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The Golden Child and the Scapegoat in Borderline Families

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The Golden Child and the Scapegoat in Borderline Families

The Golden Child and the Scapegoat in Borderline Families — Annie Wright trauma therapy

The Golden Child and the Scapegoat in Borderline Families

SUMMARY

In borderline families, children are often assigned rigid roles — the golden child who can do no wrong, and the scapegoat who’s blamed for everything — as a direct result of the parent’s splitting. Both roles carry significant psychological costs: the golden child often struggles with perfectionism and a fragile sense of worth, while the scapegoat carries chronic shame and a belief that they’re fundamentally flawed. Healing requires recognizing that neither role reflects your actual worth — they reflect your parent’s disorder.

Two Sisters, One Household, Two Completely Different Childhoods

DEFINITION
SPLITTING

Splitting is a cognitive distortion common in BPD where a person can’t hold opposing thoughts or feelings simultaneously. They view people, situations, and themselves in absolute, black-and-white terms: all-good or all-bad. In a family system, the borderline parent externalizes this split onto their children — designating one as the idealized repository for all good, and another as the receptacle for all shame.

In plain terms: One child can do nothing wrong. One child can do nothing right. And neither role has anything to do with who either child actually is.

Lauren, thirty-four, was a marketing director in Los Angeles. Kate, thirty-one, was a freelance graphic designer who struggled with chronic depression. They came to therapy together, at Lauren’s insistence, because they hadn’t spoken in two years.

“I don’t understand why she’s so angry at our mother,” Lauren said in our first joint session, looking at her sister with a mixture of pity and frustration. “Mom did everything for us. She sacrificed everything. Yes, she was emotional sometimes, but Kate just deliberately provoked her. Kate was always the difficult one.”

Kate stared at the floor. “I wasn’t difficult,” she said quietly. “I was just the one she decided to hate.”

Their mother had undiagnosed BPD. Lauren and Kate weren’t describing a difference in perception; they were describing a difference in reality. They had grown up in the same house, with the same mother, but they had experienced entirely different childhoods. Lauren was the Golden Child. Kate was the Scapegoat.

To understand why a parent would treat their children so differently, you have to understand the borderline defense mechanism of splitting.

The borderline parent is overwhelmed by their own internal chaos, shame, and fear of abandonment. To manage this, they project their internal split onto their external environment — specifically, onto their children.

They need one child to be the repository for all their hope, perfection, and idealized love (The Golden Child). And they need another child to be the repository for all their shame, anger, and perceived failures (The Scapegoat).

DEFINITION
TRIANGULATION

Triangulation is a manipulation tactic in which a person uses a third party — a sibling, extended family member, or friend — to communicate, control, or create conflict, rather than engaging directly. In borderline families, the parent triangulates to pit children against each other, consolidate their own power, and prevent siblings from forming alliances.

In plain terms: Instead of telling you directly that she’s angry, she tells your brother. Instead of addressing the conflict with you, she tells your aunt you’ve been cruel. The triangle keeps both children isolated and competing — and keeps the parent at the center.

The Golden Child: The Burden of Perfection

From the outside, the Golden Child appears to be the lucky one. They receive the praise, the resources, and the parent’s fierce, protective loyalty. The borderline parent views the Golden Child as an extension of their own idealized self.

But being the Golden Child in a borderline family isn’t a privilege; it’s a different kind of harm.

The Golden Child’s trauma is the trauma of enmeshment and conditional love.

The Erasure of Identity: The Golden Child isn’t loved for who they actually are. They’re loved for how well they reflect the parent’s idealized image. If the Golden Child expresses a need, an opinion, or a flaw that contradicts that image, the parent’s love is immediately threatened.

The Burden of Regulation: The Golden Child is often implicitly tasked with keeping the borderline parent emotionally stable. They learn that their perfection is the only thing keeping the parent from collapsing.

The Guilt: The Golden Child watches the Scapegoat being treated badly and knows, on some level, that their own safety depends on the Scapegoat taking the hit. This creates profound survivor’s guilt.

“I knew Mom was awful to Kate,” Lauren admitted in a later session. “But I was so terrified that if I defended Kate, Mom would turn that rage on me. So I just stayed quiet. I stayed perfect. And I hated myself for it.”

The Scapegoat: The Receptacle for Shame

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The Scapegoat is the child chosen to carry the family’s dysfunction. The borderline parent projects all of their own unacknowledged shame, anger, and inadequacy onto this child.

If the parent is unhappy, it’s the Scapegoat’s fault. If the family is stressed, it’s because the Scapegoat is “difficult,” “rebellious,” or “broken.”

The Scapegoat’s trauma is the trauma of rejection and chronic invalidation.

The Truth-Teller: Ironically, the Scapegoat is often the most psychologically healthy person in the family system. They’re usually the one who points out the dysfunction, refuses to comply with the delusion, or demands authenticity. Because they threaten the family’s denial, they must be punished.

The Internalization of Badness: When the person who’s supposed to love you most tells you every day that you’re fundamentally flawed, you eventually believe them. The Scapegoat often struggles with severe depression, anxiety, and a deep-seated belief that they’re unlovable.

The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy: Because they’re constantly accused of being bad, the Scapegoat may eventually act out, fulfilling the role the parent assigned them. If I’m going to be punished anyway, I might as well commit the crime.

“It didn’t matter what I did,” Kate said. “If I got an A, she said I cheated. If I cleaned the kitchen, she said I did it wrong just to spite her. I was the garbage can for all of her bad feelings.”

“Do not cringe and make yourself small if you are called the black sheep, the maverick, the lone wolf. Those with slow seeing say a nonconformist is a blight on society. But it has been proven over and over again that being different means standing at the edge, means one is practically guaranteed to make an original contribution, a useful and beautiful contribution to her culture.”

— Clarissa Pinkola Estés, PhD, Women Who Run With the Wolves

— Clarissa Pinkola Estés

The “Lost Child” and the “Mascot”

In larger families, the borderline parent may assign additional roles to manage the system.

The Lost Child: This child survives by becoming invisible. They stay in their room, make no demands, and try to avoid the parent’s radar entirely. They escape the direct harm of the Scapegoat and the enmeshment of the Golden Child, but they suffer the profound trauma of severe emotional neglect.

The Mascot (or Clown): This child survives by using humor to de-escalate the parent’s dysregulation. They’re the comic relief, constantly trying to distract the parent from their rage or despair.

The Switch: When the Golden Child Falls

One of the most terrifying aspects of the borderline family system is that the roles aren’t permanent. Because the roles are based on the parent’s internal splitting — not the children’s actual behavior — the roles can switch in an instant.

If the Golden Child attempts to individuate — by going to college, getting married, or setting a limit — the borderline parent’s abandonment terror is triggered. The parent will instantly split the Golden Child “all-bad.”

The Golden Child is suddenly cast out of the kingdom and becomes the new Scapegoat.

Simultaneously, the parent may “hoover” the original Scapegoat, suddenly showering them with the praise and affection they’ve craved their entire lives, elevating them to the new Golden Child.

This switch is profoundly destabilizing. It proves to both children that the parent’s love is entirely conditional, arbitrary, and dangerous.

The Destruction of Sibling Bonds

The most tragic casualty of the Golden Child/Scapegoat dynamic is the relationship between the siblings.

The borderline parent actively pits the children against each other. They use triangulation — communicating through a third party rather than directly — to sow distrust. They complain to the Golden Child about the Scapegoat, and they compare the Scapegoat unfavorably to the Golden Child.

This creates an environment of intense competition for the scarce resource of the parent’s approval. The siblings can’t ally with each other, because doing so would threaten their own survival in the system.

By the time they reach adulthood, the siblings often have entirely different narratives of their childhood, leading to profound estrangement. The Golden Child thinks the Scapegoat is crazy and ungrateful; the Scapegoat thinks the Golden Child is complicit and delusional.

Healing the Divide in Adulthood

Healing the sibling relationship in adulthood requires both parties to step outside the roles they were assigned and recognize the true source of the dysfunction.

For the Golden Child: You must dismantle the delusion that your childhood was “good.” You must recognize that you were not loved for who you are, but for what you provided. You must validate the Scapegoat’s reality and take responsibility for the times you were complicit in their harm to protect yourself.

For the Scapegoat: You must recognize that the Golden Child was also harmed, just in a different way. You must dismantle the belief that you’re fundamentally flawed, and recognize that you were simply the designated receptacle for your parent’s illness.

For Lauren and Kate, the breakthrough came when Lauren finally stopped defending their mother.

“I’m sorry,” Lauren told Kate in our sixth session. “I’m so sorry I didn’t protect you. I was just so scared of her.”

Kate wept. It was the first time in her life that anyone in her family had validated her reality.

Professional Support and Next Steps

Untangling the roles assigned by a borderline parent is complex work. It requires dismantling your foundational understanding of your family and your own identity.

When seeking a therapist, look for someone who understands family systems theory and the specific dynamics of Cluster B personality disorders, can help you differentiate your authentic self from the role you were forced to play, and if doing sibling therapy, can maintain neutrality and prevent the therapy room from recreating the triangulation of your childhood. You can explore therapy with Annie or reach out to connect.

If you’re the Scapegoat, I want you to know this: You were never the problem. You were the mirror that reflected the problem, and they punished you for what they saw.

If you’re the Golden Child, I want you to know this: You’re allowed to be imperfect. You’re allowed to step off the pedestal. You’re allowed to be real.

Warmly, Annie

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

You were the “good” child growing up — praised, protected, trusted — but something about it always felt like a trap. Was it?
Because golden child status in a borderline family isn’t love — it’s conditional enmeshment. You weren’t valued for who you are; you were valued for how well you reflected the parent’s idealized image. The hollowness is real: it’s the felt sense of being loved for a performance rather than a person. That’s a real AND significant wound, even if it doesn’t look like one from the outside.

You were constantly blamed, criticized, and told you were the “difficult” one — and part of you still believes it. How do you undo that?
What you’re carrying is not truth — it’s the internalized projection of a parent who needed somewhere to put their own shame. The scapegoat often carries the deepest self-doubt of anyone in the system, AND they are often the most perceptive, the most reality-grounded, the most honest. The shame that feels like yours was never yours to begin with. Therapy helps you return it.

Your sibling had a completely different experience of your childhood — and now you can’t even agree on what happened. Why does that happen?
Yes, and the story of Lauren and Kate is one example of how. Reconciliation requires both parties to step outside their assigned roles, validate each other’s experiences, and trace the dysfunction back to its actual source. This work is hard, and it often requires a skilled therapist who can hold the complexity without recreating the triangulation of the original family system.

Can the golden child and scapegoat roles switch — and what does that feel like?
Yes — and it’s one of the most destabilizing features of borderline family dynamics. Because the roles are driven by the parent’s emotional state rather than the child’s actual behavior, they can flip overnight. A golden child who sets a limit suddenly becomes the scapegoat. The original scapegoat is elevated. The switch proves to both children that the parent’s love is entirely conditional and not safe.

You watched your sibling get hurt and did nothing. The guilt has followed you for years. What do you do with that?
That guilt is real, AND it needs context. You were a child in a terrifying system, doing what you had to do to survive. The cost of protecting your sibling was your own safety — and a child shouldn’t have to make that calculation. The work isn’t to absolve yourself of all responsibility; it’s to recognize that the responsibility ultimately belongs to the parent who created the system in the first place.
RESOURCES & REFERENCES

  1. Kernberg, Otto F. Borderline Conditions and Pathological Narcissism. Jason Aronson, 1975.
  2. Lawson, Christine Ann. Understanding the Borderline Mother. Jason Aronson, 2000.
  3. Walker, Pete. Complex PTSD: From Surviving to Thriving. Azure Coyote, 2013.
  4. van der Kolk, Bessel. The Body Keeps the Score. Viking, 2014.
  5. Herman, Judith. Trauma and Recovery. Basic Books, 1992.

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Annie Wright, LMFT

About the Author

Annie Wright

LMFT  ·  Relational Trauma Specialist  ·  W.W. Norton Author

Helping ambitious women finally feel as good as their résumé looks.

As a licensed psychotherapist, trauma-informed executive coach, and relational trauma specialist with over 15,000 clinical hours, she guides ambitious women — including Silicon Valley leaders, physicians, and entrepreneurs — in repairing the psychological foundations beneath their impressive lives. Annie is the founder and former CEO of Evergreen Counseling, a multimillion-dollar trauma-informed therapy center she built, scaled, and successfully exited. A regular contributor to Psychology Today, her expert commentary has appeared in Forbes, Business Insider, Inc., NBC, and The Information. She is currently writing her first book with W.W. Norton.

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Annie Wright, LMFT

Annie Wright

LMFT · 15,000+ Clinical Hours · W.W. Norton Author · Psychology Today Columnist

Annie Wright is a licensed psychotherapist, relational trauma specialist, and the founder and successfully exited CEO of a large California trauma-informed therapy center. A W.W. Norton published author, she writes the weekly Substack Strong & Stable and her work and expert opinions have appeared in NPR, NBC, Forbes, Business Insider, The Boston Globe, and The Information.

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