Guest guest Posted April 9, 2008 Report Share Posted April 9, 2008 I'm not really sure where to begin here - it's just wonderful (and not-so-wonderful) to know that this isn't an anomaly and other people have dealt with someone with BPD. My mother died a year and a half ago, and from the time she was diagnosed with lung cancer, I went into counseling to allay my Dad's worries and to try to come to terms with what was happening. They had divorced when I was four years old, with many stories of abuse flying around, most of which a four-year-old shouldn't be exposed to. Lies were told (I think) and only now do I realise that a lot of my 'memories' may not be real, and that in itself is quite strange. Growing up I have large blank periods book-ended by horrific events, feelings of intense responsibility and feeling like the most important and brilliant person in the world. I knew the relationship Mum and I had was special, we were 'best friends' and she confided in me as such. Things now, I wish I had never heard. I remember waking up in the morning after making my school projects to find she had altered them, they weren't quite good enough. On the other hand, I was praised for being so 'gifted'. Then I remember being told constantly that I was 'selfish and self-centred,' a phrase which now rolls easily off the tongue and has settled quite comfortably into my psyche. This may explain why I feel the need to cater to every possible need of the people around me. I am so scared that people will think that of me. Selfish and self-centred. I never meant to be. Then as I grew up, developed a little bit of my own identity, was more strongly drawn to the stability of my Father's side of the family. I was curious to know them properly, something which Mum had seemed to 'shield' me from my whole life. They were a 'bad lot'. I began to work out that this behaviour wasn't normal, Mother's weren't supposed to poison their daughter's dogs to get back at them for loving their fathers, they weren't supposed to say things like, " A B? I'm an A+ mother. " They weren't supposed to smack you so hard that you bruised. We moved house 11 times. So, at 16, I suggested, as tentatively as I could that perhaps, maybe, I could stay with my Dad a week at a time - instantly, she flew into a frenzy. I remember her leaving me at home, it was late at night, to drive down bare-foot to the corner shop to buy cigarettes, only to come back yelling at me that it was my fault she started to smoke again. I was curled up in a ball in the backyard on the phone to my sister (half-sister through my Dad) bawling - I was scared she was in the house killing herself. From then her condition deteriorated, and I attempted to plow through the last year of school and into University - academics and my school persona had always been a source of pride for her, so maintaining it seemed to be the most important thing for her, and it provided me with the validation I felt I needed. The emotional blackmail she used to combat her feelings of abandonment (because I had chosen to live out my final year of school with my Dad) were constant and exhausting, and I wondered if she knew how it affected me. It got to the point where it stopped affecting me, and I became numbed. She then told me she tried to kill herself, and that it was because I left her. Then after months of Pneumonia, chest x-rays, quitting university to keep up her visitation expectations in hospital - she was diagnosed with Lung Cancer. She struggled with money and ended up having to move into a tiny flat on her own, undergoing radiation and chemotherapy. They gave her five years. I ended up working a full-time managerial job at age 17 to keep myself busy in the absence of study. I felt disgusting, making all this money while she struggled and when I tried to help financially I was thwarted by her need to be independent, despite her obvious deterioration. She would tell me how amazing her friends were, visiting her all the time, buying her things, being a constant comfort - making a very clear reference to the fact that I wasn't doing enough. I've never felt such mingled emotions; resentment and guilt. I never showed it. I think that scared her. I was blank. I became robotic, receiving text messages from her like - " You didn't visit me today, obviously you don't love me at all, " and " Do I really have a daughter? " I had gone from being her pillar of support at home, to the cause of her pain. I had abandoned her, but I didn't understand that she was so scared. She used to tell me all the time that she was scared when I wasn't there, but because I didn't drop everything for her, I had lost the ability to pacify her. 4 months after her diagnosis, they stopped treating her and she died. She had progressed incredibly quickly. She said she didn't really have much to fight for, everyone had gone. She had been abandoned at an orphanage with her sister at age 3, and suffered terrible physical and sexual abuse until the age of 17. She had no parents, no love and never felt stable enough to grow up. More often than not, I felt as though I was her mother. It was as though she was the child, and I skipped childhood into adulthood. People used to always remark on my maturity, but it was a survival mechanism. For the longest time I wondered why Dad didn't fight for custody of me, knowing what Mum was like - I really wished I was saved by someone. Everyone must've known. But Mum was amazingly resilient in a public setting - charismatic, the centre of attention, caring, intuitive and interesting. She had a real spark, something I think would have been quite spectacular had she been a nurtured child as she deserved. Most people wouldn't have known. I was the one she chose to reveal herself to, because she was able to control me. Since she died, I have gone through a large stage of denial - I feel like I've lost elements of childhood, my mother and any chance of resolution. I feel guilty that she bought that packet of cigarettes, a habit that ended up killing her. These feelings manifested themselves in depression, anxiety and finally an eating disorder which is probably the most debilitating of all and I am still trying hard to battle with daily. Despite being in therapy over the past two years, I don't think there has ever been a point where I've really referred to Mum or talked about her at length. After a particularly terrible bulimic episode a few days ago, I practically ran to my psychologist and vented my desperation. I was desperate to know why I behaved like this, despite all the intellectual knowledge and reasons I have not to put behave this way, and the physical exhaustion I felt, I continued to use food and self deprecation to remedy by anxiety. She asked me why I thought I did this, and I finally came out with something I'd known all along, but something I realised was preventing me from moving forward. I have never ever dealt with anything. Ever. She said I'd hit the nail on the head. For the next 90 minutes I practically exploded with stories about Mum, Dad and all the weird memories I hadn't allowed myself to experience. I'd packaged everything away to stay safe. Then she said something to me, which I know is the beginning of healing for me. " It sounds to me, from what you describe, that your Mother had Borderline Personality Disorder. " I had never heard of it, but an overwhelming sense of relief came over me. She explained it to me, and explained how adult children of people with BPD behave - everything fit perfectly. Mum and I were two polar extremes, both with abandonment issues but with different survival mechanisms. Now I feel a deep sadness that perhaps she had never got the help she needed and I was never able to understand. But now I think I have an opportunity to understand myself a bit better. I now understand why I find it difficult to trust, have constant battles with self esteem, very black and white thinking and an overblown sense of responsibility - and have an opportunity to heal. I am just so saddened that in the absence of this knowledge, Mum didn't have the opportunity to heal too. I now realise how much I love her. My only dilemma now is where I go from here. Thanks so much for allowing me to have a medium whereby I can share this, even just putting things into words provides some relief. If anyone managed to read this, you deserve a medal. I didn't plan to write a large novel. Abbie. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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