Title: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: guy4caligirl on April 24, 2015, 10:38:19 AM I wonder if they really do ! That's why I am asking ?
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: newlifeBPDfree on April 24, 2015, 10:58:47 AM I feel like their heart os broken all the time... .
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: dagwoodbowser on April 24, 2015, 10:59:04 AM In a way I can understand why some people would wonder about this. I think we are all Damaged in one way or another and experience emotions such as joy, sadness, anger or disapointment at different levels of timing and intensity. I am not an expert, a shrink or psychologist, but I am Human. My BPDx was also human. As I came to know her she divulged much of the terrible abuse(including sexual molestation) and neglect from childhood.
I didnt live inside her head but I know that there were moments that she felt pain, joy and in her own dysfunctional way expressed and felt Love. However, these strong emotions are all over the map moment to moment, day to day. There could be an entire day I would imagine where they feel, crave and want Love but once they have a fairly good dose of it they pull away onto something else. Much like an infant who is being breast fed, that moment they are hungry they are all about mom and that breast. Once filled and stuffed (at least for a few hours) that breast no longer matters. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: leftconfused on April 24, 2015, 11:19:16 AM I struggle with this as well. Mine fell in love with me quickly. He told me I was the best thing that ever happened to him, I was everything he ever wanted in a woman. He never felt this way about anyone before, not even his ex wife. then a few months later telling me he wasn't in love with me anymore and we just weren't meant to be. UH WHAT? That was when I knew for sure something wasn't right. Love just doesn't go away like that. We continued to see each off and on for months a few times he would tell me he did love me, but then turn around and say he doesn't remember saying it. For me personally, I think they experience infatuation and have a idealized view of what love and a relationship should look like and when the newness wears off there is nothing there. I am not sure they experience what we know to be real love.
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: dobie on April 24, 2015, 11:59:16 AM Mine only ever got dumped once and it was a bf with a gf which my x new about
In her words she was devastated because she had no one else at the time not because of him (family , friends support ) Next one cheated on her so she left him for another man and couldn't understand why he was so upset The man she left him for she picked because he was a nice guy and secure spent three years with him even though she stopped fancying him after two weeks and stayed only to finish her degree met me while she was with him and I had a gf pursued me and left him Its not my ego when I say I was the closest r/s to love she has ever had and the longest 6 years But her heart broken lol no! Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: McGahee21 on April 24, 2015, 12:02:35 PM i think they experience love, but for selfish reasons. ie, the great need to be loved, and appreciated is what motivates there action towards you. its not really about u, but there emotional need. notice a BPD gets cold when you start to talk about whats going on in your life and lights up when you say and do things for them.
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: cosmonaut on April 24, 2015, 01:18:05 PM This has to be one of the most common and one of the most controversial questions on the Leaving board, because it is so fundamental to know if we were loved or not. Was it real? Were we used?
Here's what I believe, and I will reinforce that this is a belief: we were loved. I can't prove this, but it can't also be proven that we weren't. Ultimately, each of us will have to decide that question for ourselves. Why do I believe I was loved? Because I don't believe that certain aspects of the relationship could be faked. I felt the way that my ex kissed me in a deeply passionate and tender way. It wasn't hot or seductive. It was warm and heartfelt. I felt the way she would nestle her head into my chest and the peaceful way she slept beside me. I heard the fear and worry in her voice pleading for me to call her the one time I gave her the silent treatment and she was terrified that something had happened to me. I saw how she listening and empathized with me when I was going through a difficult time myself. I felt her give me the most amazing back rubs after a long day at work. I saw the tears and pain in her face when I said something very hurtful to her about us, something I deeply regret. I felt her forgiveness of that too. All of these and so much more have me convinced that this was very real. It just wasn't sustainable. She couldn't tolerate it long term, not because it was an act, but because it wasn't an act. There was very real emotion involved, and that for her is overwhelming. Eventually, it was more than she could take, and in a very resigned way she just gave up. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: lm911 on April 24, 2015, 02:05:35 PM They loved us, they just can't sustain it for long time. As simple as that. All their emotions are intesive - like love. They love very much and hate very much.
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Blimblam on April 24, 2015, 02:40:05 PM What ever "love," is a pwBPD falls into it within the context of their reality. So yes it is very real the contempt was very real too. All of it was real within the context of their own narrative.
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: cosmonaut on April 24, 2015, 09:08:21 PM That must be the sweetest I've heard about BPD EXGF, , I believe your case is rare , I wish you the best . In some ways she is a very unusual pwBPD, and in other ways she is so very BPD. She's a wonderful and very special person to me - just a disordered one. I wish you the best too. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: guy4caligirl on April 24, 2015, 09:14:58 PM What ever "love," is a pwBPD falls into it within the context of their reality. So yes it is very real the contempt was very real too. All of it was real within the context of their own narrative. BlimBlam , can you rephrase what you wrote in easier English Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Blimblam on April 24, 2015, 10:11:52 PM What ever "love," is a pwBPD falls into it within the context of their reality. So yes it is very real the contempt was very real too. All of it was real within the context of their own narrative. BlimBlam , can you rephrase what you wrote in easier English Sorry, I have poor grammar and a lot of typos often. Emotions are emotions and they are just as real to a pwBPD as they are to a "non." Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: confusedinWI on April 24, 2015, 10:21:20 PM This has to be one of the most common and one of the most controversial questions on the Leaving board, because it is so fundamental to know if we were loved or not. Was it real? Were we used? Here's what I believe, and I will reinforce that this is a belief: we were loved. I can't prove this, but it can't also be proven that we weren't. Ultimately, each of us will have to decide that question for ourselves. Why do I believe I was loved? Because I don't believe that certain aspects of the relationship could be faked. I felt the way that my ex kissed me in a deeply passionate and tender way. It wasn't hot or seductive. It was warm and heartfelt. I felt the way she would nestle her head into my chest and the peaceful way she slept beside me. I heard the fear and worry in her voice pleading for me to call her the one time I gave her the silent treatment and she was terrified that something had happened to me. I saw how she listening and empathized with me when I was going through a difficult time myself. I felt her give me the most amazing back rubs after a long day at work. I saw the tears and pain in her face when I said something very hurtful to her about us, something I deeply regret. I felt her forgiveness of that too. All of these and so much more have me convinced that this was very real. It just wasn't sustainable. She couldn't tolerate it long term, not because it was an act, but because it wasn't an act. There was very real emotion involved, and that for her is overwhelming. Eventually, it was more than she could take, and in a very resigned way she just gave up. Wow I'm two months out from the end of my two year with my ex gf and I wonder this. The way you talked about the cuddling at night made me cry. Yes I miss what others say the passionate sex etc but right now as my kids are sleeping this is what I'm missing. I did find out thru a friend that she is already dating again after less than two months. New guy is a total downgrade. Just kills me we dated two years lived together seven months and now I'm just a distant memory. She would spoon me in a way that physically calmed me down and calmed her down... .how she just threw me away and my kids that she said she loved. The kids lived with us three nights a week. Now we are nothing. Ugh. I had to move in with my parents and she's in the apartment we shared. I thought she was the love I waited for. I had a marriage that wasn't fulfilling. My ex gf and I shared things I never shared with my ex wife. I hate this Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: still_in_shock on April 24, 2015, 10:39:30 PM This is crazy, how identical our stories are - even the words they said. He too, fell in love with me head over toes so fast and married me only 4 mo after meeting online and second time seeing each other face to face. He said I was the best thing ever happened to him, he worshipped and adored me. He was showing me off as his trophy to friends, family, coworkers saying he's won a lottery, someone way out of his league, etc.
His mood swings started month 2 together, with me walking onto him while he was cursing me off to his friends (technically, we were on a honeymoon period), and hell of a rollercoaster ride with his turbulent emotions. By the end of year 1.5 (which he barely made to), he has cheated on me, said he wasn't romantically attracted to me anymore, that we weren't meant to be together, dumped me while I was in between jobs, took all the money and and had me vacate jointly leased apartment. And convinced everyone around him that I was a mentally ill woman that he only discovered after marrying. He even trashed me to his employer, which I am speechless about. He went to his boss and told her I am disillusioned and might come over their office with a scandal. This is plain crazy. I struggle with this as well. Mine fell in love with me quickly. He told me I was the best thing that ever happened to him, I was everything he ever wanted in a woman. He never felt this way about anyone before, not even his ex wife. then a few months later telling me he wasn't in love with me anymore and we just weren't meant to be. UH WHAT? That was when I knew for sure something wasn't right. Love just doesn't go away like that. We continued to see each off and on for months a few times he would tell me he did love me, but then turn around and say he doesn't remember saying it. For me personally, I think they experience infatuation and have a idealized view of what love and a relationship should look like and when the newness wears off there is nothing there. I am not sure they experience what we know to be real love. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: FannyB on April 25, 2015, 01:23:45 AM Excerpt For me personally, I think they experience infatuation and have a idealized view of what love and a relationship should look like and when the newness wears off there is nothing there. I am not sure they experience what we know to be real love. Spot on Leftconfused. It is their version of love though, as that's all they know. My ex talked about how she loved her ex husband at the time. She wasn't lying - but it wasn't sustainable. When their feelings change their reflexive defence mechanism is to manufacture some 'wrong' that the non has done to absolve themselves of responsibility for exiting the relationship. It seems to me that many on these boards get all this, but they still struggle to really come to terms with it all. I guess it just takes time. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Blimblam on April 25, 2015, 01:27:25 AM Yall
The whole process of discrediting the pwBPD is a function of your own shame it's splitting. my-issues Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: FannyB on April 25, 2015, 01:58:17 AM Blimblam
There is a subtle difference between rationalizing what has happened and discrediting your ex. These were not 'normal' relationships and people need to make sense of what happened as a precursor to any introspective self-analysis that may follow. I also think that many of us have some pd traits. It's when those traits dominate our thinking that dysfunctionality inevitably follows. red-flag Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Blimblam on April 25, 2015, 02:20:38 AM Emotions like love are not rational. Rationalizing the irrational is limited it needs to be understood within its own context.
But that's the thing when we think of things in terms of Pd traits, the act of doing that prevents self reflection. The underlying patterns and defence mechenisms are universal. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Infared on April 25, 2015, 02:44:09 AM I do not believe that mine ever did experience anything like a broken heart. Her history was line-up someone else, secure new relationship and then abandon old relationship. She had done this repeatedly and then did it with me, lying all-the-while.
Old person is to blame for all problems. New person is white shiney knight. Mix and repeat. Just the facts. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: PaintedBlack28 on April 25, 2015, 03:06:04 AM Nope. This abhorrent manipulation had nothing to do with love.
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: FannyB on April 25, 2015, 03:28:54 AM BPD is a spectrum. At the more extreme end the behaviours are so destructively bizarre that the 'victim' couldn't possibly believe that their BPDex loved them. At the opposite end of the spectrum it's wholely believable IMO. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Reforming on April 25, 2015, 09:24:33 AM Hi all,
This is a really worthwhile discussion. You may have already have read this older thread, which explore the same topic, but it's got some really interesting posts from some of the other members, including some fascinating insights from two BPDs, Oceanheart and AJ Mahari. BPD Behaviours: Did she every love me? https://bpdfamily.com/message_board/index.php?topic=68978.0 I found it really helpful and enlightening Reforming Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: newtothis28 on April 25, 2015, 09:32:16 AM They fall in love way too hard. They fall tremendously in love. It's a really good question. A BPD's love is so ephemeral. They fall in love with new people all the time. They don't know how to stick to one person. They are always changing their mind. It has to be a horrible way to live. What they want to do with their life, who they are in love with, and, often times, they only stay with someone because they couldn't find something better. It's a really horrible mental disorder.
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: jhkbuzz on April 25, 2015, 09:37:03 AM They fall in love way too hard. They fall tremendously in love. It's a really good question. A BPD's love is so ephemeral. They fall in love with new people all the time. They don't know how to stick to one person. They are always changing their mind. It has to be a horrible way to live. What they want to do with their life, who they are in love with, and, often times, they only stay with someone because they couldn't find something better. It's a really horrible mental disorder. What you just described ^ is emotional dysregulation, and it's a hallmark symptom of BPD. It is not intentional or manipulative for the most part. Some people are involved with people with NPD (Narcissist Personality Disorder) and THOSE relationships can feel very manipulative and purposely destructive. The link that Reforming provided includes a post written by a pwBPD about what it feels like to fall in love - it opened my eyes quite a bit when I first read it. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Irish Pride on April 25, 2015, 09:52:29 AM This has to be one of the most common and one of the most controversial questions on the Leaving board, because it is so fundamental to know if we were loved or not. Was it real? Were we used? Here's what I believe, and I will reinforce that this is a belief: we were loved. I can't prove this, but it can't also be proven that we weren't. Ultimately, each of us will have to decide that question for ourselves. Why do I believe I was loved? Because I don't believe that certain aspects of the relationship could be faked. I felt the way that my ex kissed me in a deeply passionate and tender way. It wasn't hot or seductive. It was warm and heartfelt. I felt the way she would nestle her head into my chest and the peaceful way she slept beside me. I heard the fear and worry in her voice pleading for me to call her the one time I gave her the silent treatment and she was terrified that something had happened to me. I saw how she listening and empathized with me when I was going through a difficult time myself. I felt her give me the most amazing back rubs after a long day at work. I saw the tears and pain in her face when I said something very hurtful to her about us, something I deeply regret. I felt her forgiveness of that too. All of these and so much more have me convinced that this was very real. It just wasn't sustainable. She couldn't tolerate it long term, not because it was an act, but because it wasn't an act. There was very real emotion involved, and that for her is overwhelming. Eventually, it was more than she could take, and in a very resigned way she just gave up. Awesome summation. In my experience, this is spot on, but these true moments were fleeting. Not so much in the beginning, but definitely at the end. I do believe I was loved, in her own way. In fact, she'd often tell me "I love you the best way I know how". I believe it. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: cosmonaut on April 25, 2015, 09:53:16 AM Wow I'm two months out from the end of my two year with my ex gf and I wonder this. The way you talked about the cuddling at night made me cry. Yes I miss what others say the passionate sex etc but right now as my kids are sleeping this is what I'm missing. I did find out thru a friend that she is already dating again after less than two months. New guy is a total downgrade. Just kills me we dated two years lived together seven months and now I'm just a distant memory. She would spoon me in a way that physically calmed me down and calmed her down... .how she just threw me away and my kids that she said she loved. The kids lived with us three nights a week. Now we are nothing. Ugh. I had to move in with my parents and she's in the apartment we shared. I thought she was the love I waited for. I had a marriage that wasn't fulfilling. My ex gf and I shared things I never shared with my ex wife. I hate this Hey confused *welcome* That's what I miss most too - just being together. I deeply love my ex. We were once as close as two people could be, and now we can't even talk. It's very hard to deal with, and it's very hard to understand. This is all so completely unnatural. Until I discovered BPD, nothing made sense about what had happened. Learning about the disorder has allowed me to see with new eyes all that I had previously seen, and yet not at all seen. Healing has been hard and it's been a long journey - over a year - and one I'm still on, to be honest. It is not a fast process, but an absolutely critical one. I'm so sorry you are going through this experience, confused. I can hear the pain and sadness in your words. I know how hard this is - we all do. We've all been through this. I'm really glad that you are here, though. I think you will find that you're among friends and we can both relate to your struggle, and help you to work through it. Keep posting. We're here for you. |iiii Maybe when you feel ready you might post a new thread and let us know some more about yourself. How did you come to be here and what aspects cause you to suspect your ex has BPD? We'd love to know more about you and how we can help. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Reforming on April 25, 2015, 10:05:57 AM This has to be one of the most common and one of the most controversial questions on the Leaving board, because it is so fundamental to know if we were loved or not. Was it real? Were we used? Here's what I believe, and I will reinforce that this is a belief: we were loved. I can't prove this, but it can't also be proven that we weren't. Ultimately, each of us will have to decide that question for ourselves. Why do I believe I was loved? Because I don't believe that certain aspects of the relationship could be faked. I felt the way that my ex kissed me in a deeply passionate and tender way. It wasn't hot or seductive. It was warm and heartfelt. I felt the way she would nestle her head into my chest and the peaceful way she slept beside me. I heard the fear and worry in her voice pleading for me to call her the one time I gave her the silent treatment and she was terrified that something had happened to me. I saw how she listening and empathized with me when I was going through a difficult time myself. I felt her give me the most amazing back rubs after a long day at work. I saw the tears and pain in her face when I said something very hurtful to her about us, something I deeply regret. I felt her forgiveness of that too. All of these and so much more have me convinced that this was very real. It just wasn't sustainable. She couldn't tolerate it long term, not because it was an act, but because it wasn't an act. There was very real emotion involved, and that for her is overwhelming. Eventually, it was more than she could take, and in a very resigned way she just gave up. Awesome summation. In my experience, this is spot on, but these true moments were fleeting. Not so much in the beginning, but definitely at the end. I do believe I was loved, in her own way. In fact, she'd often tell me "I love you the best way I know how". I believe it. I think there's a spectrum of experience and opinion on this, but as Cosmanaut says in his post it is one of the fundamental questions that almost all of us have at the end of our relationships In the words of Oceanheart, a recovering BPD "Perhaps it would be more truthful to say that there is love, but with the inherent, fundamental, pervasive fear that is part&parcel of (full-blown) BPD, it isn't a stable emotion. It isn't steady-state, it fluctuates in inverse proportion to the amount of fear. How can you love if you're afraid the love will leave? How can you love if you're afraid you yourself are not loveable? It's like asking an animal caught in a trap to be capable of caretaking its young or something - the energy of the animal is cuaght up in doing something else, namely, surviving. The panic of fear - which I've seen people with BPD show when they feel they might be abandoned - blinds the organism to all else." One of the other posters up from here summarised it by saying" "And now these are some of the things I need to reconcile. I was loved... .just not the way she needed to love me... .and not the way I need to be loved and I did love her... .just not the way she needed to be loved... .and not the way I needed to love her." Reforming Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Mutt on April 25, 2015, 01:33:00 PM Excerpt For me personally, I think they experience infatuation and have a idealized view of what love and a relationship should look like and when the newness wears off there is nothing there. I am not sure they experience what we know to be real love. Spot on Leftconfused. It is their version of love though, as that's all they know. My ex talked about how she loved her ex husband at the time. She wasn't lying - but it wasn't sustainable. When their feelings change their reflexive defence mechanism is to manufacture some 'wrong' that the non has done to absolve themselves of responsibility for exiting the relationship. It seems to me that many on these boards get all this, but they still struggle to really come to terms with it all. I guess it just takes time. Well said , I totally agree ! How did it make you feel guy that she was talking about how she loved her ex husband when she was with you? Where you the rebound? Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Achaya on April 25, 2015, 01:40:00 PM I am totally struggling with this question right now as well. I want to think that my ex is suffering as much as I am from the grief of our parting, but I am afraid to talk to her because I know that she does not feel the same way I do about the relationship.
I have been asking myself why it is so important to me to clarify whether she "really" loved me in the way I thought she did. I need to feel like she was as attached to me as I was and still am to her, but I don't know why. I suspect it has something to do with the fact that, before I became involved with her, I doubted that anyone could love me. The intense love she gave me enabled me to overcome a negative self-image as an unlovable person. Now I am questioning again whether I have any evidence for my lovability. I think there is something more though, about needing to believe in the connection between us. It feels like a need to know from experience that connections that beautiful are possible and have existed in my life. I do believe that my partner and I connected in those ways, and that it was very real at the time for both of us. I think that many pwBPDs are in fact especially gifted at connecting in intimate, emotional ways with people, and that is one of the reasons I fell in love with my ex-partner. In reality I think that relationships can't be reduced to a choice between "she (or he) loved me or didn't." I think that people who have been involved with BPDs struggle more with this question because our ex partners showed us two extremes of love and its absence, and we non-BPD's can't make sense out of that. Maybe those of us who fall in love with pwBPDs get sucked into believing that their polarized, unrealistic, rigid representations of their feelings represent the emotional reality of the relationship. As part of my recovery, I think I will try to break down the all-or-nothing categories my ex offered me into a more realistic view of the relationship, with the wonderful, beautiful stuff, the painful, ugly stuff, and the moments of mutual indifference and boredom all mixed together. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Reforming on April 25, 2015, 03:30:11 PM I am totally struggling with this question right now as well. I want to think that my ex is suffering as much as I am from the grief of our parting, but I am afraid to talk to her because I know that she does not feel the same way I do about the relationship. I have been asking myself why it is so important to me to clarify whether she "really" loved me in the way I thought she did. I need to feel like she was as attached to me as I was and still am to her, but I don't know why. I suspect it has something to do with the fact that, before I became involved with her, I doubted that anyone could love me. The intense love she gave me enabled me to overcome a negative self-image as an unlovable person. Now I am questioning again whether I have any evidence for my lovability. I think there is something more though, about needing to believe in the connection between us. It feels like a need to know from experience that connections that beautiful are possible and have existed in my life. I do believe that my partner and I connected in those ways, and that it was very real at the time for both of us. I think that many pwBPDs are in fact especially gifted at connecting in intimate, emotional ways with people, and that is one of the reasons I fell in love with my ex-partner. In reality I think that relationships can't be reduced to a choice between "she (or he) loved me or didn't." I think that people who have been involved with BPDs struggle more with this question because our ex partners showed us two extremes of love and its absence, and we non-BPD's can't make sense out of that. Maybe those of us who fall in love with pwBPDs get sucked into believing that their polarized, unrealistic, rigid representations of their feelings represent the emotional reality of the relationship. As part of my recovery, I think I will try to break down the all-or-nothing categories my ex offered me into a more realistic view of the relationship, with the wonderful, beautiful stuff, the painful, ugly stuff, and the moments of mutual indifference and boredom all mixed together. Achaya I think it's very healthy to try and reframe our relationships is much more nuanced and less black and white way. It helps us to accept that good and the bad and heal. I know what you mean about BPDs gift for connecting in intimate, emotional ways, but I wonder whether a big part of that is their idealisation of us. It's very seductive, but it also makes the other extreme, devaluation harder to accept. Good post Reforming Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: DyingLove on April 25, 2015, 03:44:36 PM Wow I'm two months out from the end of my two year with my ex gf and I wonder this. The way you talked about the cuddling at night made me cry. Yes I miss what others say the passionate sex etc but right now as my kids are sleeping this is what I'm missing. I did find out thru a friend that she is already dating again after less than two months. New guy is a total downgrade. Just kills me we dated two years lived together seven months and now I'm just a distant memory. She would spoon me in a way that physically calmed me down and calmed her down... .how she just threw me away and my kids that she said she loved. The kids lived with us three nights a week. Now we are nothing. Ugh. I had to move in with my parents and she's in the apartment we shared. I thought she was the love I waited for. I had a marriage that wasn't fulfilling. My ex gf and I shared things I never shared with my ex wife. I hate this
confusedinWi, Your post sounds nearly exactly like something I would have written. I can hear and feel your pain. My r/s was 4 years and I'm n/c 42 days. The cuddling, the sleeping the discarding you. It's all the same as mine. She had the kid, and I didn't discard her... .but I did have to make a decision and I realize that being out of the kids life is better and less stressful for the kid. I'd hate this kid to have to see what her mom might do in the future as far as partners. The little girl would call me daddy. I loved it... .made me feel so attached. Her biodad didn't like it, but he was a scu*bag. So she pulled out the rug from under me too. I was more intimate with her than anyone ever before. And she hurt me the worse too. I fell hard hard hard for her. I found out last night thru a mutual friend that she still loves me. This litterally threw a wrench in the gears and I'm rethinking this from square one. Thank God for this board and the wonderful wonderful people that help us and have gone thru hell. Amen. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Deeno02 on April 25, 2015, 05:24:25 PM I dont feel mine did. I was a rebound after her husband bailed. I was just an ego boost until her life rebooted again, and then i was pushed away and finally dumped. Week later shes with an old college friend more suitable to her friends and lifestyle. Thats been 8 months now and it kills me. The hurt that I didnt really matter all that much has shattered me. Good guys do finish last.
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Achaya on April 25, 2015, 05:30:20 PM Thanks for your response to my post, Reforming! I do think that the self-esteem issue that drives the need for idealization is important in this issue, i.e., the issue of why we get so hung up on whether our former partners "really" loved us.
There is a school of psychoanalytic psychology known as Self Psychology where they talk about relating to another person as "a self-object." The self-object reflects back images of the partner that are needed to support positive self-esteem. I think this school of psychology takes the position that self-object relating is normal and healthy even in adults. Of course the more wounded we are in some area of our self-images, the more needy we are for the person who provides the antidote. PwBPD are really good at providing the antidote for certain kinds of self-esteem problems. Ironically, the thing my ex said that had the most seductive power to me was her telling me that she loved and wanted me as I am, not as an ideal lover. I had learned plenty about the pitfalls of idealization during previous relationships, and I no way wanted a partner who had me confused with some ideal image. I see now that I had such a strong need to be loved for who I am that I was very gullible. I know that it takes a few years before intimate partners get to know each other well enough to have a realistic idea about who the other person is. I had not been with my partner more than months when she started telling me how much she loved me as I am. If I hadn't been so needy I would have recognized that she didn't know who I was at that point. I do think, however, that there is a sense of connectivity that has nothing to do with idealizing processes. The connection I crave and value is created more from an emotional or intuitive sensitivity. In the relationships I have been a part of over the years, the ability to feel connection has varied quite a bit. With my most recent partner, when we felt disconnected we both could become aware of it, although one person might be the first to point it out. We could in most cases find a way to reconnect once we had discovered the disconnect, and we would have the same experience of when the connection was restored. This was for me a key reason for valuing this relationship, as I know that not all couples have this level of sensitivity to the level of connection, and not many have the ability to restore connections as easily as we did. Of course, I am not talking about the long stretches of time when my partner disconnected (from "everything," according to her). At those times I could not reach her in the usual ways and would become very anxious about what was going on, especially after I learned that she did completely disengage from our relationship at those times. I think that many pwBPD have exceptional sensitivity, and when they feel safe, it is possible for them to create deep emotional connections with people. I am very sensitive also, and when two people have this going on, the level of intimacy that results can be breathtaking. It does, however, foster feelings of fusion, and I suppose that a couple would have to be vigilant about balancing that with ongoing work on boundaries, separation and so on. I don't know if many pwBPDs are up to that task. By the time too much enmeshment develops, they are already on their way out. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: louisnorman on April 25, 2015, 06:15:55 PM I ask the same question about the relationship I had with my BPD wife, was the four years a lie or was there love. I can not help but remember the things that were said that sounded so good but to only find out hrs later she was with someone else. She has finally found the help she needs but there will never be us again after all the lies there could never be trust again. It was so bad if she said the sky was blue I had to look.
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Reforming on April 25, 2015, 06:31:12 PM Hi Achaya
It was a good post. "There is a school of psychoanalytic psychology known as Self Psychology where they talk about relating to another person as "a self-object." The self-object reflects back images of the partner that are needed to support positive self-esteem. I think this school of psychology takes the position that self-object relating is normal and healthy even in adults. Of course the more wounded we are in some area of our self-images, the more needy we are for the person who provides the antidote. PwBPD are really good at providing the antidote for certain kinds of self-esteem problems." I think there's a lot of truth in this. Their extreme sensitivity to our moods, facial expressions and body language can make them seem very attuned to our needs. I think this is also one of the reasons why they can find intimate relationships so difficult to sustain - being so other centred is exhausting and stressful "I do think, however, that there is a sense of connectivity that has nothing to do with idealizing processes. The connection I crave and value is created more from an emotional or intuitive sensitivity. In the relationships I have been a part of over the years, the ability to feel connection has varied quite a bit. With my most recent partner, when we felt disconnected we both could become aware of it, although one person might be the first to point it out. We could in most cases find a way to reconnect once we had discovered the disconnect, and we would have the same experience of when the connection was restored. This was for me a key reason for valuing this relationship, as I know that not all couples have this level of sensitivity to the level of connection, and not many have the ability to restore connections as easily as we did." I think a lot of borderlines are very bright and emotionally sensitive and that is part of what makes these relationships so compelling. I also think that there are lots of NONs who struggle with intimacy and real connection. You could argue that neither are really healthy The difficulty with the connection that we can feel with borderlines is that it's rarely secure or sustainable. "I think that many pwBPD have exceptional sensitivity, and when they feel safe, it is possible for them to create deep emotional connections with people. I am very sensitive also, and when two people have this going on, the level of intimacy that results can be breathtaking. It does, however, foster feelings of fusion, and I suppose that a couple would have to be vigilant about balancing that with ongoing work on boundaries, separation and so on. I don't know if many pwBPDs are up to that task. By the time too much enmeshment develops, they are already on their way out." Feeling safe and trust seem to be massive issues for pwBPD. Their sensitivity can make them hyper vigilant to any hint of abandonment or rejection. I think that can make romantic attachments very challenging for them and for us. Some couples do manage to sustain these relationships, but it's requires a lot of self awareness and skill from both the NON and the pwBPD. Really interesting post. Keep sharing Reforming Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: apollotech on April 25, 2015, 06:37:31 PM "For me personally, I think they experience infatuation and have a idealized view of what love and a relationship should look like and when the newness wears off there is nothing there. I am not sure they experience what we know to be real love."
My experiences/beliefs are aligned with what leftconfused said. My BPDexgf actually told me that she was infatuated with everything about me. Those statements always concerned me as I know that infatuations never last; they are fleeting. Unfortunately I didn't know that I was dealing with a pwBPD at the time, so I just accepted her comments as adoration. Infatuation also explains why they move in and out of relationships so quickly and easily: no deep attachment. This also displays emotional immaturity as an emotional matured person would recognize the infatuation for what it is, possibly only a crush. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Achaya on April 25, 2015, 09:00:56 PM Apollo tech, I have to agree with your evidence that the BPD version of love may be more like infatuation than a deeper love.I hate to think of that being true in my own situation, but I have thought about it. My ex always left her relationships before 5 years, and from what she told me, she was disengaging from them for years before she left. That means she was emotionally in her relationships less than 2 years. I would have to say that a feeling of love that lasts less than 2 years is based mostly on fantasy.
I hesitate to attribute my partner's declining emotional investment to any normal phenomenon, however, like a stale infatuation. Most people have experienced infatuation in their lives, but they haven't remained stuck at that level of involvement with everyone they meet. And even infatuation doesn't usually wear off so fast and so hard you feel like you've been knocked out. My ex herself told me more than once that the "roller coaster" pattern in our relationship was being caused by her own "brokenness." She said it was a familiar pattern and that it had happened in all her previous romantic relationships. I do find myself sometimes doing what you are doing, explaining the pwBPD's incapacity for love in terms of normal romantic relating. Doing that actually makes me feel worse, like the love of my life just got tired of me after a year and a half. Maybe she does think of our history that way, but she is not a credible source of insight into herself or our relationship dynamics. My impression is that she spent very little time thinking about our failing relationship. She always had other things that preoccupied her and took priority over our relational needs.She did this so intensively it was obvious she was trying to avoid me and to reduce the intensity of our relationship. This was directly contrary to my agenda and so we had an increasing amount of conflict. Thank you for your post. Responding to you has clarified my understanding of what is going on with me. I hope our exchange has been as helpful to you. Best of luck to you as well in your recovery work! Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Achaya on April 26, 2015, 12:38:29 AM Reply to Reforming's Reply to My Post:
"Their extreme sensitivity to our moods, facial expressions and body language can make them seem very attuned to our needs. I think this is also one of the reasons why they can find intimate relationships so difficult to sustain - being so other centred is exhausting and stressful " Yes, my ex used to scrutinize me, especially in the beginning of the relationship and when she was anxious about us. She also used to ask me incessantly what I was thinking. This frustrated me because I didn't want to just be in a relationship with myself. I could already do that very well. I wanted her to talk about her own thoughts. I kept trying to gently pry her attention off me without acting irritated, because that was very threatening to her in this context. "The difficulty with the connection that we can feel with borderlines is that it's rarely secure or sustainable." Reforming, this is the precise source of the heartbreak for me. You have laid your finger upon it exactly. I have been coming to terms with this truth gradually over the course of the past several years. A few weeks ago, when I recognized that my partner was pulling away again, I let go of most of the hope I have had for our relationship. I started to think about the fact that I prioritize closeness with my partner over most other things in my life, whereas my partner had been actively avoiding close contact with me for years. I asked myself what other competing priority was so important to her that she sacrifices our connection for it. When I thought about the personal issues that my partner had described as distressing for her, I realized that they were mostly about her identity, her life direction, her purpose, her self-esteem, and her internal relationships with herself generally. She seldom talked to me of needing intimacy, even though she still reacted with abandonment anxiety if I turned my attention away from her for too long a time. Once I had recognized that my partner was struggling to define who she was, I also thought that her lack of self-definition had something to do with her instability in relationships. If my partner didn't know herself she couldn't make an emotional commitment to another person; I had to stop expecting that she would commit to me. And, I have some sense of how much time and how much life experience it would take for her to clarify and stabilize her sense of self. I knew then that we were out of time. Apparently, there was some parallel train of thought going on in my partner. When she left me she told me she needed to see what she could find in her own life. (I didn't know before this that she felt she was living in my life, not her own). I didn't ask any more about why she was leaving me because I didn't want to hear about it, but what my partner had said fit well with what I had been thinking about her. Her business should be with herself and not with me. I suspect she will dive headlong into another relationship as soon as possible, but maybe I am not giving her enough credit. At any rate, I can't stick around to see how her story turns out. I have to get back to my own story. In my own mind, I replaced myself with her at the center, and that is how it has been for about five years.When she left me last week I felt like my life was ending. I am healthy enough from the therapy I have been doing, that I knew this was an irrational thought, but I couldn't imagine any positive future without my partner. I am just now seeing that the questions about whether my ex partner "really" loved me or whether her heart feels broken by our breakup are aimed in the wrong direction. My partner was unable to sustain the wonderful connections that we experienced together, and she isn't motivated or able to change in this respect. I have learned from this website that the off/on, hot/cold relating pattern is typical of people with BPD, and since she has been diagnosed multiple times with that disorder, I think that settles the question of why she couldn't stay in relationship to me. I think she acted correctly in breaking up with me, because she needs to work on herself a lot before she can become able to provide the kind of partnership I need. I still hurt a lot, but this understanding gives me a lot of peace. Thanks so much everybody for participating on this thread. The discussion has been awesome! Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: apollotech on April 26, 2015, 01:15:21 AM "My impression is that she spent very little time thinking about our failing relationship. She always had other things that preoccupied her and took priority over our relational needs.She did this so intensively it was obvious she was trying to avoid me and to reduce the intensity of our relationship."
Achaya, Thank you for your post. I know all about this behavior (quoted above). My ex kept me and our relationship on the back burner. I played second fiddle to anything that came up. Her marginalizing me that way, our relationship, was really very hurtful. It certainly made me feel that she basically saw me and our relationship to be of little value (That did not make me think that I or our relationship was of little value.). I became a trigger to her within a month of our beginning. The push/pull started, and it all went to hell in a hand basket. Seven months later I severed all contact. After the first recycle began, I became a soother more than anything else. Her infatuation of me was gone, and I became just a somebody to use. Looking back, I can now see how utterly immature she was in regards to what a real relationship entails. Her BPD selfishness just consumed everything. This woman had been a very loved and valued friend to me in childhood; now we don't even speak. It's a very sad situation. I am daily getting better. I hope that you are recovering as well. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: dobie on April 26, 2015, 09:12:11 AM My ex always left her relationships before 5 years, and from what she told me, she was disengaging from them for years before she left. That means she was emotionally in her relationships less than 2 years. I would have to say that a feeling of love that lasts less than 2 years is based mostly on fantasy. Thanks so much for this , this is exactly what happened to me the fact your x is diag as well solves a question for me . mine was just in the r/s for the last year or so out of need comfort etc anything else going on took priroty over me or us Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: guy4caligirl on April 26, 2015, 11:49:58 AM Wow very true statement !
This should give some incite ,while researching to find a cure or help treating BPD this might shed a light on why they start that devaluating the RS in early stages within themselves and don't ever try to work it out or iron up the small stuff that's mostly these contribute to the break of the RS . That's why we wonder or I wonder these ups and downs happened so frequently ! After this, I realize that's why they never get in it like we do none, they are in for a period of time and they the only ones that know it wont last for ever cause they cant handle it , I am stunned with this I am really ! have of the time we were sad in The RS is because they did not engage the other half is ups and downs turned up to be Engage or Not Engage . Terrible illness . Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: guy4caligirl on April 26, 2015, 11:54:26 AM ... .I might add I heard lately from my ex of five years and couldn't understand she mentioned after being with this new supply engaged guy that she will end up in another state two years from now , I guess she is already planning out to go somewhere else , it rings a bell now stunning !
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: FannyB on April 26, 2015, 07:41:46 PM Excerpt How did it make you feel guy that she was talking about how she loved her ex husband when she was with you? Where you the rebound? Hi Mutt. I felt fine with her telling me that she loved him when they married. It was positively re-assuring and part of a conversation where we discussed our failed marriages. And no, I came along about 10 years after her marriage ended so was not 'the rebound'. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: shatterd on April 26, 2015, 07:47:48 PM all the time i agree, there constant need to fill the void, useally with bad addictions, wen the addiction leves or the decide it isnt working anymore there quick to replace it. my opion my experiance
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: FannyB on April 27, 2015, 02:51:12 PM Excerpt Hi Mutt. I felt fine with her telling me that she loved him when they married. It was positively re-assuring and part of a conversation where we discussed our failed marriages. And no, I came along about 10 years after her marriage ended so was not 'the rebound'. Just to clarify - she was talking about her feelings at the time of her marriage. She hates her husband now - he is the blackest of those painted black in her eyes. Classic BPD logic - placed on a pedestal followed by utter devaluation. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: drummerboy on April 27, 2015, 05:10:10 PM Totally agree.
To answer this question you first have to define love and that is probably a bit different for each of us. For me, love is a verb, to love is to give. My ex was so totally self absorbed she only knew how to take, everything was about her. I never saw her do anything for anyone else unless it was to get in someone's good books. So according to my definition of love she never loved me. But she was all over those tingly infatuation feelings and that was her level of love, the Disney fairytale kind of love. I'm sure if you asked her she would say she loved me. Towards the end she told her dad that "I've never loved a man like I love him" (me). On our last day together she said "I love you but I'm not in love with you" and this was a very telling statement. She loved the idea of "being in love" the infatuation stage but the act of real love is something she knew nothing about. A selfish, self absorbed person cannot love if you define love as giving. I struggle with this as well. Mine fell in love with me quickly. He told me I was the best thing that ever happened to him, I was everything he ever wanted in a woman. He never felt this way about anyone before, not even his ex wife. then a few months later telling me he wasn't in love with me anymore and we just weren't meant to be. UH WHAT? That was when I knew for sure something wasn't right. Love just doesn't go away like that. We continued to see each off and on for months a few times he would tell me he did love me, but then turn around and say he doesn't remember saying it. For me personally, I think they experience infatuation and have a idealized view of what love and a relationship should look like and when the newness wears off there is nothing there. I am not sure they experience what we know to be real love. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Reforming on April 27, 2015, 05:55:29 PM Hi Leftconfused
"For me, love is a verb, to love is to give. My ex was so totally self absorbed she only knew how to take, everything was about her. I never saw her do anything for anyone else unless it was to get in someone's good books. So according to my definition of love she never loved me."[/i] Quite understandably in the circumstances I think we tend to focus on our common experience of BPD and sometimes we can lose sight of the fact that just like us each BPD is individual and unique. My ex was and is capable of giving. At times she was very generous and she could also be cold and selfish. I remember someone saying to me once the real generosity is giving something away that is precious to you. I struggle with that sometimes. I find it easier to give what I can most afford I think my ex really believed she loved me. I also think that when she was dysregulated she definitely struggled to sustain and hold on to that feeling. "On our last day together she said "I love you but I'm not in love with you" and this was a very telling statement" Mine said the same thing, but it's also a catchphrase that's used at the end of a lot relationships . In fact a well know relationship counsellor used it for the title of his book. I bought it the year we broke up. www.amazon.co.uk/Love-You-But-Not-Relationship/dp/0747585520 Drummerboy "She loved the idea of "being in love" the infatuation stage but the act of real love is something she knew nothing about. A selfish, self absorbed person cannot love if you define love as giving." I think they struggle to love us in the way that we need because they are frequently overwhelmed by feelings of fear, sadness and anger. I actually think they desperately want to love and be loved but their inherent instability makes that incredibly hard "For me personally, I think they experience infatuation and have a idealized view of what love and a relationship should look like and when the newness wears off there is nothing there. I am not sure they experience what we know to be real love." I think both partners can be guilty of infatuation and dare I say idealisation. I ignored my exes red flags because of her idealisation of me. When reality started to creep in we both began to struggle Interesting posts Thanks for sharing Reforming Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Copperfox on April 27, 2015, 09:51:42 PM Maybe a good time to repost this classic post from 2010 a few years back ... .PwBPD love, in their own way:
The Lonely vs. Abandoned Child https://bpdfamily.com/message_board/index.php?topic=168086.0 Who really is the Borderline? Someone who needed you for awhile because they were scared to be alone. They’re still scared. Forgive them if you can- they are modern day recreations of their own childhood fears. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: jhkbuzz on April 28, 2015, 05:09:00 AM I think they struggle to love us in the way that we need because they are frequently overwhelmed by feelings of fear, sadness and anger. I actually think they desperately want to love and be loved but their inherent instability makes that incredibly hard. When discussing BPD alone (and not BPD comorbid with NPD, for example), then that ^ is one of the truest things of all. Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: joc1970 on April 28, 2015, 12:00:06 PM Thank you for a wonderful thread. Learn a lot
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Achaya on April 28, 2015, 12:02:59 PM Does anybody know who wrote the brilliant article about the Lonely vs the Abandoned Child? I want to share this with my therapist, and would like to give credit to the author.
Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Reforming on April 28, 2015, 12:15:29 PM Hi Achaya,
It was written by a member called 2010. You can fine her posts if you click on the members option and then do a members search. Reforming Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Reforming on April 28, 2015, 12:51:14 PM I think they struggle to love us in the way that we need because they are frequently overwhelmed by feelings of fear, sadness and anger. I actually think they desperately want to love and be loved but their inherent instability makes that incredibly hard. When discussing BPD alone (and not BPD comorbid with NPD, for example), then that ^ is one of the truest things of all. I hear you JHK and there are definitely times when I look back at my exes behaviour during last part of my relationship and I think I she had transformed into a raging narcissist. I suppose as other have said our exes can often have a blend or combination of PDs. It's like trying to wrestle an octopus Reforming Title: Re: Question ? Do BPD really fall in love ? Do they ever experince a broken heart ? Post by: Mutt on April 28, 2015, 01:21:57 PM *mod*
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