Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the therapists I know are enablers. It's just too easy to get money to repeat back what someone wants to hear. There are no measurements for improvement and just basically therapy doesn't work the way it's supposed to.
Sadly, I've seen this too. You tell them the people in your life are horrible and at fault for everything, you give them your one-sided perspective, and they repeat this back to you. TBH I don't know how a therapist would get the other side. Still, it's not helpful to the patient.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, considering how you talk about your own daughter, I think I would be quite guarded around you, as well. It sounds like she can do nothing right in your eyes, OP. Do you have anything positive to say about this child? Kids ingrain your thinking about them. They know when a parent doesn't like them, and sees them through a negative lens. She may be trying to go no contact. There are videos on YouTube about how and why adult children do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All the therapists I know are enablers. It's just too easy to get money to repeat back what someone wants to hear. There are no measurements for improvement and just basically therapy doesn't work the way it's supposed to.
Sadly, I've seen this too. You tell them the people in your life are horrible and at fault for everything, you give them your one-sided perspective, and they repeat this back to you. TBH I don't know how a therapist would get the other side. Still, it's not helpful to the patient.
Anonymous wrote:It doesn't matter what's the diagnosis, its a mental health issue. Your kid is suffering emotionally and its effecting her current familial and social bonds and her future as well.
Its eating you up, thinking you or her mom are responsible, feeling rejected and disrespected, not knowing how to help.
First of all, you yourself need therapy to learn how to help yourself and how to handle interactions with her with love and tact. Think of her as a tantrum throwing toddler who doesn't know how to handle her emotions. She needs tender care.
If there is a person in her life, an aunt, uncle, grandma, cousin or coach or anyone who can talk to her in a non preachy way. May be they can convince her to see a competent psychiatrist not rely on random therapists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no cure for a personality disorder. They will always be the victim and therapy won't help. You maintain a relationship by keeping your distance. Her dumpster fire of a life isn't your problem.
+100
As painful as it is, OP, you need to distance yourself from your child ASAP. I know it’s difficult — but it’s necessary to keep your own peace.
-BTDT (my oldest has both BPD and NPD)
+1,000,000. It cannot be repeated enough: by definition, a personality disorder is a problem you cannot fix. And if you reinforce the dysfunction by doing what innumerable parents of damaged/dysfunctional and/or severely disabled children do which is to make the damaged/dysfunctional child your focus and value whatever crumbs you get from her over the authentic connection you have with your healthy daughter, you will damage the latter too. So buck the trend: put your energy into your relationship with your healthy daughter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She sounds like a narcissist.
OP here. This is actually what I think, too. It's hard.
Anonymous wrote:My 21 year old son has narcissistic tendencies too and I just try to knock him down a leg or three and point out when he’s being a d@uche. I’m not sure what the answer is, just here to commiserate.
Anonymous wrote:I think this type of personality is often a result of at least one parent being very inconsistent in their parenting style, especially including giving and withholding love and attention, so that the child is always uncertain and confused as to what they have to do or not do, say or not say, to get the parent's approval and love. It also involves them walking on eggshells all the time trying not to inflame the confusing parent. Would this be anything like the parenting your daughter got from her mother? If so, the results are very long lasting, possibly permanent, and very difficult to correct even with great therapy and full compliance with the therapists treatment.
Anonymous wrote:All the therapists I know are enablers. It's just too easy to get money to repeat back what someone wants to hear. There are no measurements for improvement and just basically therapy doesn't work the way it's supposed to.