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Re: babysitting?!?

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Hi K, and welcome -

I have a six-month old son, and would never let my nada anywhere

near him. This is because she is so incredibly unstable. She is a

reckless driver, she self-medicates (and leaves pills around), she

loses her temper so quickly that she becomes violent, and she may

very well decide to go off for a six-hour nap after one of her

tantrums. What I'm trying to say is that I don't think she is

emotionally well enough to care for him, and he could easily be in

physical danger (I also suspect she would use him to manipulate me

once he is older, and I don't ever want him in that position!).

That said, my grandmother had NPD traits, and she was an absolutely

wonderful influence on my life (this is relative to my nutty

parents, of course)

So I think you need to evaluate whether you feel that he would be in

any danger at all, and that includes his mother's mental stress

related to making arrangements with a BPD. If so, tell her you

don't want to put her out and value her to highly to use her as a

babysitter!

Sara

>

> hi there-i'm new to this group-and to yahoo groups in general.

i'm the

> adult daughter of a bpd (or traits of) mother. i had a son almost

a year

> ago, and have been having trouble meeting my mother's expectations

of

> 'grandmotherhood'. she has not used physical force in years, but

is

> very manipulative, and so far i have not let her babysit for my

little

> guy-and this is eating away at her. she constantly offers in the

hope

> that i'll just one day say 'ok, sure'. but i'm just not ready

yet.

> i'm not convinced she's ok. any advice? any experience with the

> grandchild thing? it's getting really messy!

> thanks,

> k

>

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Welcome!

I can't tell you what to do, but I wish I had know when my child was

this age that my mom was a bp. I left my nada pick up my daughter

after school for years. I figured it was at the most 1-11/2 hours a

day, and it was better then her being in day care. It got so messy to

say the least and nada latched on to my daughter.

I know I wouldn't do it again. Nada knew no boundaries and my

daughter now a grown 23 year old, will share things with me. My

mother never beat her or was physically abusive, but there was other

things going on which were inappropriate. My daughter was nada

sounding board, helper, and she used my daughter just like she used

me. Nada was devasted when she couldn't pick her up from school

anymore and she made such a fuss over not being wanted, she refused

to drive anywhere, and my fada for the past 7 years has taken her

everywhere.

Each nada is the same in many ways, but they are also different too.

I always say go with your inner voice, it is telling you something.

Good Luck and keep posting!

Malinda

> >

> > hi there-i'm new to this group-and to yahoo groups in general.

> i'm the

> > adult daughter of a bpd (or traits of) mother. i had a son

almost

> a year

> > ago, and have been having trouble meeting my mother's

expectations

> of

> > 'grandmotherhood'. she has not used physical force in years, but

> is

> > very manipulative, and so far i have not let her babysit for my

> little

> > guy-and this is eating away at her. she constantly offers in the

> hope

> > that i'll just one day say 'ok, sure'. but i'm just not ready

> yet.

> > i'm not convinced she's ok. any advice? any experience with the

> > grandchild thing? it's getting really messy!

> > thanks,

> > k

> >

>

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Guest guest

Welcome, K!

YOU are the mother now, and you have your son's well being to think

about. Others' feelings in the matter are not your concern.

She can content herself with visiting with him, but she seems to be

insisting on being alone with him. If this gives you a creepy

feeling -- no matter how strong or weak the feeling is -- LISTEN to

it!!

Stand strong -- be polite but firm in your decision. If she starts

in on trying to make you feel guilty, don't take it in -- detach.

You should be totally comfortable with anyone sitting with your

son. Your mother will have to learn to live with your decisions in

your son's best interests.

It's only getting " messy " if you let it get to you -- which is

exactly what a manipulator wants. The " mess " is on her end, not

yours. It's not your concern, so detach.

{hugs}

Kyla

>

> hi there-i'm new to this group-and to yahoo groups in general.

i'm the

> adult daughter of a bpd (or traits of) mother. i had a son almost

a year

> ago, and have been having trouble meeting my mother's expectations

of

> 'grandmotherhood'. she has not used physical force in years, but

is

> very manipulative, and so far i have not let her babysit for my

little

> guy-and this is eating away at her. she constantly offers in the

hope

> that i'll just one day say 'ok, sure'. but i'm just not ready

yet.

> i'm not convinced she's ok. any advice? any experience with the

> grandchild thing? it's getting really messy!

> thanks,

> k

>

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Guest guest

i'd like to highlight the great advice i got in just three postings:

So I think you need to evaluate whether you feel that he would be in

any danger at all, and that includes his mother's mental stress

related to making arrangements with a BPD.

Sara

Each nada is the same in many ways, but they are also different too.

I always say go with your inner voice, it is telling you something.

Malinda

… she seems to be insisting on being alone with him. If this gives you

a creepy feeling -- no matter how strong or weak the feeling is --

LISTEN to it!!

Kyla

THANKS. I WILL KEEP POSTING!!!

hugs back,

Katy :)

> >

> > hi there-i'm new to this group-and to yahoo groups in general.

> i'm the

> > adult daughter of a bpd (or traits of) mother. i had a son almost

> a year

> > ago, and have been having trouble meeting my mother's expectations

> of

> > 'grandmotherhood'. she has not used physical force in years, but

> is

> > very manipulative, and so far i have not let her babysit for my

> little

> > guy-and this is eating away at her. she constantly offers in the

> hope

> > that i'll just one day say 'ok, sure'. but i'm just not ready

> yet.

> > i'm not convinced she's ok. any advice? any experience with the

> > grandchild thing? it's getting really messy!

> > thanks,

> > k

> >

>

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Guest guest

I would say the most important thing is, don't do anything you don't

want to do. That's also really important for your mental health.

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Guest guest

>

> hi there-i'm new to this group-and to yahoo groups in general. i'm

the

> adult daughter of a bpd (or traits of) mother. i had a son almost a

year

> ago, and have been having trouble meeting my mother's expectations of

> 'grandmotherhood'. she has not used physical force in years, but is

> very manipulative, and so far i have not let her babysit for my little

> guy-and this is eating away at her. she constantly offers in the hope

> that i'll just one day say 'ok, sure'. but i'm just not ready yet.

> i'm not convinced she's ok. any advice? any experience with the

> grandchild thing? it's getting really messy!

> thanks,

> k

>

Are you kidding me?!?! Listen to yourself and you'll know the answer!

If you have any doubts, why would you endanger your kid? What is more

important: your kid's wellfare or your mother's feelings and/or your

relationship with her? This is just HER again, trying to make you do

something you don't want to do through guilt. She's spent your whole

life training you to feel guilty and inadequate, so of course you're

going to doubt your reasoning. You need to buck up and stand firm. You

are the first and only line of defense between your child and your

mother. How did she raise you? How did she make you feel about

yourself? How much misery is in your heart because of her? Don't feel

guilty. Don't. And this leads to another good point: you'd better have

a will and you'd BETTER have someone listed as legal guardian on your

will who is NOT your mother. Because if you don't, she will do

everything she can to take that kid and torment it just like she did

you (if you should die).

I know I sound brutal, but I'm done with guilt. I'm am angry about how

these women have moulded us into people without backbone. My backbone

is here and I intend to stand firm. I have figured it out: her problems

are NOT mine and I owe her nothing. Life makes so much more sense that

way.

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Guest guest

Like a lot of us, you know what's right for your son. The hard part is

sticking to your choice when your mother acts like she inevitably will

continue to act. It's not easy, but as someone who had my own child

possessed by my mother, I can confidently say you are making the right

choice.

BPD mothers see grandchildren as THEIRS and that they are ENTITLED to

them. That's not healthy for the kid,the mom or the grandma. Period.

I've never heard a story of a BPD grandparent that treated their

grandchild with the autonomy, respect and boundaries kids need.

Don't do it.

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Guest guest

Go with your gut feeling. You're not convinced she'd be ok with your

son... then don't do it. Stick to your guns.

twin.less

cyclebreaker5k wrote:

hi there-i'm new to this group-and to yahoo groups in general. i'm the

adult daughter of a bpd (or traits of) mother. i had a son almost a year

ago, and have been having trouble meeting my mother's expectations of

'grandmotherhood'. she has not used physical force in years, but is

very manipulative, and so far i have not let her babysit for my little

guy-and this is eating away at her. she constantly offers in the hope

that i'll just one day say 'ok, sure'. but i'm just not ready yet.

i'm not convinced she's ok. any advice? any experience with the

grandchild thing? it's getting really messy!

thanks,

k

---------------------------------

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Check outnew cars at Yahoo! Autos.

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