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« Parents of Those with BPD - What to do? | Main | Ending a Relationship With a Borderline Parent - Adult Children of BPD »

November 09, 2008

An adult-child of a Borderline Mother speaks about rage

Borderline Personality Disorder in a mother has significant, lasting, and impacting effects on her children. The effects of those who are now the adult children of a borderline mother seriously impact their relationships throughout childhood and into adulthood. There is often a desire, on the part of the adult child, to get some resolution, connection - actual relationship with a borderline mother - and/or find a way to make peace with it all. For many much of what they desire or hope to work out with a borderline mother proves illusive in and even through adulthood.


Mike - son of a mother with Borderline Personality Disorder shares the following;

"As a child my mother was so controlling that I was afraid that she could actually destroy me as a person, steal my identity or something. That caused me to have an emotional response of being at her mercy and a fear of being destroyed by her.

As a child I was pretty much at her mercy, and I couldn't leave, so that response was probably not to far away from being accurate. That emotional response became like a reflex. When she acted a certain way I got that same emotional response.

Even as an adult, when she had no power over me, I still felt the same learned emotional response. Then one day it came to me that it was silly to feel that way, she couldn't do any thing to me any more. Then later I realized that I had been trying to make her act the way I wanted her to, which was to treat me with respect.

I also realized that I couldn't and I was wasting my time and energy trying. I wasn't trying to get rid of rage I just decided to quit wasting my time trying to make her treat me with respect. When I quit trying to control her the rage just left.

For people who are having a problem with rage, I would say try to figure out why it is so important to you that they do what you want.

Is your response really appropriate to the situation? How are they really hurting you? My response was not appropriate, maybe for a 9 year old.

If it looks like your response is blown out of proportions then ask your self why. Maybe the thing that you are responding to is not as big of a threat now, as it was when you first started responding that way.

Get realistic about the damage the action can cause you. Is it worth the rage? If it isn't then let it go. Almost all of the damage caused by rage is caused to the person who is raging.

My response was almost like a phobia. It was way out of proportion and I never seemed to really think about why. Until I realized that I don't think I could have let it go. I was to afraid to let it go. It is kind of like being afraid that the bogey man is under you bed for 50 years because some one told you he was when you were 6 years old.

You spend 50 years not being able to sleep for fear of the bogey man. Then one day you look under the bed and nothing is there. You have to face your fear.

What are you afraid of? Why are you afraid of it? Is it really that scary or not? I know the damage that can be caused by dysfunctional families. Maybe this will help some one try to deal with it a little better. I promise you, you wont miss rage that gets nothing accomplished except to give you a heart attack."


Rage is a common problem for adult children of a borderline mother. As Mike so insightfully points out above, the rage continues to come from a place that is from one's childhood and that it can be resolved. Attempts to solve it with the borderline parent, more often than not, do not meet with success. Adult children of those with BPD, as I well-know myself have to take their own lives back and have to undo, often in therapy, the damage that they have been carrying from these types of emotionally chaotic and psychologically wounding childhood experiences.

The bogey man that Mike refers to is truly the unresolved pain and fear that each one of us has as the adult children whose inner child still longs for the mother or parent that wasn't he or she was not able to connect with or really be attached to in any lasting and meaningful way.

To be the adult child, who was a child, of a borderline mother (or parent) is to know what it means to be abandoned emotionally and to know also what it feels like, at least in part, to be an orphan, for all intents and purposes.

The rage of the adult child of the borderline mother (or parent) is really the fear of the pain of your unresolved loss.

© A.J. Mahari, November 9, 2008

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