Guest guest Posted April 14, 2008 Report Share Posted April 14, 2008 This is something I fall into often. I understand your upset with yourself but I think we often are too hard on ourselves. These people are so unhealthy and they are also our family members they know how to pull us in because they have been doing so for so long. I think it works best for me to try and stay somewhat detached. I have to remind myself to not take their comments personally and remember they project all the time and this is not about me but about them. Sometimes I have to just stop being around them for a while or have low contact. I also try to say to them, " That might be your perspective but mine is..... " The thing that has helped me the most is to not expect myself to be 100% successful when I'm around them and to just try and focus on growth being a process over time. I try to remember the areas I did establish better boundaries and then look at the ways I didn't as a way to continue growing. I hope this helps. Kelley To: WTOAdultChildren1@...: mayalisa728@...: Mon, 14 Apr 2008 15:30:35 +0000Subject: When you are in the moment with the bpd what is your self-talk? In order to keep calm and respond instead of react? Things are very stressful right now. My sister delivered her baby on Saturday and she, the baby, has a birth syndrome that will require her to spend weeks in the NICU. Everyone is tense, because she is at risk of hypoxia all the time. It's a sad and frightening situation. Dad is agitated, mom is for some reason veering into more narcissism right now, which is the worst possible moment. The SIL who just had a healthy, perfect infant, despite smoking through her entire pregnancy, seems determined to say the exact wrong thing as often as possible, when her very presence because of the above circumstance would be hard to take if she was completely silent...she's showing narcissism too; in particular she seems to be flaunting her 'closeness' to my sister, at my expense (really my sister is not fond of her but in her typical fashion she keeps her cards close to her chest and the SIL has no idea how annoying my sister finds her). It's so strange to me how these situations bring out *more* narcissism in people than less; I guess it's the nature of the beast. For people who have come through successful interactions with bpd/npd-types, where you didn't allow your buttons to be pushed, what do you tell yourself in those moments when you are being triggered? I can see this going on for a while and I don't want to add to the stress or make it worse. Right now I am saying 'imagine you were a really dignified person' (.i.e., someone else) 'how would you react to this?' when things come up, I just wish I handled it better every time. I feel I create so much of the problem, or make it worse, because I feel like I always have to respond. My mouth works faster than my brain. Can anyone share any *positive* self-talk that works for them? is _________________________________________________________________ Going green? See the top 12 foods to eat organic. http://green.msn.com/galleries/photos/photos.aspx?gid=164 & ocid=T003MSN51N1653A Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2008 Report Share Posted April 14, 2008 I often feel like I make the problem worse when I argue or try to rationalize with the people around me. I try to say to myself " I can't think straight with these people around " and remove myself from the situation for at least a few minutes to cool down via some deep breathing and fresh air, etc. It drives the family nuts, especially the BP's because they want you to screw up, they relish in you coming down to their level. They say I'm uncommunicative, blah, blah blah. But I figure " if you have nothing nice to say, don't say anything at all " , and besides, why should I indulge their drama? A therapist once told me to count to ten before responding to anything that agitates me. Maybe that would help for you. Sending positive thoughts to you and your new niece. --Sid > To: WTOAdultChildren1@...: mayalisa728@...: Mon, 14 Apr 2008 15:30:35 +0000Subject: When you are in the moment with the bpd what is your self-talk? > In order to keep calm and respond instead of react? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2008 Report Share Posted April 14, 2008 that is great advice, thank you. I wasn't even thinking in terms of being too perfectionistic about it. Everyone is so tense now that it seems like *everyone* is triggering/being triggered. You are right, it is silly to expect just to snap my fingers and suddenly be immune to this stuff after a lifetime of being used as their dumping ground. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2008 Report Share Posted April 14, 2008 I love this: It drives the family nuts, especially the BP's because they want you to screw up, they relish in you coming down to their level. that is so true. They do try to drive you 'off course' at every opportunity. It's like they hone in on the fact that you are trying to be decent and upright and then, since they themselves can't attain any kind of real psychological maturity they do their damnedest to remove whatever self-respect you have. I think this is going to be a very long, tense time until the little one is released from NICU and even then it could be anywhere from 9 months to a year and a half before the worst problem is fixed and the hypoxia danger is elminated. My heart is broken for my sister because she will be stressed out and tense until that time, the baby will have trouble eating, sleeping, and sometimes breathing and will have probably ear infections too, in addition to speech problems. We went from one reality straight into another one in less than a day. I really have had to squelch the impulse to tell my SIL to please shut the hell up the times I've been around her. I don't think that my interfering or correcting her would do any good. My sister and I are not close but hearing someone be callous about this, when I know what my sister has gone through to conceive, and how badly she wanted this child, is almost too much. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2008 Report Share Posted April 14, 2008 This is a GREAT question. I self-talk whenever I'm in a situation with my parents -- I calm myself by mentally reminding myself that it's not always up to me to jump in and fill awkward silences, I'll pick a mantra and say it over and over in my head -- " stay calm, stay calm " ..... " you're doing fine " ..... " remain peaceful and calm " , etc., etc. Self talk is soooooo helpful when in the presence of a manipulative or potentially volatile or emotionally unstable BPD. Definitely should be in a KO's " toolbox " . -Kyla > > In order to keep calm and respond instead of react? Things are very > stressful right now. My sister delivered her baby on Saturday and > she, the baby, has a birth syndrome that will require her to spend > weeks in the NICU. Everyone is tense, because she is at risk of > hypoxia all the time. It's a sad and frightening situation. Dad is > agitated, mom is for some reason veering into more narcissism right > now, which is the worst possible moment. The SIL who just had a > healthy, perfect infant, despite smoking through her entire > pregnancy, seems determined to say the exact wrong thing as often as > possible, when her very presence because of the above circumstance > would be hard to take if she was completely silent...she's showing > narcissism too; in particular she seems to be flaunting > her 'closeness' to my sister, at my expense (really my sister is not > fond of her but in her typical fashion she keeps her cards close to > her chest and the SIL has no idea how annoying my sister finds her). > It's so strange to me how these situations bring out *more* > narcissism in people than less; I guess it's the nature of the > beast. For people who have come through successful interactions with > bpd/npd-types, where you didn't allow your buttons to be pushed, > what do you tell yourself in those moments when you are being > triggered? I can see this going on for a while and I don't want to > add to the stress or make it worse. Right now I am saying 'imagine > you were a really dignified person' (.i.e., someone else) 'how would > you react to this?' when things come up, I just wish I handled it > better every time. I feel I create so much of the problem, or make > it worse, because I feel like I always have to respond. My mouth > works faster than my brain. Can anyone share any *positive* self- > talk that works for them? > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2008 Report Share Posted April 14, 2008 so, the nada/fada just had a big explosion. It's interesting because when my sis told us about this I looked up the syndrome on the internet and I got very emotional (I mean, I cried). I recognize immediately what this meant for my sister in terms of her plans: she won't be able go back to work at least until the child has surgery at 9 months to a year and a half, which will leave her and hubby extremely strapped financially, she will constantly have to be stressed out about the child's breathing/eating, etc, it just sounds like a very tense and overwhelming situation. I have two semesters of medical terminology in addition to having sat through a 5 credit hour anatomy class last semester so I understand the fam may not have understood the words they were reading or what they meant initially, but I did. Since then any time we've talked all I hear is " be positive " , " think positive " etc. I realize this is how things are handled in my family, no one ever deals with the emotions of anything until it just explodes, then my father rages, my mother cries, they never talk about it, time passes, and every one pretends it didn't happen. Boy did he just rage, too, he called my mother a 'crazy effing b*tch " . They kill me. I am staying way out of range because in the past she'd come to me and dump it on me; and I would empathize. There is NO WAY in hades I am going to empathize with her, ever again, over this stuff, because he could turn around and say the same thing to me ten minutes later and if I complained she would defend HIM. I just happened to walk in the room and they both started telling me their 'side'...so I grabbed the one of our cats that happened to be in there and we left. I know they are both devastated for my sister, and I know they are putting on this religious 'not dealing with legitimate emotions' facade, and this is the result. Sigh...I think it is only going to get worse with time because this is going to be an ordeal, which I knew the minute I read the information on the internet. And of course they won't listen to me or seek any help understanding it from me, my schooling (I'm certified in medical transcription) be damned. This is really keying on the " our family is cursed " and " nothing ever works out for us " thing that my parents have always believed as well, too. Sorry to use this for a dumping ground but I am really trying not to get sucked into this; I grieved about it legitimately for two days while they were keeping their heads in the sand, and now they can't stuff the emotions anymore. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2008 Report Share Posted April 14, 2008 Don't apologize for dumping here, we all do it. That's what it's for, right? Stay out of range. Keep your cats out of range. Keep your loved ones out of range to the extent that you can. Has everyone been in the same proximity for the past couple of days? See if you can get the parents to leave for a little bit. Tell them you'll stay with sis while she has a little quiet time. She probably needs you to hold her.... and some silence. > > so, the nada/fada just had a big explosion. > > It's interesting because when my sis told us about this I looked up > the syndrome on the internet and I got very emotional (I mean, I > cried). I recognize immediately what this meant for my sister in > terms of her plans: she won't be able go back to work at least until > the child has surgery at 9 months to a year and a half, which will > leave her and hubby extremely strapped financially, she will > constantly have to be stressed out about the child's > breathing/eating, etc, it just sounds like a very tense and > overwhelming situation. I have two semesters of medical terminology > in addition to having sat through a 5 credit hour anatomy class last > semester so I understand the fam may not have understood the words > they were reading or what they meant initially, but I did. Since > then any time we've talked all I hear is " be positive " , " think > positive " etc. I realize this is how things are handled in my > family, no one ever deals with the emotions of anything until it > just explodes, then my father rages, my mother cries, they never > talk about it, time passes, and every one pretends it didn't happen. > Boy did he just rage, too, he called my mother a 'crazy effing > b*tch " . They kill me. I am staying way out of range because in the > past she'd come to me and dump it on me; and I would empathize. > There is NO WAY in hades I am going to empathize with her, ever > again, over this stuff, because he could turn around and say the > same thing to me ten minutes later and if I complained she would > defend HIM. I just happened to walk in the room and they both > started telling me their 'side'...so I grabbed the one of our cats > that happened to be in there and we left. > > I know they are both devastated for my sister, and I know they are > putting on this religious 'not dealing with legitimate emotions' > facade, and this is the result. Sigh...I think it is only going to > get worse with time because this is going to be an ordeal, which I > knew the minute I read the information on the internet. > > And of course they won't listen to me or seek any help understanding > it from me, my schooling (I'm certified in medical transcription) be > damned. This is really keying on the " our family is cursed " > and " nothing ever works out for us " thing that my parents have > always believed as well, too. Sorry to use this for a dumping > ground but I am really trying not to get sucked into this; I grieved > about it legitimately for two days while they were keeping their > heads in the sand, and now they can't stuff the emotions anymore. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2008 Report Share Posted April 14, 2008 Thanks so much. My sister is still in the hospital. I have to hand it to her, she has set some firm boundaries around this . She finally allowed my parents to go see her last night (I had to work or I'd have gone as well); they were her first visitors...she went from thinking she was going to have a natural childbirth to having an emergency c-section, and that was even before the problem with the baby was realized. I can understand, almost, my father's explosion. My mother has been completely unbearable for about the last two or three weeks. I've been noticing a tendency in her, which is brand new, to pretend to favor the SIL over me, as a way of seemingly trying to hurt my feelings. But mom doesn't really like the SIL either, though she is crazy about her grandchild. And the SIL has been completely abandoned by her raging narcissistic mother since SIL's and my brother's baby was born in December (think Shirley MacClaine in Terms of Endearment, definitely) and shows no interest whatever in getting to know her grandchild, or even seeing him, so I know SIL is looking for a surrogate and so she is playing into this dynamic as well. I know my mother has been making these 'I' and 'me' statements constantly and it has been driving me nuts, that plus her nit- picking and complaining about every freaking thing, so I can understand it wearing thin on my dad. But I probably don't need to even be thinking about the cause of their argument. If my mother tries to confide in me I will tell her what she told me about some criticism I'd received from my brother; to keep that between her and her husband, that it is none of my business. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 14, 2008 Report Share Posted April 14, 2008 Thanks, I'm asking people to pray and/or light a candle, send white light, whatever they believe. Thanks be to the Gods my sister is well- insured, but they just weren't prepared for this and I want her to be able to enjoy her newborn and not be in constant stress. Secretly I was almost hoping they would go ahead and maybe do a tracheostomy and feeding tube for the little one rather than go by trial and error but that is probably selfish of me; it's just that the most painful aspect of this is thinking of her being in fear and worry if they try to feed her normally and let her breathe on her own. My sister has just tried so hard and waited so long to have her child, it seems so unfair. I am trying to process the emotions as they come up, and just sit with them, anger, grief, resentment, all the uglies are popping up. And of course the 'why God's' as well. I don't want to be the focus but anyone who wants to pray for my sister and her baby and send positive energy please feel free, and thanks for thinking of her. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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