > normal, she finds a way to light it up again. This always amazes me, > since she can't even talk to me right now and has no way of knowing > whether or not I've gotten over the last blows or not. It seems to > come in 4-month cycles, and maybe I should just start marking my > calendar > > - NT > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.