An Empty Plate


In 1993 I attended a Psychiatric day program facility on the west coast. I was suicidal. I wondered how I could love my own children when my mother couldn't love me. I wouldn't allow myself to recognize that I adored my children beyond comprehension, because my parents had no feelings for me.
 
I was a brilliant wreckage. At the program intake, I was told, "But you don't LOOK depressed." My nails were polished, my makeup skillfully applied and my outfit coordinated down to the socks. I was the perfect, intact image on the outside of the puzzle box; on the inside, I was a heap of detached, disjointed puzzle pieces. I succeeded in decorating the exterior of a soul that was decimated and demolished by a mother whose demons went unchecked. She suffered the same fate as I did, yet lacked the insight and inclination to break the cycle. She was the epitome of Borderline Personality Disorder. What a heinous legacy.

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