Q. I left my husband when my daughter was 7 and my son was 4. We had lived in a
rural setting. After 3 years my ex remarried and moved his new wife into our
former home. Her two children occupied the former bedrooms of my children.
My ex saw the children very really (almost never) and when I finally moved
an hour away, he stopped seeing them altogether. Also, he stopped sending
child support and I had to go to court several times regarding this. There
was no alimony in PA, where I had lived previously and I worked full time to
support myself and the children, pay medical bills and all the other bills
that a head of a household would incur. We didn't have family or any other
support system other than my seeing a therapist for emotional support. I
tried therapy with my children, too. My daughter is a BPD and now 38,
married with one child and I hope in some sort of recovery with a therapist.
She is a very classic case but thank god no drugs or alcohol to any great
extent. My concern, for many years, is the power that she seems to have over
her brother. She is extremely manipulative and when he was fifteen and very
needy she started filling his head with ideas of leaving home and he became
hostile toward me. She left home at 17 after several years of chaotic
behavior that just about destroyed our family. My son was always a great kid
but he suddenly quit his job and started hanging around with the wrong
people. He eventually moved in with her after she won a settlement from one
of her many car (as passenger) accidents. My son is now 35 and according to
a very nasty letter she just wrote me, is suffering from depression. My son
is homosexual and I have known this since he was sixteen and have accepted
this fact and embraced him and his honesty about it. My children have been
very abusive toward me (although we've had some good years, too) and I
haven't seen my son in six years. He walked out of our home in a big angry,
nasty, huff after he told us he declared bankruptcy and quit his job. This
was not the first angry display. I haven't seen my daughter in 21/2 years.
My husband of sixteen years and I have tried to be supportive to both my
children and even offering education and therapy. My big question is: Could
my daughter possibly have influenced and manipulated my son's view of me and
life (over the years) to the point that he now has traits of or could be a
BPD? I know that a few years ago he was diagnosed as co-dependent, if that
means anything. When I have been with them together I've noticed that he
hardly speaks for himself. It's as if he had become an appendage of her. I
know that my daughter has said some very heavy duty, nasty things about me
over the years and I've seen my son's attitude toward me change drastically.
I have made a success of my life in many, many ways. I am sorry to say that
I can't include raising children to be giving members of society.

A. I'm sorry to hear of your situation. Unfortunately, your situation is far
too complex for me to even guess as to the hows and whys of what may have
transpired between your daughter and son. Regardless of any reasons, it
sounds from your description that you may want to work on improving your
relationship with your son. Spending time with him and developing an adult
relationship with him will likely be the only thing that will offset any
ideas or beliefs that may have been instilled in him. It will take a long
time to re-develop a relationship. Be patient. Keep trying.
