I have noticed many stories on this site carry the theme of an emotionally blackmailing mothers. The physical and mental health, the social/marital life, and financial stability of their caregivers, mainly daughters, are being destroyed by such verbal and emotional abuse. Is this a generational problem or unique situations that drive so many to this site looking for help and validation plus a safe place to vent?
Children of the Self-Absorbed: A Grown-Up's Guide to Getting Over Narcissistic Parents By Nina W. Brown
There has been some improvement with the treatment of those with borderline personality disorder. However, this requires much hard work in Dialectical Behavioral Therapy in a group and one on one therapy otherwise, plus staying on meds which can help the unstable moods. Too often they quit therapy and/or stop there meds. Underneath much of it is a fear of abandonment and a sense of never being validated or being invalidated.
Before the actual diagnosis was made and more was understood about its dynamics, people often considered them just mean. Many therapist still run from treating this disorder or will only treat a limited number due to the issues involved. As therapists learned more an early theory was found to not be true. There was the idea that they had these problems because of rape. Even the often correct idea that it takes a narcissist to make a borderline is not set in concrete. Some borderlines come from very healthy families for some reason.
For Family Members
There are books that have been written for family members, the adult child of the borderline mother, understanding the borderline mother along with one workbook that I'm aware of. Here's more of what I've found on this subject.
A basic book to help someone dealing with about anyone with any personality disorder is.
Emotional Blackmail: When the People in Your Life Use Fear, Obligation, and Guilt to Manipulate You by Susan Forward.
A basic guide for family members with a very good workbook is
The Essential Family Guide to Borderline Personality Disorder: New Tools and Techniques to Stop Walking on Eggshells by Randi Kreger
It contains a discussion of 3 clusters of persons with BPD. First, the classic mental health picture as seen in I Hate You, Don’t Leave Me. Second, is the high functioning person whose BPD illness is hidden to all but their family. It is very likely that a majority of people with BPD are in this cluster. Third is a mixture of one and two. These are not closed clusters because there is some overlap.
She and John Paul Shirely wrote, The Stop Walking on Eggshells Workbook
A good book for an adult child of a borderline mother is
Surviving a Borderline Parent: How to Heal Your Childhood Wounds & Build Trust by Kimberlee Roth and Freda B. Friedman
Another excellent book for adult children of a mom with BPD is
Understanding the Borderline Mother: Helping Her Children Transcend the Intense, Unpredictable, and Volatile Relationship by Christine Ann Lawson, Ph.D. and Jason Aronson.
Dealing with this mental illness within a family calls for wise and firm boundaries. This book offers practical insights and instruction where Stop Walking on Eggshells only touches on lightly. The two books together make an awesome pair.
This book is quoted at length in the workbook for SWOE. It is not only descriptive of the four types of these mothers but also prescriptive in how to relate with each type within healthy boundaries.
Also, there are websites with support groups like BPD Central which is the oldest.
The next book gives a person an inside look at what goes on inside someone with BPD. Another good resource is the site called Out of the FOG. FOG stands for Fear, Obligation and Guilt.
Lost in the Mirror: An Inside Look at Borderline Personality Disorder By Richard Moskovitz
Another good book which is a classic is "I Hate You, Don't Leave Me."
People with BPD often abandon someone out of fear of being abandoned before the person even has a chance.
For a spouse of someone with BPD or traits.
Melville, Lynn. Breaking Free From Boomerang Love: Getting Unhooked From Borderline Personality Disorder Relationships
Porr, Valerie. Marsha M Linehan (forward), When Someone You Love Has Borderline Personality Disorder: How to Repair the Relationship
Manning Shari Y., and Marsha M. Linehan. Loving Someone with Borderline Personality Disorder: How to Keep Out-of-Control Emotions from Destroying Your Relationship
Tinman, Ozzie. One Way Ticket to Kansas: Caring about Someone with Borderline Personality Disorder and Finding a Healthy You
Walker, Anthony. The Siren's Dance : My Marriage to a Borderline: A Case Study Rodale Books (September 20, 2003)
Randi Kreger: “For six years, I have maintained several support groups on the web for people who have a borderline partner. Mr. Walker's book tells a very familiar story--ignoring red flags in particular. Since most non-BP partners need immense validation, this book will validate your experiences so you will not feel so uncertain and alone if you have a BP partner.”
For a parent of a child with BPD
Winkler, Kathy. Randi Kreger. Hope for Parents: Helping Your Borderline Son or Daughter Without Sacrificing Your Family or Yourself.
The books above are classics concerning BPD and good tools to have in one's library and life. More have been written, but these books are a good starting place.
Here's some resources for adult children of narcissists that I just found.
Carter, L., Enough About You, Let's Talk About Me: How to Recognize and Manage the Narcissists in Your Life
Cavaiola, A., and Lavender, N, The One-Way Relationship Workbook: Step-by-Step Help for Coping With Narcissists, Egotistical Lovers, Toxic Coworkers, and Others Who Are Incredibly Self-Absorbed
McBride, K., Will I Ever Be Good Enough?: Healing the Daughters of Narcissistic Mothers
I hope this detailed list of resources helps.
@terry - BPD does not refer to Bi polar but to Borderline Personality Disorder, It s not a matter of hate but of hurt, and healing from the hurt and abuse as well as possible. A college text book does not provide many answers of how to handle them. Counsellors don't know how to handle people with personality disorders or how to help them much. My mother was diagnosed later in life and I was told that there was no treatment . I do agree with getting away from them - not living under the same roof.
Misslauri - there is a huge difference between "dealing with frustrating parents and inlaws" and dealing with family members with mental illnesses. I tend to be a optimist too and look for the silver living. It is very hard to find in some situations.
Sometimes I feel hypnotized to give her what she wants. Early conditioning can kick in automatically if I am not aware of what is going on. For instance, my mother is quite obviously jealous of my health. I am the healthiest one in my family and dear old Mom is quite puzzled and resentful about why such a happy outcome should go to someone so obviously inferior and weak as me. I think they call it cognitive dissonance. This situation is dangerous for me because I have all this early conditioning to give Mom what she wants. I could easily sabotage my health by neglect, not going for checkups, losing interest in exercise etc, thereby fulfilling that early programming in a robotic way. God knows, every time I visit, my mother does her utmost to undermine any health routines I have, including flossing my teeth. My awareness helps me counter this robotic default reaction but it is hard work. I can feel the pull but I know what it is. I have a right to be healthy if that is what God has given me. She is not God, though she acts like it.
I am now getting rid of every single thing I have of hers, her rings, knick knacks, whatever I came home with. I decided to purge my life of her and my father. I need to heal for the rest of the life I have left.
These types are not real parents, they are mentally disturbed narcissists who only think about one thing, themselves.
I hope everyone here finds peace with parents and emotional blackmail.
Dad may be more amenable to help. He may not wear hearing aids for any number of reasons - they may hurt, they may not be adjusted for his hearing loss, they may be the wrong type for him - maybe he'd go to an audiologist with you and see if at least that one small piece can be figured out.
Therefore, you don't have a life to live apart from me (the narcissistic or borderline parent) because you are an extension of me and thus you are not a separate, equal adult person apart from me. It's just not possible for them to have an adult to adult relationship with them.
Those who grow up with such parents might think their life was normal, but it was not. They were and some still are victims of child abuse. This is what I call the dark side care giving. The dark side is very powerful with these emotional blackmailing moms and dads. Far too often they hoover their overly trusting, too wiling to help, groomed adult children into the often self-created drama of the parent with the personality disorder that they are standing in the middle of like a victim when they started it themselves. Very often when the adult child realizes they have been seduced into a trap, it is hard to see their way out. In my opinion, borderlines are the must seductive of the two personality types.
One thing you could do is send a letter to her doctor with your observations about her behavior and how it is affecting your dad. Make sure you indicate he's not to mention it to her. But he can ask her questions to get at some of the answers. But if she won't comply or answer honestly, there's not much you can do. Since she's so abusive to you, I'd certainly consider moving out. Or moving away.
She sounds to me like she has some kind of anxiety disorder or OCD (obsessive compulsive stuff), but I'm no doctor. You don't mention things that would typically be dementia - poor memory, mixing up people/things, etc.
Could you ever get her to someone who specializes in seniors, even though she's still young and vibrant (in her mind)?
I feel bad for your poor dad. Sounds like he's just trying to stay out of her way and not engage. My dad never wore his hearing aids either - I think it was his way of keeping people out.
Money is merely a tool of fear to empower the whole dynamic of fear obligation and guilt. So much of what we consider a traditional child-rearing actually contributes to the whole dynamic of emotional blackmail.
Whenever children are treated as possessions who are to be seen and not heard or treated as little goddesses or gods something is horribly wrong.
Yes, for many it does continue after marriage for neither it, nor advanced education, or professional achievements will defeat its power until detaching with love by setting boundaries with real consequences, placing and keeping oneself on your own healthy path no matter what and facing three realities 1. You didn't make them how they are! 2. You can't control them! 3. You can't fix them!
All much easier said than done and that's why a person needs a well trained and experienced therapist to make it through the journey.
I would suggest reading the thread
"The Power of Emotional Blackmailers: What is it? its origin? Its effects? How it's defeated by some? Why it's victorious over others?"
https://www.agingcare.com/discussions/power-of-emotional-blackmailers-176430.htm
I havent found a better way to deal with this emotional balckmail yet. Luckily mine is love marriage and I always discuss with my sweet love to resolve mental conflicts.
Otherwise these blackamails are intimidating.
Some impatience is normal. Continued impatience often means help is needed.
Are you still married? If so, what does he think of all of this?
Your profile says Location: Germantown, TN
It also says, your mother is in her home in Alabama.
I don't quite understand the in and out of the country. Do you want to live here and care for your mother?
Who cares for your mother when you have to leave the country because of immigration laws?
How long do you have to stay out of the country?
What country are you from?
Aren't these trips expensive?
How long can you maintain this going back and forth?
Why are you dong this for such an abusive person?
Do you have a life, job, and house of your own overseas that you maintain?
As you can tell, I'm confused. Please clarify my confusion?
I really believe you can learn to stick up for yourself, spending time reading about the toxic relationships on here, especially written by cmagnum and others.
How do I know? From recent personal experience.