+MY MAD MOTHER IN ABSOLUTE CONTROL

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PART I:  My mother was a professional bully.  There are very few direct examples in her letters about how mother handled outside criticism about her thinking and decisions — or ANYBODY’S attempts to intervene.  Here in this letter mother effectively deflects whatever observations and opinions her mother must have expressed about our mother.

The homestead served the integral role in her madness of being her ‘isolation chamber’ for our family and for her actions.  She didn’t need a burning ring of fire around us.  She didn’t need a moat filled with starving crocodiles.  When we sat perched in our canvas hut high on the mountainside at the end of a long terrible road without any near neighbors, mother could rule her kingdom with her entire family as her captives.

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July 31, 1962

Wednesday

Dear Mother,

Today Bill will send the message to you telling you it’s better, we [Linda note:  meaning as usual, I’m certain, HER] feel, that you wait for your trip until next summer.  More than likely we will make a trip ‘out’ before then but we have thought and thought about this and agree it’s best you wait.

I’ll send the letter along that I wrote last week telling you ‘same’ and why after I received your advisory letter.

Then I wanted to see you so badly I let my heart not my head rule and decided not to send it.

Then over the week-end we got a nice letter from Spoerry [landlord of log house] saying we could spend $150 to fix up drive-way and 450.00 new roof – also Reynolds can stay.  I had expected “no, no, no’s! from her on all 3 counts.

We’re thrilled to be able to remain on homestead now but my gosh the work that will have to be done here so we can stay and if I teach them I must get the place done now.

Floors must be put down and all ready before Labor Day when all of our furniture will be moved up here!!

I know you’re against our spending winter here and my teaching the children and I couldn’t stand to have you come and arguments start about it.  I know they would.

[Linda note:  There were NO possibilities for anyone to ever contradict my mother about ANYTHING – and she could control all outside input and influence – as commander-in-absolute-charge of our family!]

Believe me Mom, we all want to see you but it wouldn’t be happy with things as they’re.  I live in fear that what happened last year would occur again.  I’d be too sick, then, to do a thing this winter.  [Linda note:  I am not sure what happened the summer before – is she referring to the arguments with her brother and wife when they came to see us?]

You’re so right I must watch my health.  I must have a serene environment.  It wouldn’t be if you came and we disagreed.

It’s my life and I choose to live it here on our mountain and I won’t stand for interference on this point and I no longer want advise [sic]!  Our minds are made up and we’ve been busier and happier since we’ve decided.

We’ll have electricity this winter and a chemical toilet [never happened].  Next spring will dig a well [never happened] and have a bath-room [never happened] next summer.  Then you can come all summer if you wish.  Perhaps we could erect a little log cabin where you’d have some privacy [never happened].  It’s hard to all live together for any length of time.

I hope you’re not too dissappointed [sic].  I want so for you to be happy.  You’d be a whole lot unhappier if you come and it wasn’t pleasant.

And I’m afraid it couldn’t be when I’ve so much to do and all — .

Please write and tell me how you feel — Love, Mildred

[Interesting, the envelope mother used to mail this letter to grandmother has Spoerry’s, the owners of the log house, address crossed out on the front and grandmother’s written in.  Spoerry’s address is in Algeria.]

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See in context:

*July 1962 – Mother’s Letters

*1962 – MOTHER’S LETTERS

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See also for background context regarding homesteading:

*Dad’s April 2, 1960 Letter to Alaska Land Office

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+INFO ABOUT BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER (BPD)

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+MOTHER’S MAD MERCURIAL MIND – AND OUR RESULTING SUFFERINGS

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It is my continual hope as I work with my mother’s letters that sooner or later the ‘truth’ of our life with her will appear behind the façade, between the lines, or below the surface of her written words.  I believe these openings do exist in the Borderline’s wall between realities.

I found one of those openings today and it was contained in one simple word I found in her July 17, 1962 letter where she stated in reference to the certain probability of another move:

“We can’t stand thought of shifting back to log house.”

That’s it, the truth about how our continual moving was in my mother’s distorted mind.  We never really, actually MOVED from place to place to place.  We SHIFTED!

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Here is another letter that is a ‘snipit’ of the bigger picture that was the turbulent chaos of my childhood.  Please follow links at the bottom of the post for the fuller context for this letter (beginning particularly on June 1, 1962) , including her references to our trip ‘outside’ Alaska.

I am amazed and stunned as I go through these letters at how completely her thinking changed sometimes from day to day, often certainly from week to week.  She never was able to follow the trail of her own unpredictable and changeable thinking.  Very mercurial — jam packed with unstable elements of logic, emotion, thought and action.

Of course the consequences of her radical decisions drastically affected us all, though she does not seem capable of even beginning to grasp what her ‘sick self centeredness’ is doing to her family or even to herself.

Her chaos has created an ulcer in her own body.  My brother, who was turning 12 the day after this letter was written, was suffering from a terrible boil that erupted on his back.  The other, unseen side of life with my mother never appears in her letters — her chronic outbreaks of unpredictable, uncontrolled rage and violence against me.

Her moving frenzy thoughts have expanded by this time not only to include travel ‘outside’ of Alaska for a California ‘visit’, but also a possible ‘transfer’ to Europe.

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June 14, 1962

Dear Mother,

Tomorrow is John’s Birthday.  Thanks for the $ for him.  He’s saving it to spend in Calif. For we have rented the log house until school starts – unless the Army condemns the well water, as the house has to be inspected and the water has to be safe.  The Army prefers drilled wells and the log house has a dug well.  We rented to a military family as you can guess and they’re very nice.  We left all of the furniture etc. and we can have it back September 1st.  They pay $195 so we profit 40.00 a month.  GOOD!!

[Linda note:  Oh great!  In June 1, 1962 letters she says we’ve left homestead and moved back into log house.  Two weeks later we move BACK to the homestead?!?!?]

[We] pay 135 rent but pay for electricity and rubbbish [sic] collection so profit 40.00.  Now I hope they don’t move out.

If possible will come by SHIP – exciting.  There’s a big Army vessel due in Anchorage Port on July 11th and will leave July 15th and get into San Francisco on 15th.  [Linda note:  No, I don’t think so!]  If not will go by Army plane.  I prefer the boat but Bill thinks space will be all taken up.  I’ll try and get a clipping of the article about the boat etc. to send you!

Now this all came about because we figured that if we paid rent all summer we couldn’t go outside or anything so made a list of musts if anyone rented it.  We put a sign up FOR RENT and rented it next day.

Ives came and were there to dinner (long story I’ll tell you when I see you) when people came to look at the house.

The house was beautifully fixed and they came by surprise.  All went fine and next day and since all HAVOC broke lose.  Luck.

[Linda note:  I can just picture this.  Two weeks earlier she ‘moves’ us all from homestead to log house – then sets up her ‘homey stage’ so that to all appearances we are the happiest family in the world in our ‘beautiful home’!  Two weeks later everything has changed and back to the homestead we ‘move’ again!]

Well, now I hate to write you until Army approves house as that would really ruin plans.  These people I trust and feel they will take excellent care of everything.

Now I insist on not staying with anybody.  I wasn’t going to tell you we were even coming as I don’t want to upset anyone but you have to know so you won’t plan to come to Alaska.

I’m putting all our books etc. etc. in storage and although of course, we’re at homestead now, don’t plan to come here when we return.   [Linda note:  Go figure!!  Back ‘home’ again!  Any stability in our family?  I think absolutely not!  She’s already planning to move us back down the mountain – somewhere – again by fall!]

If we go to Europe will sell tractor, jeep etc. – in fact, plan to trade jeep in on new car which we will get in Seattle and I’ll drive back – want to come?  Bill will come down Friday before Labor Day and we will see Fair and he’ll fly back as will only have short time off.  I’ll have to drive back.  I’ll try to get someone (man preferred – and young – you better chaperone) to drive.

Thought I’d ask Roy who is in Kansas and rented our room and he’d have free trip back.  He went out with Mrs. Erickson in car.

I guess her house sold but she still plans to teach at Eagle River – 10 new classrooms etc. are to be added on to school!! – and new Highway completed too!

We think will just forget about homestead next winter and rest in log house and next summer take week end trips all over Alaska in our new car.

We’re going to get a Chevrolet Greenbriar – holds 9 passengers easily!  [Linda note:  Probably holds lots of junk for the moving frenzies, as well!  Doubt it has much traction for mountain glacial ice and mud roads, though.]

We can do all this if we don’t fight homestead.  We were going to add onto hut here this summer but now will wait and build cabin or basement of our house.

We may sell tractor and get 3,500 for it (!  Oh, how I wish you were here to talk to.  We may sell trailer for 750 – if we go to Europe.  Would have to put metal roof on hut then to serve as ‘prove up’ instead of trailer.

I want to get out of homestead rut for awhile – I still love it here but we need a change of wheels.

Now I’m dying to hear your reaction.

I felt good at log house but move through [sic] me again and stomach hurts again.  [Linda note:  So many examples of being a victim of one’s own madness!]

We moved on our Anniversary for three consecutive years and I had to get out in one day and next day (our anniversary) go back and clean house and made four trips over this damn road and was dong wash at Eagle River Laundromat at 12:00 P.M. and got so sick I felt I couldn’t get home.

This place was so neat and is a mess now.  I’m not going to sort a thing – things going in suit cases!  — already.

Gosh, I’m excited.

Baby is a jewel – so good, husky and smart.

I can stay down there [California] for as long as I like.

I may go to beach a week, mountains awhile – shall we go to Santa Barbara? – Laguna?  [Linda note:  “I” seems to forget she has 5 children with her?  Or should I say, ‘props’?  Touch of the manic here?]

Bill says I can come and go as I please.  I don’t want to be stuck in Pasadena.  I want to see and do things.

Such fun!

I may get our car in Seattle so as to have it down there.  It’s big enough to hold a crib.  [Linda note:  Hint.  Never happened.]

I’ll bring his stroller and car seat but will need a high chair – and small crib that folds easily!!

So much to plan and do!

I’ve got enough clothes – but need some light pants.

— David wants nap.  I’ll write soon.  Love, Me.

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Context for this letter can be found at the following links —

*June 1962 – Mother’s Letters

*1962 – MOTHER’S LETTERS

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+WHAT DO YOU THINK OF PHYSICAL PUNISHMENT IN OUR PUBLIC SCHOOLS?

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26 states in the U.S. still allow spanking and other forms of corporal punishment in public schools.

I have only a vague memory of something my sister remembers very clearly from my childhood.  She tells me that each of my elementary school years my mother walked into the principal’s office at the start of the school year and left a paddle with my name on it with permission for it to be used on me if needed.

The paddle was one of those toy ones with the ball and string removed.  How humiliating for me!  Yet, did her action send up any possible red flags about what a terribly abusive mother she was to me?  How could it when the school itself approved corporal punishment itself?

Nobody every hit me in school that I remember, though my sister remembers having a teacher that would whack student hands if they missed a multiplication problem presented orally in a class quiz format.  My brother had a teacher in school that hit him, and ironically my mother blew a gasket over this!

Two of my Texas nieces are no longer being home schooled and have found upon entering public school that spankings in the principal’s office are a very real threat of terror in their new world.

I would add in relation to the article below that many children who have been neglected, maltreated and abused OFTEN act out in school — myself included evidently.  When those children are not shown another way of interacting socially, aren’t the already existing abuse patterns of violence in their lives being reproduced and reinforced in the only other major arena of functioning young children have in their lives — their school zone?

What do you think of spanking in American schools?

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

By Sue Shellenbarger

  • September 1, 2009, 9:18 AM ET

Spanking Kids in School Still Common, Especially Among Disabled

Spanking kids in school has gone the way of the buggy whip – right?

Wrong, based on a new study by the ACLU and Human Rights Watch, as reported here and here. More than 200,000 U.S. schoolchildren were subjected to corporal punishment during the 2006-2007 school year, the study shows. And the South has a big lead in whacking schoolkids, with Texas, Mississippi and Alabama holding the top three spots.

Paddlings in school are still legal in 20 states, and the report suggests they are quite common, based on 202 interviews with parents, teachers, students and school officials, plus federal Education Department data. The courts haven’t afforded students in classrooms the same protection as criminals have against cruel and unusual punishment.

Many pediatricians now advise against corporal punishment; some research suggests spanking makes behavior problems worse. And while I admit to having harbored now and then a fleeting wish that my kids’ teachers could smack fellow students whose behavior disrupted class, I never would seriously advocate such a thing.

In the saddest finding of the ACLU study, children with disabilities, especially autism, drew corporal punishment at a far higher rate than others, the study found. Children with autism were often punished for behaviors linked to the condition, because teachers lacked the knowledge, training or patience to use other methods of behavior control.

Stefanie has posted before on how this touchy topic plays out in different families. I have known parents who occasionally spank their children, whose kids seem well-adjusted; my own mom and dad, who I thought were great parents, used spanking occasionally. Nevertheless, I find the idea of routine corporal punishment at school pretty appalling.

Readers, are spanking and other forms of corporal punishment ever warranted in schools? Should local school officials be free, as they are now, to choose disciplinary methods, in keeping with the values of their own communities? Or do we need a nationwide ban on spanking in schools?

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+RETHINKING MEDICINES THAT HEAL US

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I think it’s too easy to blame our relationship concerns on ‘addiction’.  Some people in our lives are our medicine and having them in our lives helps us heal, just as surely as some others are toxic poisons and make us sick and harm us.

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What does my all time favorite movie and my all time favorite man share in common for me?  Healing.  Plain and simple – healing.

I’ve been doing some thinking lately (of course) about the man I am in love with who has ‘dismissed’ me from his life.

I think about what I’ve heard people discuss about ‘addictive relationships’.  I have a related yet different take on the subject.

Humans, as a social species, are INTENDED to heal through human relationships.  We will be drawn to such healing powers like magnets.  Science has provided us now with quite a wide array of ‘psychotropic medications’ to attempt to ‘fix’ what ails our emotions, our brains, our minds.  But do they EVER heal our heart and soul?

Some people become addicted to ‘street drugs’, some to prescribed drugs.  What matters to me in my thinking right now is that there are times and conditions that cause us to NEED medicine.  Sometimes these required medicines produce side effects.  The complications of some love relationships, to me, are the side effects of the healing medicine the relationship itself produces.

I ask the question of myself, “Were you, are you, Linda, addicted to this man?”  No, but as I have no real choice but to inch my way forward in time without contact with him, I continue to search for ways to lessen my sadness.  If “knowledge is power” and “the truth will set me free,” then perhaps a combination of the two will allow me to put some gold in this pan of mine and allow me to toss back the dull, unappealing, useless gravel that serves the beauty of my life absolutely no purpose.

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In today’s world of media access I suggest that each of us probably has at least one favorite movie.  This favorite movie of mine fits like a key into the lock of my being.  It in-forms me of things I most need to know.  It provides me access to some of my most important inner feelings.  It resonates with my essence.  And, yes, not surprisingly it is a child’s movie.

I watch and re-watch The Secret Garden primarily because through the eye of the camera that filmed it, through the actions of the people who participate in the telling of its story, through its scenes and scenery, I can repeatedly glimpse the surest information I have ever had access to about what it MIGHT be like to be a child.

Watching living, breathing, active children in real life does not give me what I need to look into my own secret places and try to discover if I have ANY information within myself about what being MY OWN child was like.  So far, at 58 years of age, I still have no other clues but the ones that I discover anew each time I closely watch every second of this film.  This process, on some deep and very real profound levels, heals me.  I know it.  This movie, as a form of a work of art,  is one of my ‘medicines’.

Spending time with the man I am in love with was also a medicine to me.  I don’t even think the person himself is the medicine.  The medicine was what happened when I was with him, as if the combination of the two of us being together resulted in a lock opening to our own secret garden that freed me – and I believe at times him also – to exist for those times in a world where troubles dissipated.  In that world I felt calm, safe, peaceful, happy, joyous, entertained, connected. grounded, and well.

People in connected relationship DO heal one another as they also experience healing themselves.  Humans are created this way, of this I have no doubt.  Our entire feel-good chemical system in our bodies is connected to this fact.  That is what safe and secure attachments are all about.

However, neither the man I love, nor I, experienced what we needed of safe and secure early attachment relationships as our body-brain-mind formed in our early childhoods, which of course left us at greatest risk of – quite simply – letting our insecure attachment patterns destroy the ‘us’ of our relationship.

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When it comes to the very real ‘soft tissue’ of my heart’s ache, it is not to the technical information that I turn to.  Nonetheless, I have this foundational information to support my inner healing work.  The man of my love no doubt has what experts would call (using various technical explanations) a dismissive-avoidant insecure attachment disorder.

This simply means that his brain formed to operate primarily by categorizing, compartmentalizing and sealing off any incoming or inner information that feels uncomfortable.  He can dismiss and avoid discomfort because his brain-mind was formed that way.  At the same time, if his brain were to be scanned by an expert the actual emotional energy working behind the screen of his consciousness would STILL be visible.

All that his dismissive-avoidant (organized) insecure attachment style is really accomplishing is that what he feels can remain nearly completely ‘out of sight, out of mind’.  But because this insecure attachment pattern is included among the ‘organized’ rather than ‘disorganized’ ones, he can carry on his life just fine – and certainly that can mean without me.  He might appear extremely narcissistic from the outside, but so what.  He convinces himself he always gets what he wants – and he probably does.

Then, on the other hand, there’s me with my disoriented-disorganized insecure attachment disorder.  It is entirely ‘my problem’ that I ‘oriented and organized’ my emotional universe around my attachment to this man.  NOT his problem – nor should it be.  Yet none of this changes the fact that I am left — now that my 35 years of being a mother with a child under the age of 18 in the house has vanished as my orienting-organizing center, now also without this 8 year plus relationship in my life that also gave me an orienting-organizing center — to face the full splendor of what is really going on inside of me.

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Having a movie for a healing medicine is a whole lot simpler and easier to depend on than having a connection with a special person for a healing medicine.  In either case, both these medicines temporarily alleviate my deep, ancient-to-me underlying major sadness and depression that was ‘impressed into me’ by my extremely abusive mother.  Watching the movie vanquishes the depression for a time.  Being with the man I love also vanquished the depression for a time.  Is there, for me, anything like a more permanent solution?

I honestly don’t know.  I am as yet completely opposed to consuming psychotropics (or street drugs including alcohol) because I believe that my combination of depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, and identity, depersonalization, derealization and dissociation disorders are far, far too complex to be ‘healed’ with drugs.  I do not believe that they would act as medicines to me, and I am not willing to deal with the side effects.  [Please do not take my personal opinions regarding this issue over into your own pasture.  I am me.  You are you.  Always consult your medical providers about your own concerns.]

If missing this man in my life is one of the side effects of having spent many, many healing hours in his presence, so be it.  I discovered through my relationship with him the best of feelings I never – until then – ever even knew existed.  And of course I both miss those feelings as well as deeply miss HIM, the person who is most special to me of all I’ve ever met in this lifetime (my children, of course, being in a different category all of their own).

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We cannot ignore the tragedies created within human relationships caused by insecure attachment disorders.  Nor do I believe we have any chance of healing these relationships themselves if we do not and cannot address the insecure attachment systems that doom them. We need to be crystal clear that most often the ‘fault’ — or fissure that destroys many otherwise healing relationships belongs to the insecure attachment disorders themselves — not to the individual people that form these relationships.

I am not going to demean, disregard, or distort anything about my relationship and feelings in connection with this man.  I honor the whole of it all.  I can accept that healing of a medicinal nature was transpiring for me, but this does not indicate an addiction.  That both of our insecure attachment histories would prevent a sustaining, long term, two-way-committed relationship from blossoming between us seems obvious to me.  Knowing this does not make losing him in my life one single bit easier.

He can shut off awareness of feelings and conflicts and I cannot.  He lives his life.  I live mine.  Yes, I miss him.  Terribly with anguish.  Yet at the same time I can focus my efforts to find all the other experiences in this world that can each help to heal me.  I’m going to start by ordering myself my own copy of my favorite movie so I no longer have to rely on the public library when I want to watch it.  This might be just a small thing, but it will help me.

I must look for all the ways I can nurture myself.  After all, the very roots of the word ‘medicine’ are feminine, and the word relates to what affects our well being.  That is fundamentally what I am after – improved well being.  I need well being as much now as I did every time I was able to be at that man’s side and feel better than I did without him.  I never took one single second of that time with him for granted.  I was clear in appreciating every second I was with him.  I valued that time.  I was grateful.  I knew I was being given the gift of a precious blessing.  Of that I am certain.

Yet today I must search for and find my medicine elsewhere.  All this being said – I am going for a walk — as always, by putting one foot in front of the other so I can move forward.  Dick and Jane, see Linda go.  “Go Linda!  Go!”

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+INFO ABOUT BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER (BPD)

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New Resource for Parents: CDC Parent Portal

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+THE CHILD ABUSE CONTINUUM – THROW DENIAL TO THE WIND

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Deception, denial, deflection – whatever the tactic abusive parents such as my mother was – and as my father was through his compliant complacency — may use, their intent is to find ways to confuse young abused children about the facts of their condition and situation.

I remember a time in my childhood when my mother described a TRUE child abuse case to me and my siblings.  Someone in Alaska had become so furious at their young toddler for soiling its pants during potty training that they had beaten the child and then taken it outside and placed it bare bottomed, in the middle of a freezing Alaskan winter night, on the top of a car hood.

After some period of time they had yanked the child off of the car, ripping all the skin off its bottom.  They took the baby to a hospital where the truth of their crime was then uncovered.

“Now THAT was child abuse,” my mother let us know – particularly me.  She did not make clear her intentions in telling this story, but I think similar tactics are often used to present in the minds of abused children – and even in the minds of adults who were abused as children – the distorted ‘fact’ that we are not abused ourselves.  We are only punished because we are bad children and have to get what we deserve to straighten us out.

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I have written in other posts that I figured out the bare minimum sentence that my mother – and my father through his passive participation in my mother’s madness – would have deserved for the abuse perpetrated against me in my childhood.  Theirs would have been a minimum sentence at 14,500 years each.

So what do we make of the kinds of abuse acts like those referenced below?  Does the abuse we suffered ourselves so pale in comparison to these kinds of cases that we ought not to consider that we ourselves were abused at all?  Are we tempted to compare our history to much worse cases so we can minimize our own history and thus vanquish our own abuse experiences into the oblivion of ‘not so bad’?

I think not.  I believe that altered brain development caused by malevolent early childhood conditions underlies all chronic and sustained adult abuse actions against children.  These evolutionarily altered brains can be extremely dangerous.  In my mother’s case, she was wise enough and narcissistic enough to usually know exactly where the line was that would have brought outside negative attention against her for her abuse actions toward me.

I also have to credit myself with the fact that from as soon as I was old enough to do so, I remained hyper-aware, hyper-alert, and hyper-involved while my mother beat me so that I could make every possible effort to protect my body from devastating impacts against hard objects as she threw me around in the midst of her frequent and extensive physical rage attacks against me.  During her severe attacks on my small body, preserving my life was not my mother’s concern.  Fortunately, it was mine.

I also know that she used food as a weapon against me, but that is substance for another post in the future.  She certainly did not starve me because she knew someone would make her pay for that act.  If she could have done so with impunity, I think she would have – and would have enjoyed doing so.

My point today is that hearing about cases such as these (below) brings to mind that child abuse exists on a continuum of damage caused by faulty brains in faulty human beings.  That child abuse DOES exist at all reflects faults within our entire society.  At no time does denial or minimization of the reality of ANY child abuse help anyone — most certainly not ourselves.

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Carnation-area woman pleads guilty in stepdaughter’s starvation case Local News A Carnation-area woman accused of starving and withholding water from her 14-year-old stepdaughter last year entered a modified guilty plea Friday to first-degree criminal mistreatment. Rebecca Long’s plea came just days after her husband, Jon Pomeroy, 43, pleaded guilty to the same charge. 9/5/2009 | seattletimes.com | find similar results

Woman pleads guilty in child starvation case Local News A 45-year-old woman accused of withholding water and starving her 14-year-old stepdaughter has entered a modified guilty plea to a charge of first-degree criminal mistreatment. 9/4/2009 | seattletimes.com | find similar results

Couple indicted in Texas starvation case Nation and World A grand jury in Dallas has indicted a couple accused of keeping the woman’s three young children starving in a hotel bathroom for at least nine months. 8/26/2009 | seattletimes.com | find similar results

Wash. man pleads guilty in daughter’s starvation Local News A Carnation man has pleaded guilty to first-degree criminal mistreatment, after his daughter was found severely emaciated last summer and told investigators she was allowed only about 6 ounces of water a day. Jon Pomeroy, 43, entered the plea Monday in King County Superior Court. 8/31/2009 | seattletimes.com | find similar results

Starvation abuse rare, shocking even to experts Local News …and the 14-year-old victim, but has studied cases of starvation involving children ranging in age from 2 months to 13 years…systematic and deliberate,” Wilson said. Kellogg said starvation victims such as the Carnation girl need far more than food… 10/14/2008 | seattletimes.com | find similar results

Pa. social workers charged after starvation death Nation and World By all accounts, there is blame to go around for the 2006 starvation death of disabled teenager Danieal Kelly. Her mother pleaded guilty to murder this week for criminally neglecting the once-vivacious… 5/1/2009 | seattletimes.com | find similar results

Vegan couple sentenced in baby’s starvation death Nation and World …sentences on Jade Sanders, 27, and Lamont Thomas, 31. Their son, Crown Shakur, weighed just 3 ½ pounds when he died of starvation on April 25, 2004. The couple were found guilty May 2 of charges including malice murder, felony murder and cruelty… 5/10/2007 | seattletimes.com | find similar results

New mental evaluations ordered for Kent mother in starvation case Local News …found Robinson passed out amid 300 beer cans. Officers also found a 6-week-old and a 16-month-old boy dead of starvation and dehydration. A 2 ½-year-old son survived, apparently by eating uncooked noodles and rice. 3/15/2007 | seattletimes.com | find similar results

Lesson In Death By Starvation Business …Red Cross, described the process of starvation. NAIROBI, Kenya – Starving to death…die of illnesses, rather than actual starvation. The victim initially feels hunger…of infection. The body copes with starvation by burning fewer calories, the fuel… 8/27/1992 | seattletimes.com | find similar results

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+THE MAD WOMAN MOTHER MOVES US ALL AGAIN!

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I was nine years old when my mother wrote the following letters to her mother (in Los Angeles).  My mother had given birth 2 months prior to my brother, the 5th child.  We had left the homestead fall of 1960 and moved into a one bedroom apartment in Anchorage.  Of course that apartment was too small for six of us, so everything was hauled up the stairs into a two bedroom apartment later in the fall of 1960, the one that we are in the process of moving out of the next spring — when these letters were written.

As I work with the very few of mother’s letters I can find for the early summer of 1961, I am beginning to understand why this process is the ONLY way to begin to construct anything like a coherent time line of my childhood.  At this time (see below) we were moving back into the log house in Eagle River AT THE SAME TIME mother intended for us to return to the homestead for the summer.

In effect, this meant that at least for May and part of June 1961 we were living in three places AT THE SAME TIME — all of them in a terrific mess with boxes of things packed, piled, loaded, moved — truly insane!

What is really interesting is that not one of the older four children, myself included, have any actual memory of the moves!!  That’s part of what motivates me to go looking for them — to solve this mystery!

I had no real idea until this point in my letter transcription process of how my mother’s insanity was completely reflected in the continual changing of our place of residence, and even in the overlapping of residences!!  The following letters act as ‘signifiers’ of the states of my mother’s mind that both created the moving conditions and was itself created by the moving conditions!

I notice again and again that her maniacal cleaning was a continual thread tying all the living environments together, even on the homestead without electricity or running water.  In fact, it was even so before we made it up the mountain — in her April 14, 1959 letter where she describes how we had no water for meals because she used it all up during the day scrubbing and waxing the tiny trailer floor as it sat in another homesteader’s snow covered field — as if dropped from the air by some giant passing bird.

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May 31, 1961

Dear Mother,

It hurts me terribly to write this but I must.  The dam has broken and the flood is loose – our home is threatened by it.  I must tell you now – please cancel your plans, at least temporarily.  You mustn’t come in July at least.  Please understand.  We cannot possibly have things straightened out by then.

The past 3 years have been HECTIC in so many ways.  I don’t know, I think I’ll wire Spoerry [landlord of log house] and cancel the house.  Perhaps we should spend one more winter in town and put all in storage for the summer.

The house is 135 plus 50 oil + + +.  We have more jeep repairs as of today.

I might come down instead and next summer you could come up.

All is a mess.  I’m very unhappy.  I can’t stand it any more.  My nerves are shot to hell.  [triple underlining]

Really Mom – please tell me you understand.  All is a mess – my private life too!!  [multiple underlining]

I love you – and will write later.  Love, Mildred

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June 13, 1961

Dear Mother,

Just a note – I’m sorry but I’ve so much to do.  It’s been this way ever since moving day – 13 days of it only it started of course away before then.

2 nites ago on our (ha, ha) anniversary I slept on bare floor here – last nite on a cot (work, work, work!)

Well this is [can’t read word] that you’re to cash our check for 150 [underlined 6 times] on June 20th.

All is O.K.  We’re just busy.  Log house has had all walls washed and floors scrubbed and waxed – it was absolutely filthy which made me furious after I’d had to per-fect apartment before I left for inspection!

Now I’m doing windows on inside and out and painting bed-rooms.

Last nite went to Anchorage and bought pots, pans, stainless steel flatware and towels etc. for the place.  It’s all strictly business!

I’m so tired I could die.

Well John is on his way so I want this mailed.  He received gift from you and opened it.  He loves it – so nice!  Will spend his Birthday at Homestead at his request.

I did get David’s ‘suit’ and it’s darling was so rushed forgot to mention it.

Will write later, Love, Me

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Rest of letters here:

PRESENTING THE HOMESTEADING

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+LINKS TO MILLIONS OF WORDS ABOUT THE BORDERLINE (BPD) CONDITION

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Borderline Personality

I am coming to the conclusion that those with a Borderline Personality Disorder are the most likely group of parents to severely abuse their children — and are especially at risk for picking out one single child to be The Chosen One for the worst of their abuse.

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LOTS OF HOT LINKS FOR YOUR CLICKING (RESEARCH) PLEASURE!

The comments that book readers post in their reviews of books in response to published titles on Borderline Personality Disorder are enlightening.  (Even if they don’t address developmental brain changes caused by early childhood malevolent environments!)

I am posting some links this morning both to the titles themselves and to the comments readers have made in response to them.

Many of the comments describe actual real-time, real-life experiences that people have had (and are still having) with the disordered, disoriented brain that both creates the Borderline condition and is a response to a turbulent, malevolent childhood that in combination with genetic potential has manifested in BPD.

(Please note that the editorial reviews, separate from the reader reviews, are presented on the Amazon.com page below a book’s selling information.  Be sure to scroll down the page when you follow the ‘READER REVIEWS’ links!!)

ALSO remember that you don’t have to buy one of these books to read it.  If your local public library doesn’t carry a title, you can request them to find a copy for you!!

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Bleeding Out: A Memoir of A Borderline Personalityby Merri Lisa Johnson (Paperback – May 31, 2010)

Sign up to be notified when this item becomes available.

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Buddha & the Borderline: My Recovery from Borderline Personality Disorder Through Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Buddhism, and Online Dating by Kiera Van Gelder (Paperback – Jul 2010)

Buy new: $16.95 $11.53 — Available for Pre-order

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Blogger’s Comment:  THIS book won’t be at the top of my ‘Must Buy’ List!

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Borderline Personality Disorder For Dummies (For Dummies (Health & Fitness)) by Charles H. Elliott and Laura L. Smith

READER REVIEWS

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The Borderline Psychotic Child: A Selective Integration by Trevor Lubbe

READER REVIEWS (no reviews yet, read editorial comments)

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Diagnosis – Borderline Personality Disorder: Visions for Tomorrow – The Basics by Nami Texas and Deborah Colleen Rose

READER REVIEWS (no reviews yet – read editorial comments)

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Helping Someone You Love Recover From Borderline Personality Disorder by Tami Green

READER REVIEWS (no reviews yet – read editorial comments)

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One Way Ticket To Kansas: Caring About Someone With Borderline Personality Disorder And Finding A Healthy You by Ozzie Tinman

READER REVIEWS

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Breaking Free from Boomerang Love: Getting Unhooked from Borderline Personality Disorder Relationships by Lynn Melville

READER REVIEWS

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I Love You Madly! Workbook: Insight Enhancement About Healthy and Disturbed Love Relations by Robert M. Gordon

READER REVIEWS

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Through The Looking Glass: Women And Borderline Personality Disorder (New Directions in Theory and Psychology) by Dana Becker

READER REVIEWS (no reviews yet – look at editorial comments)

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The Borderline Personality Disorder Survival Guide by Alex Chapman and Kim Gratz

READER REVIEWS

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Putting the Pieces Together: A Practical Guide to Recovery From Borderline Personality Disorder by Joy A. Jensen (Paperback – 2004)

READER REVIEWS

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Universe, Disturbed by Janice Brabaw

READER REVIEWS

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When Hope is Not Enough by Bon Dobbs

READER REVIEWS

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Living in the Dead Zone: Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison: Understanding Borderline Personality Disorders by Gerald A. Faris and Ralph M. Faris

READER REVIEWS

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Stop Walking on Eggshells: Taking Your Life Back When Someone You Care About Has Borderline Personality Disorder by Paul T. Mason and Randi Kreger

READER REVIEWS

*This book has an Amazon.com sales ranking of #612 – if that gives us any idea of the prevalence of BPD and seriousness of public concern for Borderline Personality Disorder and its consequences.

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The Stop Walking on Eggshells Workbook: Practical Strategies for Living With Someone Who Has Borderline Personality Disorder by Randi Kreger and James Paul Shirley

READER REVIEWS

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My Enemy, Myself: Personal Journey through Healing Childhood Sexual Abuse & Borderline Personality Disorder by Meri R Kennedy

READER REVIEWS

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Surviving a Borderline Parent: How to Heal Your Childhood Wounds & Build Trust, Boundaries, and Self-Esteem by Kimberlee Roth, Freda B. Friedman, and Randi Kreger

READER REVIEWS

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Get Me Out of Here: My Recovery from Borderline Personality Disorder by Rachel Reiland

READER REVIEWS

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Sometimes I Act Crazy: Living with Borderline Personality Disorder by Jerold J. Kreisman M.D. and Hal Straus

READER REVIEWS

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I Hate You, Don’t Leave Me: Understanding the Borderline Personality by Jerold J. Kreisman and Hal Straus

READER REVIEWS

This book has an Amazon.com sales ranking of #1,589.

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The Essential Family Guide to Borderline Personality Disorder: New Tools and Techniques to Stop Walking on Eggshells by Randi Kreger

READER REVIEWS

This book has an Amazon.com sales ranking of #3,703.

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Skills Training Manual for Treating Borderline Personality Disorder by Marsha M. Linehan

READER REVIEWS

This book has an Amazon.com sales ranking of #1,114

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Borderline Personality Disorder: A Clinical Guide by John G. Gunderson and Paul S. Links

READER REVIEWS

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Borderline Personality Disorder Demystified: An Essential Guide for Understanding and Living with BPD by Robert O. Friedel, Perry D. Hoffman, Dixianne Penney, and Patricia Woodward

READER REVIEWS

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Understanding the Borderline Mother: Helping Her Children Transcend the Intense, Unpredictable, and Volatile Relationship by Christine Ann Lawson

READER REVIEWS

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The Siren’s Dance: My Marriage to a Borderline: A Case Study by Anthony Walker

READER REVIEWS

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A Peek Inside The Goo:: Depression & The Borderline Personality by Njemile Zakiya

READER REVIEWS

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Dialectical Behavior Therapy Workbook: Practical DBT Exercises for Learning Mindfulness, Interpersonal Effectiveness, Emotion Regulation, & Distress Tolerance (New Harbinger Self-Help Workbook) by Matthew McKay, Jeffrey C. Wood, and Jeffrey Brantley

READER REVIEWS

This book has an Amazon.com sales ranking of #687

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New Hope for People with Borderline Personality Disorder: Your Friendly, Authoritative Guide to the Latest in Traditional and Complementary Solutions by Neil R. Bockian, Nora Elizabeth Villagran, and Valerie Porr

READER REVIEWS

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Lost in the Mirror, 2nd Edition: An Inside Look at Borderline Personality Disorder by Richard Moskovitz

READER REVIEWS

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The Angry Heart: Overcoming Borderline and Addictive Disorders : An Interactive Self-Help Guide by Ph.D. Joseph Santoro and Ronald Jay Cohen

READER REVIEWS

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Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder by Marsha Linehan

READER REVIEWS

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Borderline Personality Disorder in Adolescents: A Complete Guide to Understanding and Coping When Your Adolescent Has BPD by Blaise A Aguirre

READER REVIEWS

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Psychotherapy for Borderline Personality: Focusing on Object Relations by John F. Clarkin

READER REVIEWS

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Integrative Treatment for Borderline Personality Disorder: Effective, Symptom-Focused Techniques, Simplified For Private Practice by John D. Preston Psy D ABPP

READER REVIEWS

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The Narcissistic and Borderline Disorders: An Integrated Developmental Approach by James F. Masterson

READER REVIEWS

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Borderline Conditions and Pathological Narcissism (Master Work Series) by Otto F. Kernberg

READER REVIEWS

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The Narcissistic/Borderline Couple: New Approaches to Marital Therapy by Joan Lachkar

READER REVIEWS

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Borderlines: A Memoir by Caroline Kraus

CUSTOMER REVIEWS

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Mentalization-based Treatment for Borderline Personality Disorder: A Practical Guide by Anthony Bateman and Peter Fonagy

READER REVIEWS

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Essential Papers on Borderline Disorders (Essential Papers in Psychoanalysis) by Michael H. Stone

READER REVIEWS

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Women and Borderline Personality Disorder: Symptoms and Stories by Janet Wirth-Cauchon

READER REVIEWS

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Self Help for Managing the Symptoms of Borderline Personality Disorder by Tami Green

READER REVIEWS

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Psychotherapy Of The Borderline Adult: A Developmental Approach by M.D. Masterson

READER REVIEWS

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Psychotherapy for Borderline Personality Disorder: Mentalization Based Treatment (Bateman, Psychotherapy for Borderline Personality Disorder) by Anthony Bateman and Peter Fonagy

READER REVIEWS

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Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Of Borderline Patients by Otto F. Kernberg, Michael A. Selzer, Harold W. Koenigsberg, and Arthur C. Carr

READER REVIEWS

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Borderline Patients: Extending The Limits Of Treatability (Basic Behavioral Science) by Harold W. Koenigsberg M.D., Otto F. Kernberg M.D., Michael H. Stone M.D., and Ann H. Appelbaum M.D.

READER REVIEWS (no reviews yet – look at editorial comments)

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Borderline Personality Disorder (The Facts) by Roy Krawitz and Wendy Jackson

READER REVIEWS

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Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder: A Guide to Evidence-Based Practice by Joel Paris MD

READER REVIEWS

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Dynamic Psychotherapy With the Borderline Patient by William N. Goldstein

READER REVIEWS (no review yet – read editorial comments)

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Understanding your Borderline Personality Disorder: A Workbook (The Wiley Series in Psychoeducation?) by Chris Healy

READER REVIEWS

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Borderline Personality Disorder: Clinical and Empirical Perspectives by John F. Clarkin, Elsa Marziali, and Heather Munroe-Blum

READER REVIEWS (no reviews yet – read editorial comments)

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Borderline Personality Disorder: Struggling, Understanding, Succeeding by Colleen E. Warner Psy.D

READER REVIEWS (no reviews yet – read editorial comments)

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Schema Therapy for Borderline Personality Disorder by Arnoud Arntz, Hannie van Genderen, and Jolijn Drost

READER REVIEWS (no reviews yet – read editorial comments)

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Understanding and Treating Borderline Personality Disorder: A Guide for Professionals and Families by John G. Gunderson and Perry D., Ph.D. Hoffman

READER REVIEWS

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Borderline and Beyond, Revised by Laura Paxton

READER REVIEWS

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Borderline Personality Disorder: The Latest Assessment and Treatment Strategies by Melanie A. Dean

READER REVIEWS

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The Borderline Personality Disorder Survival Guide: Everything You Need to Know about Living with BPD [BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDE] by Alexander L.(Author) ; Gratz, Kim L.(Author); Hoffman, Perry D.(Foreword by) Chapman (Paperback – Dec 31, 2007)

Dialectical Behaviour Therapists: Challenging Therapeutic Pessimism Related to Borderline Personality Disorder by Rachel Rossiter (Paperback – Jul 16, 2009)

Borderline Personality Disorder: The NICE Guideline on Treatment and Management by National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health (section of the Colleges Research Unit) (Paperback – Jun 15, 2009)

Borderline Personality Disorder: New Research by Marian H. Jackson (Hardcover – Feb 2009)

Borderline Personality Disorder (Medical Psychiatry Series) by Mary C. Zanarini (Hardcover – Sep 14, 2005)

Borderline (The Toni Barston) by Terri Breneman (Paperback – Aug 20, 2007)

The Treatment of the Borderline Patient: Applying Fairbairn’s Object Relations Theory in the Clinical Setting by David P. Celani (Hardcover – May 1993)

Personalities: Master Clinicians Confront the Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorders by Henk-Jan Dalewijk (Hardcover – Feb 28, 2001)

Sexual aversion an issue for borderline patients: new observation. (borderline personality disorder).(Adult Psychiatry): An article from: Clinical Psychiatry News by Bruce Jancin (Digital – Jun 1, 2005) – HTML

A Developmental Model of Borderline Personality Disorder: Understanding Variations in Course and Outcome by Patricia Hoffman Judd and Thomas H. McGlashan (Paperback – Oct 1, 2002)

Borderlines: Autobiography and Fiction in Postmodern Life Writing (Postmodern Studies 33) by Gunnthórunn Gudmundsdóttir (Paperback – Jun 2003)

An analogue investigation of the relationships among perceived parental criticism, negative affect, and borderline personality disorder features: the role … from: Behaviour Research and Therapy] by J.S. Cheavens, M. Zachary Rosenthal, and S. Daughters (Digital – Feb 1, 2005) – HTML

From Borderline Adolescent to Functioning Adult: The Test of Time by M.D. Masterson (Hardcover – Aug 1, 1980)

The Metaphor of Play by Russell Meares (Paperback – Sep 29, 2005)

PTSD/Borderlines in Therapy: Finding the Balance by Jerome Kroll (Hardcover – Jun 17, 1993)

Memory of childhood trauma before and after long-term psychological treatment of borderline personality disorder [An article from: Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry] by I.P. Kremers, A.E. Van Giezen, and A.J.W Van der Does (Digital – Mar 1, 2007) – HTML

BORDERLINE CONDITIONS AND PATHOLOGICAL NARCISSISM (Unknown Binding – Jan 1, 1975)

Becoming a Constant Object in Psychotherapy with the Borderline Patient by Charles P. Cohen (Paperback – Feb 28, 1996)

Split Self/Split Object: Understanding and Treating Borderline, Narcissistic, and Schizoid Disorders by Philip Manfield (Hardcover – Jun 1992)

Schema Therapy for Borderline Personality Disorder (Unknown Binding – Jan 1, 2009)

Mentalization: Theoretical Considerations, Research Findings, and Clinical Implications (Psychoanalytic Inquiry Book Series) by Fredric N Busch (Paperback – Feb 25, 2008)

Trauma reenactment: rethinking borderline personality disorder when diagnosing sexual abuse survivors.: An article from: Journal of Mental Health Counseling by Robyn L. Trippany, Heather M. Helm, and Laura Simpson (Digital – April 25, 2006) – HTML

Drug Tx for borderline personality disorder.(EVIDENCE-B… PSYCHIATRIC MEDICINE): An article from: Clinical Psychiatry News by Jan Leard-Hansson and Laurence Guttmacher (Digital – Sep 20, 2007) – HTML

Borderline personality disorder in mom predicts teen’s social problems.(News): An article from: Pediatric News by Sarah Pressman (Digital – April 3, 2007) – HTM

Key Papers on Borderline Disorders: With IJP Internet Discussion Reviews by Paul Williams (Paperback – May 2002)

Let Me Make It Good: A Chronicle of My Life With Borderline Personality Disorder by Jane Wanklin (Paperback – Jun 1997)

My Work With Borderline Patients (Master Work) by Harold F. Searles (Paperback – Oct 1994)

Borderline Personality Disorder: A Practitioner’s Guide to Comparative Treatments (Springer Series on Comparative Treatments for Psychological Disorders) by Arthur Freeman EdD ABPP, Mark H. Stone PsyD, and Donna Martin PsyD (Paperback – Jan 29, 2007)

Approach by Michael H. Langley (Hardcover – Jan 1994)

Eclipses: Behind the Borderline Personality Disorder by Melissa F. Thornton (Paperback – Nov 1997)

Borderline Personality Disorder: A Patient’s Guide to Taking Control by Arthur Freeman and Gina M. Fusco (Paperback – Nov 1, 2003)

Cognitive characteristics of patients with borderline personality disorder: Development and validation of a self-report inventory [An article from: Journal … Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry] by B. Renneberg, C. Schmidt-Rathjens, R. Hippin, and Back (Digital) – HTML

A Primer of Transference Focused Psychotherapy for the Borderline Patient by John F. Clarkin (Hardcover – Jun 28, 2002)

Cognitive Therapy of Borderline Personality Disorder (Psychology Practitioner Guidebooks) by Mary Anne Layden, Cory F., Ph.D. Newman, Arthur Freeman, and Susan Byers Morse (Paperback – Mar 28, 2002)

Psychotherapy for Borderline Personality by John F. Clarkin, Frank E. Yeomans, and Otto F. Kernberg (Hardcover – Dec 18, 1998)

Borderline Psychopathology and Its Treatment (Master Work) by Gerald Adler (Paperback – Oct 1994)

Psychotherapy of the Quiet Borderline Patient: The as-if Personality Revisited by Vance R. Sherwood (Hardcover – Aug 28, 1994)

Current and Historical Perspectives on Borderline Personality Disorder (Current Issues in Psychoanalytic Practice : Monographs of the Society for Psychoanalyst) by Fine (Hardcover – Oct 1, 1989)

Relationship Management of the Borderline Patient: From Understanding to Treatment by David Dawson (Hardcover – Jul 1, 1993)

Treating the borderline family: A systemic approach (Family therapy) (Unknown Binding – 1989)

The Borderline Personality: Vision and Healing by Nathan Schwartz-Salant (Paperback – Jun 1989)

Management of Countertransference with Borderline Patients by Glen O. Gabbard (Paperback – Feb 28, 2000)

Splitting, Protecting Yourself While Divorcing a Borderline or Narcissist by William Eddy (Paperback – 2004)

Understanding Borderline Personality Disorder (Co-occurring Disorders Series) (Co-occurring Disorders Series) by Juergen E. Korbanka (Paperback – April 15, 2004) – Import

Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Patients with Borderline Personality Disorder (American Psychiatric Association Practice Guidelines) (American Psychiatric Association Practice Guidelines,) by American Psychiatric Association (Paperback – Nov 2001)

Cognitive Analytic Therapy and Borderline Personality Disorder: The Model and the Method by Anthony Ryle

Imbroglio: Rising to the Challenges of Borderline Personality Disorder by Janice M. Cauwels (Hardcover – May 1992)

Borderline Personality Disorders: The Concept the Syndrome the Patient by Peter Hartocollis (Hardcover – Aug 1977)

Borderline Personality Disorder by John G. Gunderson (Hardcover – Nov 1984)

Borderline Disorders: Clinical Models and Techniques by Eda G. Goldstein (Hardcover – Oct 5, 1990)

Treating Borderline States in Marriage: Dealing with Oppositionalism, Ruthless Aggression, and Severe Resistance (The Library of Object Relations) by Charles C. McCormack (Hardcover – Feb 1, 2000)

The Angry Heart: An Interactive Self-Help Guide to Overcoming Borderline and Addictive Disorders by Joseph, Ph.D. Santoro (Hardcover – Jul 2001)

An Introduction to the Borderline Conditions by William N. Goldstein (Paperback – Jul 1997)

Borderline and Beyond, Workbook and Personal Journal, Revised by Laura Paxton (Paperback – Nov 21, 2001)

The Essential Family Guide to Borderline Personality Disorder: New Tools and Techniques to Stop Walking on Eggshells [ESSENTIAL FAMILY GT BORDERLINE] (Unknown Binding – Oct 31, 2008)

The Legacy of Abandonment In Borderline Personality Disorder by A.J. Mahari (Kindle Edition – Jan 5, 2007)

The Fate of Borderline Patients: Successful Outcome and Psychiatric Practice by Michael H. Stone MD (Hardcover – May 4, 1990)

Borderline Personality Disorder: Tailoring the Psychotherapy to the Patient by Glen O. Gabbard, Jon G. Allen, Siebolt H. Frieswyk, and Donald B. Colson (Hardcover – Jan 15, 1996)

Six Steps in the Treatment of Borderline Personality Organization (The Master Work Series) by Vamik D. Volkan (Paperback – Jun 1995)

Advances in Psychotherapy of the Borderline Patient by Joseph LeBoit and Attilio Capponi (Hardcover – Jul 1979)

Comparative Treatments for Borderline Personality Disorder (Springer Series on Comparative Treatments for Psychological Disorders) by Arthur Freeman EdD ABPP, Mark H. Stone PsyD, and Donna Martin PsyD (Hardcover – Nov 18, 2004)

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BLOGGER’S CHOICE

The Metaphor of Play by Russell Meares (Paperback – Sep 29, 2005)

Buy new: $35.95 $32.53

19 Used & new from $27.95

Usually ships in 9 to 12 days

Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping.

Other Editions: Kindle Edition, Hardcover, Paperback

Excerpt – page 3: “… of the disturbance was officially given a name – the borderline personality. The aim of this book is to show how …”

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Editorial Reviews

Review

In my Opinion The metaphor of play is a profoundly important book by one of the greatest contemporary thinkers and researchers in the field of psychotherapy.Dougal Steel, Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
Product Description
Personality disorder can be conceived as the result of a disruption of the development of self. This thoroughly updated edition of The Metaphor of Play examines how those who have suffered such disruption can be treated by understanding their sense of self and the fragility of their sense of existence.
Based on the Conversational Model, this book demonstrates that the play of a pre-school child, and a mental activity similar to it in the adult, is necessary to the growth of a healthy self. The three sections of the book: Development, Disruption and Amplification and Integration introduce such concepts as the expectational field, paradoxical restoration, reversal, value and fit, and coupling, amplification and representation.

This highly readable and lucid presentation of the role of play in the development of self will be of interest not only to therapists but also to those interested in the larger issues of mind and consciousness.

About the Author
Russell Meares is Emeritus Professor of Psychitary at the University of Sydney and leads a program at Westmead Hospital, Sydney for the treatment of, and research into, borderline personality.

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+EXPERTS LEAVE US KNOWING WE NEED ‘SOMETHING MORE’

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I would like to recommend (with the following reservations) the book

Surviving a Borderline Parent: How to Heal Your Childhood Wounds & Build Trust, Boundaries, and Self-Esteem by Kimberlee Roth, Freda B. Friedman, and Randi Kreger.

The authors have created a recovery tool for anyone exposed in childhood to the whims and rages of a parent with this form of mental illness.  The book is clearly divided into sections which cover NEARLY every topic of interest for those of us who had to endure childhoods under the care (or more likely the lack of care) of a parent whose mind never worked correctly.

Yet while the book carries within its pages hundreds of tips for working out our adult ‘issues’ created within this malevolent kind of childhood, it does not, in my opinion, speak to the single most important FACT that those of us who were raised from birth by parents – particularly mothers – who manifested the most severe ‘style’ of Borderline Personality Disorder known within the human species know instinctively about ourselves.

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This book, like most others except The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog: And Other Stories from a Child Psychiatrist’s Notebook Child Psychiatrist’s Notebook–What Traumatized Children Can Teach Us About Loss, Love, and Healing by Bruce Perry and Maia Szalavitz, does not discuss or present the very real brain development changes that occur as a result of an infant being raised in a truly malevolent environment.

I find that altered brain development is a completely ignored consequence of being raised by a severe Borderline parent.  I remain disappointed that the experts in the topic of working to recover a healthy self and a healthy life post-malevolent childhoods do not consider that for every word of their expert writing those of us who HAVE one of these altered brains read, we are still left ‘starving and alone’, bereft of the most important information we need in order to make use of the information all the experts are giving us.

No matter how helpful, how accurate, how comprehensive, how informed or how ‘scientifically based’ any Borderline Personality Disorder recovery book may intend to be, either for the BPD person or for their offspring, if altered brain development is not presented as THE SINGLE most significant consequence of a malevolent childhood, then the authors’ words are missing the point.

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Even though Roth, Friedman and Kreger at least mention insecure attachment disorders in their book, they do not develop the potential that exists within this one crucial sphere of thought to its REAL conclusion.  Insecure attachment patterns from birth, if they are not altered and improved by secure attachment patterns with other adequate early infant and childhood caregivers, result in the development of a changed brain.

These changed brains will NEVER process incoming information in the same way as a securely attached, benevolently formed brain will.  When this fact is ignored in any ‘self help’ book — which I might add currently includes ALL of them – the foundational brain of the person trying to make sense of the ‘help’ and apply it to themselves is left floating around without the information most needed in order to make improvements in their lives.

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This, to me, amounts to a situation similar to one in which instruction is given in how to drive a car safely without anyone ever acknowledging or addressing the single most important aspect of the task – one must not be completely sightless.  It’s like being instructed to build a modern day wood frame house while at the same time NOT being told that one must have something to measure with, cut the wood with, and drive the nails with.

In other words, every ‘self help’ book I have ever read, with the exception of those who specifically begin from the start by identifying the fundamental brain changes that result from infant and child development in a malevolent world, make major assumptions about their readership that leaves those of us with these changed brains flailing around in the dark.  We know from our insides that something is missing.  I am here to say the missing information is not due to any fault of ours.  The missing information is in the writing and work of the ‘experts’ who are presenting THEIR information while ignoring what some of us know absolutely to be true.

‘Un-ordinary’ infancies and childhoods create ‘un-ordinary’ brain-mind-bodies.  Those with severe Borderline Personality Disorder are among such people, and it is likely that without outside assistance during our childhoods that those of us raised by these BPD parents end up with ‘un-ordinary’ brains, as well.

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The tricky part of trying to locate, access and use information helpful to improving the quality of our lives is that those people with an ‘ordinary brain’ and those with an ‘un-ordinary’ brain might both be left needing to build the proverbial modern wood frame house.  The first have the box of tools, the second do not – and may well NEVER have them because the brain that was built inside their skulls from birth was simply not made to be an ‘ordinary brain’.

Yes, the brain is plastic and can accomplish incredible feats of adjustment.  But the fundamental brain regions, circuits, pathways and patterns of operation are built into the brain’s structure before the age of two.   These most fundamental aspects of a brain, once it has been built, cannot be changed in any fundamental way.  It would seem far more helpful to me to have experts tell me what these brain changes are, how to recognize how they affect me, and how to work most constructively in order to try to create a quality life in spite of them.

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Without information about my changed brain, I am left alone deep within a pitch dark cave without a source of light.  The ‘self help’ books can tell me what it’s like up there on the earth’s surface, but they do not describe where I am to start with, nor do they give me a single solitary clue how to find my way to the surface so that I can try to begin the journey they so helpfully describe for those who are already there.

Yet even if I do somehow miraculously make my way to the ‘ordinary surface’, my journey there would STILL be a far different one than ‘ordinary’ because of my brain-mind-body changes.  I would STILL be left trying to translate their helpful instructions about how to ‘drive safely’ even though I lack the sightedness these authors take completely for granted.  Where DOES this quandary leave me?  Let me ‘count the ways’ I know there’s a field on the surface that is not covered with daisies.

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I was raised from birth by a Narcissistic Psychotic Borderline.  At the same time I can say that my experiences were obviously an exception to the RULE, I can also say that this proves to me that what is considered to be the RULE is fallible.  Therefore in my thinking the RULE is not a RULE at all.  It is simply an assumption about brain formation based on what optimal caregiving environments produce.

Similar breaches of this RULE, as I experienced them, produced my mother’s changed brain during her own early development, as well.  Therefore, in my thinking, obviously the RULE cannot apply to my experience as all ‘self help’ authors seem to assume.

My mother and I, as exceptions to the RULE, must therefore exist in a world that operates under completely different rules, and we ended up with a brain-mind-body that resulted from our adaptations to this altered ‘un-ordinary’ world.  Because nobody tells me what these changes really ARE, I am left trying to figure them out for myself.

Most simply put, I do not receive ‘ordinary’ information in an ‘ordinary’ way.  From those beginnings, I do not process the ‘un-ordinary’ information I receive or act on it in an ‘ordinary’ way, either.  Just taking these simple facts into account, I cannot read any ‘self help’ book and make any ‘ordinary’ sense out of it unless I understand that those books are not addressing the altered reality that I was forced to grow up adjusting to.

Let me give you a few examples.  Because from the time I was born I had no way to count on a ‘good mother’ appearing in response to my infant needs, my brain’s processing systems had to expand themselves to accept that incoherent malevolent chaos was just as equally likely to respond to ME as was coherent benevolent niceness.   Well before the age of three months my brain would already have changed from ‘ordinary optimal’ development as a consequence.

When an infant ordinarily needs something and that something is out-of-sight, it can ordinarily begin to form brain circuits that allow it to WAIT HOPEFULLY because it can TRUST that its caregiver is going to return to take care of it.  If incoherent malevolent chaos is just as likely to appear as the alternative, it seems perfectly obvious to me that this tiny forming brain is not going to have the ‘ordinary’ experiences required to build an ‘ordinary’ brain – from the start.

Most simply put, because my mother lacked the capacity to respond to me as my own self, nothing inside of me was able to respond back to her from my own internal ‘self place’.  I simply have what I can most clearly describe as blank spots in my brain where ‘ordinary’ patterns and circuits were supposed to develop.  As a consequence I am NOT an ‘ordinary’ person and never will be, no matter what good use I try to make out of information contained in expert self help books.

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As a result of my development within the malevolent conditions my mother was just as likely to provide for me as her periodic – and undependable – benevolent conditions, my brain did not build within itself any ‘ordinary’ potential to process human interactions.  This is a complicated condition that I will not cover in detail here.  But I will say here that as a consequence, my right brain did not grow to include ‘ordinary’ processing of social or emotional information.  Its connection with information in my body is different.

Once the major development of the right brain is completed before the age of one, it is time for the left brain to begin going through its major developmental stages.  Under extreme malevolent conditions, there is no way that the left brain can develop ‘ordinarily’, either.  It is not possible for the corpus coliseum, the region of the brain that transfers information between the right and left brain for processing, to develop ‘ordinarily’, either.

That’s just the very earliest beginnings of what I know about changes in my own (and my mother’s) brain development.  We could move on in our understanding of how the development of an infant’s left brain ‘happy’ center’s neurons are affected, how the ability to process social cues is affected, how the brain’s ability to form understandings about trust and hope is affected, how the brain’s neurological information processing about the self is affected, and about how all aspects of communication from the molecular to the verbal are affected as a result of a brain’s ability to adapt a human being’s development to and under malevolent environmental conditions.

There is absolutely no way that the higher functioning cortical areas develop in any ‘ordinary’ fashion, either.  As a result, future planning, decision making, and the ability to understand consequences with cognitive flexibility are affected.

I personally know that my brain does not even process the fundamental concept of TIME in an ordinary way.  Yet I am even here only describing the proverbial ‘tip of the iceberg’ of how extreme early infant and child abuse changes the fundamental ways a survivor’s brain-mind-body changes.

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In other words, even if we take every single expert self help book and put them together in one volume, the OTHER volume that some of us most need to read simply does not exist – yet.  We are left trying to find a fit for ourselves as we attempt to understand ourselves in relation to the more ‘ordinary’ world we were hatched into as adults.

I’m not saying that we can’t make good use of information found in books that do not recognize our ‘un-ordinary’ reality or what our changed brains are really like.  I’m simply making a point that no matter how hard these self help books might try to help us a create a more ‘ordinary’ life, they are evidently unable to address the specifics of what actually happened to some of us.

For any of us who have ever had the attempted-recovery-based feeling of “YES, but……..  “ when we try to apply what seems to make sense to everyone else but not QUITE to us, we are absolutely correct!!  There IS something missing – but the trouble is NOT with us.  The trouble is that what happened to us has yet to be truly recognized for what it is – the creation of ‘un-ordinary’ individuals who were able to adapt physiologically on our most fundamental levels to endure unimaginably malevolent early developmental conditions.

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We are truly extraordinary people, and it evidently remains for us to identify and describe exactly what that means!!  Nobody else seems able to do that for us!

We don’t have to look beyond ourselves to know what living with a changed brain is like.  We’ve made that quantum leap in understanding.  We were forced to, or we would not have survived the malevolent world we developed in.

The rest of the ‘expert’ world just has to catch up with us.  We know what we are talking about.  We are our own living proof!

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+SHEER DETERMINATION OF HOMESTEADING

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This link is to a letter my mother wrote to ‘people’ who she believed were denying the fact that we were living on the homestead for our required period of time to receive title to the land in December 1959:

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*Age 8 – Homesteading – On the Edge of Madness

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+BORDERLINE PERSONALITY DISORDER – LEARNING ABOUT MY MOTHER’S BRAIN-MIND

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Several years ago when I first began research for my writing I had no intention of focusing on Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD).  The more I work with the transcription of my mother’s Alaskan homesteading letters, the more I realize that it is impossible for me to avoid the subject.

According to the statistics at the bottom of this post, approximately 1 in 50 adult Americans suffer from BPD disorder.  If I think about how BPD affects our population, I realize that the offspring of these people are severely affected.  From that ‘contagion’ the grandchildren on down are affected, as well as every person intimately (and even not so intimately) connected to the BPD person.

My mother’s letter that I present here is simply another tiny slice of the words she expressed from within her own psyche, from within her own perspective of the world.  Having been her abused child for 18 years, I can read a universe of twisted darkness not only behind the words she chooses to write, but in all the spaces between those words and between those lines.

Taken together, my mother’s letters (once I have completed transcription of them) has the possibility of being the single most comprehensive ‘case history’ of a severe Borderline Personality Disorder person ever collected.

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My mother intended to write her book about her story — her way.  She could not do it.  I believe her true story is ABOUT the mental illness that kept her from doing so.  In her September 26, 1959 letter to her mother she states:

“Please now send back all letters and this – it’s my only record and I’m determined – a book I will write!!  — I will — !!”

This letter this sentence is taken from is longer and perhaps sheds more light on her psyche than does the one I post below, and is well worth reading.  It can be found at:

*September 1959 Mother’s Letters

I cannot personally imagine any scenario in which a BPD parent can be a truly adequate parent.  I see that all such a parent’s offspring are in danger of being used in the twisted inner psychic reality world that the Borderline condition creates — used as pawns and props of an externalized psyche of a parent that has no idea what “ordinary” reality is.  These children will not be recognized as the individual actual people that they are, and will not be related to as such by their BPD parent.

Nor do I believe that Borderlines as severe as my mother was ever have the capacity to understand “ordinary” people or reality — ever.  It is an admirable effort should these people seek therapy and desire to change — and some progress might be able to be made IN THE DIRECTION of ordinary — but they will never get there.

BPD individuals do not have “ordinary” brains.  Part of their condition is that they will NEVER understand how different their thinking and acting is.  From the outside — such as from the position of readers of my mother’s letters — the difference in their thinking is almost imperceptible.

But it IS there.  Hopefully by the time I complete the job of transcribing my mother’s letters I will be able to CLEARLY pinpoint and point to examples that will make these differences as clear as possible.  In addition we can more clearly discern the insecure disorganized-disoriented insecure attachment disorder that lies at the root of the Borderline Personality Disorder’s condition.

So how do those of us who had such a parent, usually a mother, begin to untangle for ourselves the twisted childhood that has confused us at our basis from the time we were born?  I urge readers to take a long, close, hard, thoughtful look at these letters my mother wrote, both the one copied here below and the one at the end of the link to the September 1959 letters provided above.

But most importantly, pay attention to your body as you read them, particularly to your gut. Note any sensation that your body, through your right emotional brain sends you — not what your left brain very limited logical side might wish to convince you is real.

We also have hosts of cultural admonishments not to ‘think badly’ about other people.  I learned a long time ago that by looking for the truth about my mother I am NOT judging her.  I am trying to understand the devastatingly cunning and destructive mental illness that consumed her, and therefore her life.  My mother’s was an insidious disease.  My mission-possible is to offer some small insight into how to recognize both the conditions that contributed to its onset (almost always through childhood traumas) and the damage that it does particularly to the BPD’s offspring — especially to THE CHOSEN ONE for abuse such as I was.

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October 22, 1959 7:15 PM

Dear Mother,

Just a short ‘Hi’.  Bill is only working 10 hours now and I’ve been getting children’s meals and then he arrives and another meal to get so – tonite I’m waiting for HIM – so thought I’d write a note while waiting.

Just read your long letter – so nice and informative and interesting.  It’s funny how things work out.  Now you’re $ tight and we got that loan and can start paying you back.  Thank God.  We are watched over – for certain, for certain.

We’re tight too and eat beans and potatoes (Carrs gave us 100 pounds) but at least we can keep those D – vehicles.

I just finally got truck started.  All week it wouldn’t run but today it’s warmed up and now it’s raining and then will freeze!!!

Anyways went to garage to see about jeep and called Bill at work and he talked to mechanic.  I’ll know when he gets home.  It will cost but we’ve GOT to get it fixed.

Took truck up to get Linda at Brownies and J. at Cub Scouts.  I feel they need that.  {Linda note:  Brownies didn’t last long in my life, but it was at least something positive while it did.}

Those D – Vanover boys still don’t like J. and Julie came over and told him and that they say “none of the boys like him” and did I tell her.  I told her.  I told her they don’t even know HIM or his friends etc. etc. and I told her they were impolite and unmannerly to say such a thing and I knew plenty who didn’t like them!  [Linda note:  Chuckle!  Oh, great mom!  Look who’s talking!]

He felt terrible but I felt worse.  [Linda note:  That sucks having a mother like ours was!  She could only care about herself!] He must play baseball, ice skate, ski etc.  He MUST – we need $ for those things.

Oh Mom, it’s not easy to be a child – or a Mother.

They got report cards.  Linda got all B’s, J. got D in spelling and otherwise B’s.  I can’t understand it and wrote her a note about it.  She said when I visited school it was his arithmetic and he got C+ in that and all other B’s.  I’ll drill him now in that too!

Work work work

I worry over our 2 months [proving up time on the homestead].  Our neighbors – Pottle, Gunter etc. say “Who will know?”  Oh, I hate that.

I say We Know!  We’re Honest.

Spring is not good, roads are impassable – mud and all.  Remember?  Must be Nov, Jan, Feb or 2 of these.  Unless you come up in March and April.  I hate to depend on that.

Still no children – just Gracie.  I don’t feel she’s good publicity.  [Linda note:  Terrible thing to say about the “artist’s retarded daughter” in her Happy Time Nursery School, and read below!]

She’s a moron but easy for me!  She does say 20 words, plays dolls etc. ? But what do others think?

Oh Mom – I want a home and to live like other people.  I’m tired of all this mixed up MESS.

Tell C and C ‘Hi’ I’ll write Carolyn this week.

You come up in March and April and I’ll go back with you for a month – kids get out of school May 15th.  I could — ?  Love, Your Loving Daughter

+++ [in same envelope – says Friday]

Dear Mom,

Enclosing your scarf – I never wear it.  It just looks like YOU – please wear it again.

Also Bill forgot your letter so you’ll get 2.

No new news!  It’s rainy today.

I’m going to try and take children out of school for 2 months.

Seriously could you come up for 2 months or would it completely throw you?

Jo Anne just was over – told me not to tell a soul – nobody – just sold 80 acres he homesteaded in Mountain View for 150,000.

Imagine!

But Jerry got 3 F’s and is on 3 week trial.

Oh Mom – she’s so interested in our place I’m suspicious and sick until I get back [there]!!!  Love, Me

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The rest of October 1959 letters here:

*October 1959 Mother’s Letters

The rest of the 1959 letters here:

*1959 MOTHER LETTERS

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Prevalence and incidence statistics for Borderline Personality Disorder:

See also prevalence and incidence page for Borderline Personality Disorder

Prevalance of Borderline Personality Disorder: 2 percent of adults (NIMH)

Prevalance Rate: approx 1 in 50 or 2.00% or 5.4 million people in USA [about data]

Incidence (annual) of Borderline Personality Disorder: 3,019 annual cases in Victora 1996 (DHS-VIC)

Incidence Rate: approx 1 in 1,510 or 0.07% or 180,074 people in USA [about data]

Incidence extrapolations for USA for Borderline Personality Disorder: 180,074 per year, 15,006 per month, 3,462 per week, 493 per day, 20 per hour, 0 per minute, 0 per second. Note: this extrapolation calculation uses the incidence statistic: 3,019 annual cases in Victora 1996 (DHS-VIC)

Prevalance of Borderline Personality Disorder: BPD is more common, affecting 2 percent of adults, mostly young women. (Source: excerpt from Borderline Personality Disorder: NIMH)

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