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Just learned of your site a couple of weeks ago and have been reading your

messages daily since then. My husband and I have a 35 year old daughter who has

been diagnosed within the past few months with bpd. My h and I have been

reading SWOE and our daughter's behaviour for the past 20 years is finally

making alot of sense. All of your posts have helped me tremendously (my h has

not yet read them)... knowing that we are not alone in the struggles that we

have had. Our daughter has also been diagnosed with a mood disorder, depression

and anxiety/panic disorder. I'm not sure at this point whether some or all of

these are a result or part of the bpd.

Some of her early history ... she was molested by a neighbour boy at the age of

5, she was a rebellious teen at age 14/15 and we had her placed in a foster home

for 3 months. When she came back home, she seemed to be better for a time then

we moved to a new community just before her 16th birthday. She seemed to have

trouble adjusting but we put it down to a new school, new community and of

course those awful teen years. She has a brother 2 yrs older and she has always

had resentment towards him. .. feels that we love him more, always doing more

for him, prouder of him, etc. etc. In her early 20's, she told us that she is a

lesbian. Until recently I felt that alot of her struggles throughout her life

were because she didn't fully accept her sexuality... her depression, low

self-esteem and no love for herself.

She had a good job in her early 20's, which she held for about 5 - 6 years,

bought a house and car and lived on her own. Life seemed good!! Then she had a

relationship go bad, she started taking anti-depressants and things seemed to go

downhill from there. She has been taking the meds for approx. 7 - 8 years now.

During that time, her behaviour would go from bad to worse. She lost her job ..

blamed it on her employer and we sided with her. She would rant and rave at her

Dad and I and then we wouldn't see her for awhile. Mostly she would direct her

anger towards me so for a long time her Dad thought it was just a

mother/daughter thing and that we just couldn't seem to get along.

In the past year and a half, she has not been working. She has been seeing a

therapist regularly and is also working with her doctor to get on the right

meds. She is still taking an antidepressant and also something for her anxiety

attacks. She also attends a group for managing depression and is on a waitlist

for a group with bpd. She recently mentioned that her gp wants her to start on

some other treatment. I haven't discussed it with her but I think it may be dbt

.... not sure. She is now on a disability income, we have been making her

mortgage payments for almost a year and have also been giving her money when she

asks for it. Since she was approved for the disability income, she seems to

have lost sight of who she is ... now she is a pwd (person with a disability)...

and we need to " respect " her disability. Prior to getting the approval she

talked about getting back into the work force, and just getting back into life

in general. Now she sleeps alot, doesn't eat well or at all, spends alot of

time on the computer playing games. I'm thinking that as long as the government

and her Dad and I are paying the bills, there really is no incentive for her to

do anything.

I've learned through reading your posts and swoe that we have been royally

manipulated and it is crucial that we set up boundaries. We have agreed to pay

her mortgage until June, she realizes that she has to sell the house and we

won't be giving her anymore money. For the past year, her Dad and I have been

very involved in her life ... thinking that the best way to support her would be

to be in her life and help her when we could, in any way that we could. But I

now know that the best way to help her, is to not help her. I have so much

reading material ... Codependent no More, swoe, Hope for Parents, I Hate You,

Don't Leave Me ... I'm feeling a little resentful that I have to put so much

more time into all of this. I'm still having difficulty accepting that I can't

fix her. In my head I know it but my heart is having a hard time.

My apologies for this lengthy post. It's difficult to put 30 years of struggles

into a few paragraphs. I do believe that there is hope for our daughter and

ourselves. She is taking some steps on her own and I believe once her Dad and I

set our boundaries and let her know what they are, things will move in the right

direction. I'm excited and at the same time a little frightened that I have

found all of you.... excited because I now know more about what we are dealing

with and frightened because that means giving up the denial that I have been

living with for all these years.

Debbie ... you mentioned a contract that you drew up. I would be interested in

seeing it.

Thank you all for your support,

Judy

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Hi Judy, I have just been catching up on my mail, so excuse me if I'm a little

late welcoming you to the group. I have belonged for almost a year and have

learned so much. Normally I'm not sure I have advice for older adult children

and parents, but something struck me in your story. My daughter just turned 19

so you and I are in slightly different places- or are we? I wanted to address

the issue of meds with you. My daughter had been taking paxil for her

depression/anxiety as well as lithium. she has been diagnosed as bi-polar.

She never had an official bpd diagnosis, I have learned that there is a fine

line in the ability to distinguish between bi-polar, bpd, and even ADHD. I

finally set up some serious boundaries and expectations in August and my

daughter has made a huge change. I do believe it isn't only the boundaries,

but I decided not to chase after her to take her medicine, she could suffer the

consequence of her behavior. She has always expressed her

dislike for it- I didn't listen. She has weaned herself off of all of it, to

my amazement her rages decreased and she once again has incentive to go after

personal goals. She went from what your daughter is doing now- nothing- to

applying, registering, and making her way to classes. I think I really

believe now that the anti-depressant- was having a severe negative impact on

her. I didn't listen to her before thinking medicine was the answer. It kind

of sounds like you are concerned over her taking these medications. Who is

prescribing them? A psychiatrist or a general practicioner, you said gp and

I'm not sure what you were referring to. who has diagnosed her? A

psychiatrist or her therapist? Also, in the world of mental health a mood

disorder would come before a personality disorder.

It's funny how anti-depressants work for some and not for others. We could

have stock in all the Paxil in my house, not only was my daughter taking it but

I do as well and so was my father. I have an anxiety disorder and it has been

a wonder drug for me. No negative reactions, only positive. After 4 years on

it, I see a huge change in my daughter not being on it. My dad couldn't

handle it physically, he reacts well to Zoloft. I don't. Soo, prescribing

meds is a real trick.

Hope to hear from you,

runningal60 runningal60@...> wrote:

Just learned of your site a couple of weeks ago and have been reading your

messages daily since then. My husband and I have a 35 year old daughter who

has been diagnosed within the past few months with bpd. My h and I have been

reading SWOE and our daughter's behaviour for the past 20 years is finally

making alot of sense. All of your posts have helped me tremendously (my h has

not yet read them)... knowing that we are not alone in the struggles that we

have had. Our daughter has also been diagnosed with a mood disorder,

depression and anxiety/panic disorder. I'm not sure at this point whether some

or all of these are a result or part of the bpd.

Some of her early history ... she was molested by a neighbour boy at the age

of 5, she was a rebellious teen at age 14/15 and we had her placed in a foster

home for 3 months. When she came back home, she seemed to be better for a time

then we moved to a new community just before her 16th birthday. She seemed to

have trouble adjusting but we put it down to a new school, new community and of

course those awful teen years. She has a brother 2 yrs older and she has

always had resentment towards him. .. feels that we love him more, always doing

more for him, prouder of him, etc. etc. In her early 20's, she told us that she

is a lesbian. Until recently I felt that alot of her struggles throughout her

life were because she didn't fully accept her sexuality... her depression, low

self-esteem and no love for herself.

She had a good job in her early 20's, which she held for about 5 - 6 years,

bought a house and car and lived on her own. Life seemed good!! Then she had

a relationship go bad, she started taking anti-depressants and things seemed to

go downhill from there. She has been taking the meds for approx. 7 - 8 years

now. During that time, her behaviour would go from bad to worse. She lost her

job .. blamed it on her employer and we sided with her. She would rant and

rave at her Dad and I and then we wouldn't see her for awhile. Mostly she

would direct her anger towards me so for a long time her Dad thought it was

just a mother/daughter thing and that we just couldn't seem to get along.

In the past year and a half, she has not been working. She has been seeing a

therapist regularly and is also working with her doctor to get on the right

meds. She is still taking an antidepressant and also something for her anxiety

attacks. She also attends a group for managing depression and is on a waitlist

for a group with bpd. She recently mentioned that her gp wants her to start on

some other treatment. I haven't discussed it with her but I think it may be

dbt ... not sure. She is now on a disability income, we have been making her

mortgage payments for almost a year and have also been giving her money when

she asks for it. Since she was approved for the disability income, she seems

to have lost sight of who she is ... now she is a pwd (person with a

disability)... and we need to " respect " her disability. Prior to getting the

approval she talked about getting back into the work force, and just getting

back into life in general. Now she sleeps alot,

doesn't eat well or at all, spends alot of time on the computer playing games.

I'm thinking that as long as the government and her Dad and I are paying the

bills, there really is no incentive for her to do anything.

I've learned through reading your posts and swoe that we have been royally

manipulated and it is crucial that we set up boundaries. We have agreed to pay

her mortgage until June, she realizes that she has to sell the house and we

won't be giving her anymore money. For the past year, her Dad and I have been

very involved in her life ... thinking that the best way to support her would

be to be in her life and help her when we could, in any way that we could. But

I now know that the best way to help her, is to not help her. I have so much

reading material ... Codependent no More, swoe, Hope for Parents, I Hate You,

Don't Leave Me ... I'm feeling a little resentful that I have to put so much

more time into all of this. I'm still having difficulty accepting that I can't

fix her. In my head I know it but my heart is having a hard time.

My apologies for this lengthy post. It's difficult to put 30 years of

struggles into a few paragraphs. I do believe that there is hope for our

daughter and ourselves. She is taking some steps on her own and I believe once

her Dad and I set our boundaries and let her know what they are, things will

move in the right direction. I'm excited and at the same time a little

frightened that I have found all of you.... excited because I now know more

about what we are dealing with and frightened because that means giving up the

denial that I have been living with for all these years.

Debbie ... you mentioned a contract that you drew up. I would be interested

in seeing it.

Thank you all for your support,

Judy

Problems? Ask our friendly List Manager for help, @....

SEND HER ANY POSTS THAT CONCERN YOU; DO NOT RESPOND ONLINE.

Essential reading to help you feel better and understand the BP in your life

are:

• SWOE ( " Stop Walking on Eggshells”) and the SWOE Workbook (for everyone)

• HOPE FOR PARENTS

Call 888-35-SHELL () to order your copies.

From Randi Kreger, Owner of BPDCentral and the WTO Online Community

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I was told at NAMI that if your loved ones take the SSRIs (Paxil,

Zoloft,Lexapro,Prozac,etc,) and they are bipolar it can send them into a manic

episode.

In fact this is how many find out they are bipolar.

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Doctors will look at a BP and see a depressed patient.

Most don't understand the other side of BPD. But they

see what's in front of them at that time...a seriously

depressed looking patient.

SSRI's are antidepressants. Those are proven to

control the effects of depression. Unfortunately, with

BPs this " treating symptoms instead of causes " is an

" emotional upper " ...that can produce rages with added

confidence.

My wife was on zoloft for awhile...one of the worst

things was that added confidence during her rages.

The " Zoloft Episode " was one reason I lost confidence

in most of the established medical community with

respect to BPD.

--- twinpinesjll@... wrote:

> I was told at NAMI that if your loved ones take the

> SSRIs (Paxil,

> Zoloft,Lexapro,Prozac,etc,) and they are bipolar it

> can send them into a manic episode.

> In fact this is how many find out they are bipolar.

>

__________________________________________________

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Hi , Thanks for your thoughts. Our daughter started on paxil about 8

years ago. She was on it for about a year but her symptoms of depression

seemed to get worse (according to her) so the gp then prescribed effexor, which

she is still on. Because she is an adult, 35 yo, and hasn't lived with us since

her teens, we had no idea what her life was like on a daily basis. When we did

see her, sometimes she was like her old self and other times she would be moody

and sometimes very nasty. We thought she may be using street drugs. The more

time we spent with her, the more we saw the bad behaviour. Eventually (about 3

years ago) we realized that the only drug she was taking was the effexor and

thought that was the cause of her erratic behaviour. She weaned herself off

over several months and we saw a drastic change in her, again more like her old

self. Then she was feeling stressed about starting a new job, and started back

on the meds again. She was taking the max dose until about 6 months ago but

was having severe side effects so she agained weaned herself down to the min

dose. Unfortunately she doesn't take the meds regularly. She'll have a good

day, so then she won't take any ... then she has a bad day or two and then

starts taking them again. So it's difficult to know whether they are helping or

hurting her. She doesn't eat regularly either ... lives on coffee, cigs and

meds .... that can't be a good thing. We live in a community of about 70,000

.... there are only 3 psychiatrists here and it takes at least 6 months to get

into see one, then another 6 months for a follow-up appt. Her diagnosis was

made by her gp and therapist and she has had only 2 short (about 10 min. each)

visits with the psychiatrist. which were a complete waste of time.

On a positive note, she called me the other night while she was having a panic

attack. I immediately went into rescue mode ... " pack a bag, I'll be right over

to pick you up " ... then I gave myself a slap and smartened up. Told her that I

thought it best that I call 911 as they would be better equipped to help her.

Anyway, bottomline is that we talked for 1 1/2 hours and at the end of it, we

were laughing and joking like old times. The next day she thanked me for being

there for her (something she hasn't done for ages) and said she realized that I

was " different " now that I understand more about her illness. I felt in control

of myself for the first time and it worked much better for her and me. She also

has an appointment next week to do some volunteer work, with the possibility

that it will become a paying job. She is very excited and said that she

realizes that she needs to have structure and a purpose to her daily life ....

so alot of good changes for all of us this week.

Thanks again to all of you in this group. I'm so grateful for all of your

support and words of wisdom.

Judy

> Just learned of your site a couple of weeks ago and have been reading your

messages daily since then. My husband and I have a 35 year old daughter who has

been diagnosed within the past few months with bpd. My h and I have been reading

SWOE and our daughter's behaviour for the past 20 years is finally making alot

of sense. All of your posts have helped me tremendously (my h has not yet read

them)... knowing that we are not alone in the struggles that we have had. Our

daughter has also been diagnosed with a mood disorder, depression and

anxiety/panic disorder. I'm not sure at this point whether some or all of these

are a result or part of the bpd.

>

>

> Some of her early history ... she was molested by a neighbour boy at the age

of 5, she was a rebellious teen at age 14/15 and we had her placed in a foster

home for 3 months. When she came back home, she seemed to be better for a time

then we moved to a new community just before her 16th birthday. She seemed to

have trouble adjusting but we put it down to a new school, new community and of

course those awful teen years. She has a brother 2 yrs older and she has always

had resentment towards him. .. feels that we love him more, always doing more

for him, prouder of him, etc. etc. In her early 20's, she told us that she is a

lesbian. Until recently I felt that alot of her struggles throughout her life

were because she didn't fully accept her sexuality... her depression, low

self-esteem and no love for herself.

>

> She had a good job in her early 20's, which she held for about 5 - 6 years,

bought a house and car and lived on her own. Life seemed good!! Then she had a

relationship go bad, she started taking anti-depressants and things seemed to go

downhill from there. She has been taking the meds for approx. 7 - 8 years now.

During that time, her behaviour would go from bad to worse. She lost her job ..

blamed it on her employer and we sided with her. She would rant and rave at her

Dad and I and then we wouldn't see her for awhile. Mostly she would direct her

anger towards me so for a long time her Dad thought it was just a

mother/daughter thing and that we just couldn't seem to get along.

>

> In the past year and a half, she has not been working. She has been seeing a

therapist regularly and is also working with her doctor to get on the right

meds. She is still taking an antidepressant and also something for her anxiety

attacks. She also attends a group for managing depression and is on a waitlist

for a group with bpd. She recently mentioned that her gp wants her to start on

some other treatment. I haven't discussed it with her but I think it may be dbt

.... not sure. She is now on a disability income, we have been making her

mortgage payments for almost a year and have also been giving her money when she

asks for it. Since she was approved for the disability income, she seems to have

lost sight of who she is ... now she is a pwd (person with a disability)... and

we need to " respect " her disability. Prior to getting the approval she talked

about getting back into the work force, and just getting back into life in

general. Now she sleeps alot,

> doesn't eat well or at all, spends alot of time on the computer playing games.

I'm thinking that as long as the government and her Dad and I are paying the

bills, there really is no incentive for her to do anything.

>

> I've learned through reading your posts and swoe that we have been royally

manipulated and it is crucial that we set up boundaries. We have agreed to pay

her mortgage until June, she realizes that she has to sell the house and we

won't be giving her anymore money. For the past year, her Dad and I have been

very involved in her life ... thinking that the best way to support her would be

to be in her life and help her when we could, in any way that we could. But I

now know that the best way to help her, is to not help her. I have so much

reading material ... Codependent no More, swoe, Hope for Parents, I Hate You,

Don't Leave Me ... I'm feeling a little resentful that I have to put so much

more time into all of this. I'm still having difficulty accepting that I can't

fix her. In my head I know it but my heart is having a hard time.

>

> My apologies for this lengthy post. It's difficult to put 30 years of

struggles into a few paragraphs. I do believe that there is hope for our

daughter and ourselves. She is taking some steps on her own and I believe once

her Dad and I set our boundaries and let her know what they are, things will

move in the right direction. I'm excited and at the same time a little

frightened that I have found all of you.... excited because I now know more

about what we are dealing with and frightened because that means giving up the

denial that I have been living with for all these years.

>

> Debbie ... you mentioned a contract that you drew up. I would be interested in

seeing it.

>

> Thank you all for your support,

>

> Judy

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Problems? Ask our friendly List Manager for help, @B... SEND HER ANY

POSTS THAT CONCERN YOU; DO NOT RESPOND ONLINE.

>

> Essential reading to help you feel better and understand the BP in your life

are:

>

> • SWOE ( " Stop Walking on Eggshells " ) and the SWOE Workbook (for everyone)

> • HOPE FOR PARENTS

>

> Call 888-35-SHELL () to order your copies.

>

> From Randi Kreger, Owner of BPDCentral and the WTO Online Community

>

>

>

>

>

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I'm not convinced that antidepressants are the right meds for our daughter and I

think she feels the same. When she went off them for a few months, I asked her

how she felt without them ... she said she felt lost without them. .. but she

didn't say that she needed them. I got the feeling it was like a person who

has quit smoking or drinking .....

Judy

>

> > I was told at NAMI that if your loved ones take the

> > SSRIs (Paxil,

> > Zoloft,Lexapro,Prozac,etc,) and they are bipolar it

> > can send them into a manic episode.

> > In fact this is how many find out they are bipolar.

> >

>

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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, I can relate to this as well from a different experience.

I developed severe chronic fatigue syndrome in 1995 - it felt like mono. The

neurologist who tested me for MS decided maybe I was depressed, although I

felt no depression. He put me on Paxil. I took one pill and could not sleep

for 24 hours. It was wild - like a 24 hour panic attack - heart racing, wild

thoughts.

A couple of years earlier my husband had mono but was not diagnosed at

first. Again, his doctor decided he was depressed. Don't ask me where these

stupid doctors come from. He was also given Paxil and HALLUCINATED all

night.

Years before I had taken Proxac when I was depressed - brother was dying of

cancer. It energized me and flattened all my emotions. I took it three

months and it worked well. But I suspect if I had a tendency to rages I

could have been very aggressive during that time. I guess I was healthy

enough to tolerate it then, but later I could not.

PJ

Doctors will look at a BP and see a depressed patient.

Most don't understand the other side of BPD. But they

see what's in front of them at that time...a seriously

depressed looking patient.

SSRI's are antidepressants. Those are proven to

control the effects of depression. Unfortunately, with

BPs this " treating symptoms instead of causes " is an

" emotional upper " ...that can produce rages with added

confidence.

My wife was on zoloft for awhile...one of the worst

things was that added confidence during her rages.

The " Zoloft Episode " was one reason I lost confidence

in most of the established medical community with

respect to BPD.

--- twinpinesjll@... wrote:

> I was told at NAMI that if your loved ones take the

> SSRIs (Paxil,

> Zoloft,Lexapro,Prozac,etc,) and they are bipolar it

> can send them into a manic episode.

> In fact this is how many find out they are bipolar.

>

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That's interesting, I find it amazing that three different psychiatrists

prescribed Paxil for and never acknowledged this information. And the

first is the one that diagnosed her bi-polar! My respect for psychiatry is

waning......

twinpinesjll@... wrote: I was told at NAMI that if your loved ones

take the SSRIs (Paxil,

Zoloft,Lexapro,Prozac,etc,) and they are bipolar it can send them into a

manic episode.

In fact this is how many find out they are bipolar.

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Share on other sites

I'm glad you are having a good week. We all know the roller coaster, how will

it be next week. I try my best to keep positive, but I'm always waiting for

the downslide. Not sure if that will go away.

I'm disheartend that I am questioning the psychiatric field, I work in a

treatment program where I do respect the psychiatrists. I guess there are alot

of quacks out there , just like in any medical field.

still has her manic moments, (she is in one now) but it seems more

managable for her and myself without the meds. She hasn't had a bout of

depression for awhile. who knows when that will strike its ugly head.

Several weeks ago I asked if anyone had heard of an up and coming treatment-

neuro-feedback. I haven't seen any responses, but would like to know.

and I are planning on pursuing it.

runningal60 runningal60@...> wrote:

Hi , Thanks for your thoughts. Our daughter started on paxil about 8

years ago. She was on it for about a year but her symptoms of depression

seemed to get worse (according to her) so the gp then prescribed effexor, which

she is still on. Because she is an adult, 35 yo, and hasn't lived with us

since her teens, we had no idea what her life was like on a daily basis. When

we did see her, sometimes she was like her old self and other times she would

be moody and sometimes very nasty. We thought she may be using street drugs.

The more time we spent with her, the more we saw the bad behaviour. Eventually

(about 3 years ago) we realized that the only drug she was taking was the

effexor and thought that was the cause of her erratic behaviour. She weaned

herself off over several months and we saw a drastic change in her, again more

like her old self. Then she was feeling stressed about starting a new job, and

started back on the meds again. She was taking

the max dose until about 6 months ago but was having severe side effects so

she agained weaned herself down to the min dose. Unfortunately she doesn't

take the meds regularly. She'll have a good day, so then she won't take any

.... then she has a bad day or two and then starts taking them again. So it's

difficult to know whether they are helping or hurting her. She doesn't eat

regularly either ... lives on coffee, cigs and meds .... that can't be a good

thing. We live in a community of about 70,000 ... there are only 3

psychiatrists here and it takes at least 6 months to get into see one, then

another 6 months for a follow-up appt. Her diagnosis was made by her gp and

therapist and she has had only 2 short (about 10 min. each) visits with the

psychiatrist. which were a complete waste of time.

On a positive note, she called me the other night while she was having a

panic attack. I immediately went into rescue mode ... " pack a bag, I'll be

right over to pick you up " ... then I gave myself a slap and smartened up.

Told her that I thought it best that I call 911 as they would be better

equipped to help her. Anyway, bottomline is that we talked for 1 1/2 hours and

at the end of it, we were laughing and joking like old times. The next day she

thanked me for being there for her (something she hasn't done for ages) and

said she realized that I was " different " now that I understand more about her

illness. I felt in control of myself for the first time and it worked much

better for her and me. She also has an appointment next week to do some

volunteer work, with the possibility that it will become a paying job. She is

very excited and said that she realizes that she needs to have structure and a

purpose to her daily life .... so alot of good changes for all

of us this week.

Thanks again to all of you in this group. I'm so grateful for all of your

support and words of wisdom.

Judy

> Just learned of your site a couple of weeks ago and have been reading your

messages daily since then. My husband and I have a 35 year old daughter who has

been diagnosed within the past few months with bpd. My h and I have been

reading SWOE and our daughter's behaviour for the past 20 years is finally

making alot of sense. All of your posts have helped me tremendously (my h has

not yet read them)... knowing that we are not alone in the struggles that we

have had. Our daughter has also been diagnosed with a mood disorder, depression

and anxiety/panic disorder. I'm not sure at this point whether some or all of

these are a result or part of the bpd.

>

>

> Some of her early history ... she was molested by a neighbour boy at the

age of 5, she was a rebellious teen at age 14/15 and we had her placed in a

foster home for 3 months. When she came back home, she seemed to be better for

a time then we moved to a new community just before her 16th birthday. She

seemed to have trouble adjusting but we put it down to a new school, new

community and of course those awful teen years. She has a brother 2 yrs older

and she has always had resentment towards him. .. feels that we love him more,

always doing more for him, prouder of him, etc. etc. In her early 20's, she

told us that she is a lesbian. Until recently I felt that alot of her struggles

throughout her life were because she didn't fully accept her sexuality... her

depression, low self-esteem and no love for herself.

>

> She had a good job in her early 20's, which she held for about 5 - 6 years,

bought a house and car and lived on her own. Life seemed good!! Then she had a

relationship go bad, she started taking anti-depressants and things seemed to

go downhill from there. She has been taking the meds for approx. 7 - 8 years

now. During that time, her behaviour would go from bad to worse. She lost her

job .. blamed it on her employer and we sided with her. She would rant and rave

at her Dad and I and then we wouldn't see her for awhile. Mostly she would

direct her anger towards me so for a long time her Dad thought it was just a

mother/daughter thing and that we just couldn't seem to get along.

>

> In the past year and a half, she has not been working. She has been seeing

a therapist regularly and is also working with her doctor to get on the right

meds. She is still taking an antidepressant and also something for her anxiety

attacks. She also attends a group for managing depression and is on a waitlist

for a group with bpd. She recently mentioned that her gp wants her to start on

some other treatment. I haven't discussed it with her but I think it may be dbt

.... not sure. She is now on a disability income, we have been making her

mortgage payments for almost a year and have also been giving her money when

she asks for it. Since she was approved for the disability income, she seems to

have lost sight of who she is ... now she is a pwd (person with a

disability)... and we need to " respect " her disability. Prior to getting the

approval she talked about getting back into the work force, and just getting

back into life in general. Now she sleeps alot,

> doesn't eat well or at all, spends alot of time on the computer playing

games. I'm thinking that as long as the government and her Dad and I are paying

the bills, there really is no incentive for her to do anything.

>

> I've learned through reading your posts and swoe that we have been royally

manipulated and it is crucial that we set up boundaries. We have agreed to pay

her mortgage until June, she realizes that she has to sell the house and we

won't be giving her anymore money. For the past year, her Dad and I have been

very involved in her life ... thinking that the best way to support her would

be to be in her life and help her when we could, in any way that we could. But

I now know that the best way to help her, is to not help her. I have so much

reading material ... Codependent no More, swoe, Hope for Parents, I Hate You,

Don't Leave Me ... I'm feeling a little resentful that I have to put so much

more time into all of this. I'm still having difficulty accepting that I can't

fix her. In my head I know it but my heart is having a hard time.

>

> My apologies for this lengthy post. It's difficult to put 30 years of

struggles into a few paragraphs. I do believe that there is hope for our

daughter and ourselves. She is taking some steps on her own and I believe once

her Dad and I set our boundaries and let her know what they are, things will

move in the right direction. I'm excited and at the same time a little

frightened that I have found all of you.... excited because I now know more

about what we are dealing with and frightened because that means giving up the

denial that I have been living with for all these years.

>

> Debbie ... you mentioned a contract that you drew up. I would be interested

in seeing it.

>

> Thank you all for your support,

>

> Judy

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

> Problems? Ask our friendly List Manager for help, @B... SEND HER

ANY POSTS THAT CONCERN YOU; DO NOT RESPOND ONLINE.

>

> Essential reading to help you feel better and understand the BP in your life

are:

>

> • SWOE ( " Stop Walking on Eggshells " ) and the SWOE Workbook (for everyone)

> • HOPE FOR PARENTS

>

> Call 888-35-SHELL () to order your copies.

>

> From Randi Kreger, Owner of BPDCentral and the WTO Online Community

>

>

>

>

>

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<...

Don't ask me where these stupid doctors come from. He

was also given Paxil and HALLUCINATED all night.

....>

PJ,

I wouldn't call those doctors stupid...just that its

human nature to treat symptoms rather than look for

underlying causes.

My thought is this one reason why not all doctors are

the same....and a good reason why " House " is a

fascinating TV show.

--- PJ pj7@...> wrote:

> , I can relate to this as well from a

> different experience.

>

> I developed severe chronic fatigue syndrome in 1995

> - it felt like mono. The

> neurologist who tested me for MS decided maybe I was

> depressed, although I

> felt no depression. He put me on Paxil. I took one

> pill and could not sleep

> for 24 hours. It was wild - like a 24 hour panic

> attack - heart racing, wild

> thoughts.

>

> A couple of years earlier my husband had mono but

> was not diagnosed at

> first. Again, his doctor decided he was depressed.

> Don't ask me where these

> stupid doctors come from. He was also given Paxil

> and HALLUCINATED all

> night.

>

> Years before I had taken Proxac when I was depressed

> - brother was dying of

> cancer. It energized me and flattened all my

> emotions. I took it three

> months and it worked well. But I suspect if I had a

> tendency to rages I

> could have been very aggressive during that time. I

> guess I was healthy

> enough to tolerate it then, but later I could not.

>

> PJ

>

>

> Doctors will look at a BP and see a depressed

> patient.

> Most don't understand the other side of BPD. But

> they

> see what's in front of them at that time...a

> seriously

> depressed looking patient.

>

> SSRI's are antidepressants. Those are proven to

> control the effects of depression. Unfortunately,

> with

> BPs this " treating symptoms instead of causes " is

> an

> " emotional upper " ...that can produce rages with

> added

> confidence.

>

> My wife was on zoloft for awhile...one of the

> worst

> things was that added confidence during her rages.

>

> The " Zoloft Episode " was one reason I lost

> confidence

> in most of the established medical community with

> respect to BPD.

>

>

>

>

__________________________________________________

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Yes, there are a lot of good and smart docs. These two were not. I am not so

annoyed with the one who missed my diagnosis because actually Prozac in LOW

dose is used for fibromyalgia and CFIDS. But to give me a standard high dose

taken at bedtime was actually very stupid. No doc who knows about CFIDS

would have done that.

In my husband's case to have missed the mono diagnosis and to tell him to

exercise and take Paxil was inexcusable. He could have died from liver

damage. You don't excercise with mono. I expect if my husband had died that

doc would have lost his medical license. Besides my hubby was so sick anyone

could tell he was terribly sick. People he worked with told him he looked

like warmed over death and to go home. He could hardly stand up. We had

driven 600 miles home from a visit to family. I drove the whole trip while

he lay in the backseat exhausted.

But you know I have been around doctors too long. I am very jaded. LOL

PJ

<...

Don't ask me where these stupid doctors come from. He

was also given Paxil and HALLUCINATED all night.

...>

PJ,

I wouldn't call those doctors stupid...just that its

human nature to treat symptoms rather than look for

underlying causes.

My thought is this one reason why not all doctors are

the same....and a good reason why " House " is a

fascinating TV show.

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