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Borderline Personality Disorder Today MENU
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Story #42
I was adopted. I always knew that. It was a part of who I was.
The urban folklore in the wealthy suburb in which I was raised
tells that I was left on a doorstep when I was 9 mos old and
wasn't adopted until I was 3 yrs old. I don't know about the rest
of the world, but I actually remember being 3 yrs old. That first
Christmas with "the new family" just weeks after being
adopted, feeling alone, unwanted, unloved, listening to everyone
else having a good time because they all knew each other, being
the outsider, not fitting in. Most folks I know can't seem to
remember before age 10 or so.
I've read some of the stories here and I sit here wondering how I
ended up with BPD. I wasn't sexually abused. I don't think I
suffered any traumatic stressors. Perhaps my therapist is right -
maybe BPD *is* genetic. Either way, I did manage to find a few
commonalities.
As I said, I was raised in a wealthy suburb where everything was
perfect - the lawn, the car, the house, the decor, the family, the
child. I grew up with "children should be seen, not
heard" and "don't ask for what you want, wait for it to
be offered to you." I grew up with an absent father who was
constantly working to keep up with the Jonses. I grew up at the
hands of a mother who was extremely jealous of me because she had
five miscarriages and resented the hell out of my father bringing
home an adorable little girl, personality formed, to make Insta-Family.
I was renamed Joy because I was "the joy of (my dad's)
life" and boy did I suffer for it.
If I played with the dog the wrong way, at age six, I was made to
write out "I will not tease the dog" one hundred times.
If I dared complain I was bored or there was nothing to do, I was
given a comb and made to comb out the fringe on ALL of the
oriental rugs in the house. If she determined I was getting
underfoot, I had the thrill of alphabetizing the canned goods at
age 11.
Look out when I rebelled against my teacher mother (but not mine
nor at my school) by not turning in 18 homework assignments in
fourth grade. I got the wooden, spiked meat tenderizer applied to
my butt - 18 times on each side. Boy, was I howling but that only
got me "If you don't knock it off, young lady, I'll REALLY
give you something to cry about!"
Many years later, she and I had a lengthy discussion on neutral
turf when I was about 19 wherein she admitted her jealousy,
admitted she was a horrible mother & never should have been a
mother and that I was taken from a home that had more love than
the one I was brought into. It meant a lot to hear those words but
it didn't stop who or how I was.
Even though most of the physical and emotional damage came at my
mother's hands, my dad absolutely adored me and because of that
and the town environment, I tried SO hard to be perfect so I could
get his love - not his gifts. When I was a sophomore, he was
headed to Parent-Teacher conferences at the private, Catholic,
all-girls high school I attended and he asked me what grades
should he expect. Trying to hedge my bets, I underestimated on
purpose so that, just in case, hopefully, when he saw higher
grades, he'd be really proud of me. Boy, did THAT backfire! He
started screaming at me about all the money I was wasting at the
school that he didn't really have but he busted his butt to make
sure that I didn't lack for anything, yadda, yadda, yadda.
He stormed out and I lost it. I agonized, sobbed, wailed, moaned
for an hour before I took the bottle of (whatever headache pills
were in the cabinet.) And then I got scared, called a friend, had
her mom take me to the hospital, swallowed whatever that brown
goop was & spent the rest of the night barfing.
That wasn't my first bout with suicidal feelings. I, like someone
else mentioned in their story, was double promoted. I started
kindergarten early & skipped second grade because ... ready
for this ... my mom had done the same thing. I was being drilled
on multiplication flash cards at age 5 and punished when I got
them wrong. Because of the acceleration, I was always the youngest
in class, the freak, the oddball. It's painful to walk into the
third grade classroom and have everyone stare at you because they
just KNOW you're a freak and you're seriously intimidated by all
the older kids and don't know any of them.
It's hard to start high school at age 12 and still be the tallest
one in your grade. It's even more idiotic to think that someone
would be ready to go away to college at 16 - which I, of course,
screwed up royally, flunked out in three semesters and wasted
$10,000 of dad's money - which, as I was reminded, he didn't have
but he busted his butt to make sure I was never wanting for
anything. Talk about growing up with guilt complexes on top of
perfection expectations - no damn wonder I'm a neurotic mess!
Along the way, I managed to battle alcohol addiction, sex
addiction and food addictions. The DUI at 19 helped me sober up.
Waking up on my 21st birthday with some guy, that ordinarily would
have repulsed me, helped me stop sleazing around - although at age
28, I've been with less men than my age but only because of two
relationships lasting 6 yrs wherein I was with only one person.
The food addiction was addressed during a rotten experience with
an HMO that decided, after ten psychiatrist sessions, I was
"cured" but they recommended ongoing group therapy in OA
(Overeater's Anonymous.) That was a joke! I figured out at those
meetings that there was WAY MORE to my problems than just
substituting food for feelings.
As I was waiting to for my wedding ceremony to begin in 1994, I
can still feeling that I should be nervous, reminding myself that
there wasn't anything to be nervous about because I didn't really
love or care about him. And yet, I married him anyway because it
was what was expected. We were a GREAT co-dependent couple! I was
the steamroller, he was the doormat. My wish was his command. We
were both passive-aggressive to the Nth degree. It was doomed to
fail. I joke about it now but it took us a year and $45,000 to get
married - 60 days and $600 to get divorced.
Nope, no kids, thank god. Since I was 12, I've always known that
I'd never have kids. I'm too messed up to do justice to an
innocent child. And then there's the whole "I don't really
LIKE children" thing. Seriously, this decision is probably
the best thing I'll ever do in my life - save a life.
Oh, along the way, I've made just about the worst decision I could
possibly make and still be alive. I've chosen to be with the wrong
men as punishment to myself for being imperfect. I've quit jobs
without having another lined up and almost ended up homeless. I've
been fired from more than one job because of my temper and
impulsivity - neither of which are good in Human Resources. I've
made financial management decisions that led to bankruptcy. I've
up and moved three times trying to chase down happiness in the
hands of another - failing to realize that I could run away from
the situation but never from myself.
There are days when the only reason I'm alive is because of my dog
- he doesn't care for strangers and if I died, he'd be put to
sleep because no shelter would be able to place him. I place my
entire existence on that little guy's head and rarely do I decide
to live because I WANT to.
I've never been a cutter. I don't get into the physical
self-abuse. I'm more emotionally self-destructive. I test every
single person in my life. I allow VERY few people into my inner
circle. Lord help them once I do because I test the hell out of
them. I have been manipulative, lied, cheated, stolen, snooped,
spied, stalked ... you name it.
I've spent twenty-five years learning to be the perfect BPD. I
just got diagnosed with what I call "BPD x 2" - bi-polar
and borderline - about two months ago. It was a blessing to know
what was/is wrong with me. It's been a saving grace to know that
I'm not the only nut bar in the world. It's nice to know that
"I have reason to be."
I still battle the black-and-white thinking. I still battle my
abandonment & rejection demons. I still have mood swings,
although not as severe thanks to the meds. I still am impulsive
and temperamental. I still expect myself to be perfect and beat
myself up beyond recognition when I fall short of the mark.
BUT, as my therapist equated it, one can't go from couch potato to
Olympic-class athlete overnight. I can't wipe away 25 yrs of
learning, practicing and perfecting in two months. I recognize my
BPD traits more and more now that I know what they are. I am
TRYING to re-train how I operate. I am TRYING very hard but at the
same time, each time I stumble during my training, I hurt people I
deeply care about tremendously. It gets discouraging and it helps
to know that there is at least ONE person in my life that is there
for me consistently - my therapist.
However, I recognize that the insurance may change, circumstances
are fluid, life is filled with chance and change - I could lose
that at a moment's notice. I need to get to the point where I can
do this on my own.
As I'm writing this, my life is in a gray area right now. My
relationship which is almost at the one year mark is in serious
jeopardy. I love, respect, cherish, admire and enjoy this man
tremendously but he's made it clear that my unpredictability and
impulsivity is driving him nuts. He's taking time to figure out if
he wants to invest any more of himself in this. Three months ago,
I would have been climbing the walls, gotten drunker than a skunk
& gone out driving, or been threatening suicide.
*I* am seeing improvements in myself insofar as I'm not doing ANY
of those things. I'm calm and somewhat accepting of the situation.
I've made my feelings and desires clear to him but have accepted
that he may very well come back to me say "I've had it, no
more." IF that happens, I'll deal with it then. I won't
over-analyze this, as is common in BPD. I'm learning, but slowly.
And it's the slowly part that's driving him nuts.
Oh well, that's my story "and I'm stickin' to it!" I DO
believe there is hope. I DO believe we CAN overcome BPD. I DO
believe that, given the right therapist, the right support system,
the will, desire and determination to overcome BPD and become who
we want to be, we CAN be better. We CAN be world-class hurdlers in
our own right.
As I'm fond of saying of late ... "it ain't easy bein'
green."
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