Guest guest Posted January 7, 2006 Report Share Posted January 7, 2006 Hi and Welcome........you have come to the right place. My name is Debbie and I, like most here, have been/are in your shoes. Know first, that you are not alone and we are here to support you and help if we can. I have a daughter, will be 19 on Tuesday. Spent five years on a roller coaster ride. We have been good since April now. Ours is a success story so anything I can tell you, let me know. What has/is your daughter doing? Is she attending school? Or do you have trouble getting her to go? Is she on any meds? Was she diag. w/BPD? What other things might she be doing, any PTSD, any eating disorder? Is she cutting? Share your story, it will help us to help you. First and foremost is setting boundaries for yourself, what you will and will not tolerate from her, and don't be afraid to let her know. I too was afraid for my daughter as you are, but remember this, they are very receptive to structure, thing written down in black and white. What worked for me dealing with my daughter was I had to step outside the situation. Become someone else and deal with her as if she were someone else's daughter. I had to completely change my way of thinking and dealing with her. I had to change my REACTIONS to her ACTIONS. This is key. I drew up a contract of rules and regulations, chores, and then consequences to her bad behavior. I sat her down, we went over the contract and the rest is history. It's a long road, it won't happen overnight. I could go on and on. It takes a long time and a lot of self determination in changing yourself, learning to let go of the guilt, the fear, the anger, the feelings of helplessness. You wish you could just wake up one day and make it all better. I know how you feel, what you are going through. Do you have a partner, someone giving you support? This is important. Making sure you both are on the same page in dealing w/your daughter. I hope I have helped you a little, could probably tell you a lot more. Do you remember when your daughter started out with her bad behaviors, had she experienced some sort of trauma in her life? Anything, even the loss of a pet would trigger her BPD. The key to her working on getting better is getting her thinking process back on track. She is not computing things properly in her head. Her way of thinking is so totally off balance, something we can't even begin to understand. Keep reading, keep posting. Let me know if there is anything I can help you with. Be strong, remember you have to take care of yourself first if you are to be any good in dealing with your daughter. DebbieL 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.