Title: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 23, 2015, 03:10:46 PM Cat Familiar, I can tell you today that it doesn't matter what my fiancé can do, I'm pissed at him for lying to me. Even if he didn't lie to me today I'm pissed at him for lying to me in the past. I'm pissed at him for making me look bad in front of other people. That kind of makes appreciating any accomplishments he's made hard.
Title: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: waverider on September 23, 2015, 04:47:40 PM Cat Familiar, I can tell you today that it doesn't matter what my fiancé can do, I'm pissed at him for lying to me. Even if he didn't lie to me today I'm pissed at him for lying to me in the past. I'm pissed at him for making me look bad in front of other people. That kind of makes appreciating any accomplishments he's made hard. You are probably pissed because you are pretty sure he is probably going to do it again. That is why overlooking things becomes so hard, as they are rarely one offs and the cycle repeats. It makes you feel like a mug... It disempowers you, which is very invalidating to you. Even if you understand it is the nature of the disorder the consequences can still be hard to live with, and respect can often turn out to be no more than wishful thinking. How do you separate wishful thinking from deep seated respect? Respect is closely tied to reliability. Title: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 23, 2015, 05:12:31 PM Thank you waverider. So that begs the question, is lying part of the disorder? Lying is so horrible because its two fold, its the lying itself, and then confronting the liar which usually ends up in the game of tag you're it referenced to in stop watching on eggshells. How do you deal with the projection when you confront a liar about lying?
Title: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: formflier on September 23, 2015, 07:13:08 PM Thank you waverider. So that begs the question, is lying part of the disorder? Sort of... . Things said while dysregulated are most likely going to be a feeling equals fact kinda thing. Their emotions overwhelm them, and then they claim/state a reality that fits how they feel. Yes, this is lying. However, I don't think that the intent is to deceive. The process that is going on inside them that "created" the lie is not conscious. So, I would say that in this way that a lie can be part of the disorder. Not all lies come from the disorder. How do you deal with the projection when you confront a liar about lying? Why deal with the projection at all? Why confront them? What would happen if a boundary was used instead of a confrontation. How have confrontations gone in the past? What has been achieved? FF Title: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 23, 2015, 07:27:33 PM Formflier, I spoke too hastily. How do you deal with a situation where a person claims they are not lying but the facts do not line up? Obviously confrontation does not work and I'm not recommending that. What do you do when a person claims they're not lying but the facts claim they are?
Title: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: Turkish on September 23, 2015, 11:10:15 PM Thank you waverider. So that begs the question, is lying part of the disorder? Lying is so horrible because its two fold, its the lying itself, and then confronting the liar which usually ends up in the game of tag you're it referenced to in stop watching on eggshells. How do you deal with the projection when you confront a liar about lying? In Understanding the Borderline Mother (https://bpdfamily.com/book_review/christine_lawson.htm), the author states that to a pwBPD, "lying feels like survival." If it's survival (I.e., a dysfunctional coping mechanism), then it is something they revert to when feeling threatened. Though of course everyone has lied at some point, and is capable of it in the future, it's when it violates our core values ("I wouldn't lie about xyz", that may elicit our resentment or disrespect. It's an unspoken boundary/value violation. Title: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 12:02:45 AM So, Turkish, what do you do when you resent the wBPD for lying to you, especially when they deny they're lying to you, and then get mad at you for accusing them of being a liar when you did no such thing, but you simply pointed out the facts instead. I was going to say I should start a separate thread, but for me lying is definitely a way to lose respect for someone.
Title: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: Turkish on September 24, 2015, 12:33:18 AM You're dealing with a tough situation.
In general? I was tired of being my Ex's Jimny Cricket, so to speak. I shut down. She felt my resentment. Aside from judging her, it was a poor dynamic on both sides. "Running" and resenting isn't a healthy dynamic. It's both sides retreating, in a way. Title: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 12:39:38 AM Thank you Turkish, I think I'll think about it overnight Your input is always helpful!
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: waverider on September 24, 2015, 05:22:14 AM When I want to express a feeling often I will use an anology knowing the analogy is not real only a tool to express a feeling... .> "It felt like being punched in the guts'
As pwBPD closely tie facts to feelings, the use of analogies is often not in their tool box. So instead of using an analogy they will make something up and state it as real, not as an analogy. From there it becomes a defensive cover up to justify the lie... digs a bigger hole... .> " I was punched in the guts"... >"seriously he did so there would be no marks"... "you weren't there, what do you know" Two different ways of expressing how hurt you feel. In the latter backing up the lie starts to become a bigger issue than the original feeling. Self invalidating I have been trying to teach my wife how to utilize analogies. I actually ask her if she can come up with an analogy to express how she feels, hopefully she may start to make a habit of it instead of the need to make up stories. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: formflier on September 24, 2015, 07:52:39 AM Formflier, I spoke too hastily. How do you deal with a situation where a person claims they are not lying but the facts do not line up? I like to use the analogy of "shining the light". If you are consistent with shining the light, eventually the truth will come out and be "shown". Also try to verify the facts independently of the person making the claims. In the case of filing or not, this should be straightforward. Obviously confrontation does not work and I'm not recommending that. What do you do when a person claims they're not lying but the facts claim they are? There is going to be some trial and error involved here. You have figured out confrontation has not worked, so skip that in the future. I am a big fan of "help me understand". I am deliberate about avoiding using the word "why". For me, I need help "seeming small", and not being overbearing. What I thought was "normal" was triggering a defensive reaction in my wife. I am a big guy 6 ft 2 and around 230 (football lineman frame... .offensive tackle for sports fans out there). I am also a very direct person (in case you hadn't noticed... . :)) My wife is a tiny person physically and would try to use her words and manner to "match" my size. It was a bad dynamic. So, in the context of therapy for our r/s one of my "assignments" was to tone down how I look for information and approach my wife. "Help me understand (fill in the blank)" came from that. Many on here have had success with it, some haven't. Again, trial and error. How do these ideas sit with you? FF Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 10:17:08 AM FF, In my particular case my fiancé already pushed the issue and I already asked him if there's anything he's withheld from me that could shine light on the case and he's vehemently denied it. He keeps insisting on showing me the papers when he's divorced, that his pride's involved, that he never agreed to show me the papers before the actual divorce. I'm more leaning to taking a break from the relationship if nothing new shows up tomorrow. I've reach the end of my rope. I don't want to be in a relationship with someone who lies to me, who denies it, who tells me about hurt pride when I ask for what I want and then tells me they love me and they care about me and they want the best for me. This is just the last in a string of lies I've caught him in. He of course denies ever lying to me, always backing it up with his point of view. I did place a call into a new counselor, and am waiting to see if she checks out with my insurance and if not I will call another one. I am very sad. This is not what I wanted, and this is unexpected, but I can't continue on like this, it feels fake to me.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 10:21:12 AM Waverider, I guess I don't know if I have that kind of energy. I'm a single parent and I'm not married to my wBPD just engaged and I don't know if I have the energy to sustain that kind of intimate relationship. My pwBPD is significantly older then me and it just doesn't feel right to be in a relationship with such an emotionally immature person. I don't have the energy to always be defending him before other people. I've been down this road before with my first husband and i just don't have the energy to do it again. I feel very sad about this whole affair. I even asked my pwBPD if he knew how important this issue was to me, and he brushed it off saying his pride and integrity were hurt. He caught me saying "I don't care about... ." but you know what? I don't and I'm sick of caring.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: formflier on September 24, 2015, 10:42:47 AM Waverider, I guess I don't know if I have that kind of energy. A valid question to ask yourself. "Can I do this?" For me, once I started using the lessons/tools and seeing that they did make improvements, that provided me hope. Each situation is different and the relationship dynamics will respond differently to application of the tools. Some of my wife's behaviors have gotten much better and the ones that haven't, I have a better understanding of why. I'm able to accept them for what they are. I would suggest another question. "Should I do this?" and also "Where will I direct the energy I am currently putting into this r/s?" Big life questions. I hope you can find answers that give you hope. FF Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: ForeverDad on September 24, 2015, 04:00:13 PM I recall someone writing here a few years ago a perspective I hadn't noticed before. I had been posting about boundaries and how they needed to be firm and any 'exceptions' could risk weakening the boundaries. The insightful comment was that the boundary isn't about the other person, it's about us.
How so? We may think we have to tell the person what they have to do. You may get compliance or you may not. Even if they do it may not change things long term because it or something like it could just happen again and again in the future. So, instead, view a boundary as Your Boundary. We often can't change or fix the other, so we have to do the 'changing', that is, we have to see that the boundary is ours and if broached then we are the ones to address it. So saying, "show me the paperwork" may not be a good long term boundary, it leaves it up to him to delay or fail to comply or who knows how long he could string it out with various stories and excuses. How about this? "I will not be in a relationship with someone who is not truthful with me, in this instance, confirming that the person has divorced." So you see, having paperwork is one step, whether it was filed is another step and whether the divorce is final can be yet another step, but that one boundary covers it all. Your boundary of what you will or will not do. The boundary, as was explained back then, is for you. Does that help? (I hope I didn't get it wrong back then.) I thought it interesting that when you investigated there was yet another issue, that he was party to a law suit. What might affect him financially would affect anyone in a relationship with him. I am concerned that he's a slick manipulator, like a con man, always having one excuse or another no matter what facts are discovered. Whether he is or not, I don't know. But the indicators are there. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 04:04:45 PM Formflier, my fiancé is 4" taller then me and 2lbs heavier. He's very lean now. He was not so when I met him. He slimmed down to be with me.
In terms of the help me understand, I don't want to understand him. A lie is a lie. In terms of filing I just called the county clerk's office again and told them he told me he filed and they told me if he filed it would show up. So that is the situation at hand. Unbelievable. I like your posts because they make me think, so I wrote down some answers to your questions. As an aside, the first counselor I called could not see me because of my insurance so I'm going to move on to the next. Ironically enough my fiancé offered to pay for my counseling and I said no thank you, that was a conflict of interests, as he was the reason I was going back into therapy. So the first question, Can I do this? Can I control my temper? My self? Enforce my boundaries? Take care of myself? Stand up for myself? Trust myself? That is what the relationship will require of me. Considering I'm dealing with a man 16 years older and 4 inches taller, you should know that standing up for myself is no easy feat. We won't even touch the huge socioeconomic difference between he and I. I'm having a really hard time enforcing my boundary around filing for divorce. Should I do this? Well, my fiance has already established relationships with my friends, family, church and community. He and my daughter have an independent relationship. Everywhere I go people ask me where he is. (We're in a LDR for those who don't know my story). I definitely don't have the energy to deal with a break up right now in those circumstances. Those people who know the situation would understand if I broke up with him. Its not so much that the relationship takes energy but dealing with the aftermath of a breakup will. Other then that I do not know. I am very hurt and confused and am pushing forward to find a new counselor. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 04:11:17 PM Forever Dad, That lawsuit involved his wife, when I checked the court system last night it was gone. However his divorce still was not there and when I called the county clerk they looked it up and found nothing. I told them he said he filed and they said if he did it would have showed up. So I have a really big problem on my hands. He insists he filed. We even talked about this last night. I can not believe this. I've never dealt with such a bold faced liar in my life and I've dealt with a lot of liars.
I like your idea of a boundary, except I would say "confirms that the person has filed for divorce." I really don't know how to do this. Like I told form flier I really don't have the energy to go through a break up right now. My fiancé is really aggressive and whenever I try to set a boundary with him he goes ballistic. Calls, texts, calls my home phone. Its disastrous. I have however informed my family of the situation so they know I am preparing to take action. It would be a real tragedy if I had to cut him loose as he is really helpful with my daughter. I have a facetime appointment scheduled with him tomorrow morning to discuss this and honestly I don't know what to do. When we talked about it last night he said there was nothing he was withholding, said he filed, said I should take his word, and said his pride was involved. I couldn't believe this. I was so angry. One thing is a problem, I don't currently have a therapist. I wrapped up therapy in August and my therapist felt I was ready to fly on my own. Then this came up last week. This is not good. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: Daniell85 on September 24, 2015, 04:50:03 PM How is he helping with your daughter when he is lying to and upsetting her mother?
Her primary relationship is with you. Protecting yourself is also protecting her. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 05:27:09 PM How is he helping with your daughter when he is lying to and upsetting her mother? Her primary relationship is with you. Protecting yourself is also protecting her. Daniell, he claims he is not lying, so I'm going to work on not getting upset. I'm still planning on having the FaceTime conversation with him tomorrow morning where I will tell him I called the county clerk and asked again if he had filed for divorce. Its funny you mention the primary relationship thing because he's attacked me in the past for making her my primary relationship. I don't feel he is a danger to me or her today. That's not the issue here. The issue is he lied to me and the question is how can I move forward with him with this on the table. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: babyducks on September 24, 2015, 05:44:50 PM Hi unicorn,
I think its great that you are taking such positive steps to care for yourself. Pushing forward to find a new counselor is good. You are using all the resources you can. I hope you are trying to eat well and get some decent sleep. Self care during periods of high stress is vital. So the first question, Can I do this? Can I control my temper? My self? Enforce my boundaries? Take care of myself? Stand up for myself? Trust myself? All any of us can do is the best we can. When things get difficult, for me, it boils down to doing the right thing for the right reason. So that I can be comfortable with me. That can be very hard. It can require a lot of inner strength. Finding the inner strength, like you mentioned, can be challenging. Hang in there. Don't give up on yourself. Give yourself credit for all the good effort you have put in. 'ducks Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 06:01:00 PM Thank you baby ducks. I let my fiancé know that our problem is interfering with my ability to discipline my daughter and he got the message. I think he thinks that by being nice to me I'll somehow forget about the problem at hand. Nope, that won't work with me. We're going to have that difficult conversation tomorrow morning. I'm pretty sure i'm not going to end the relationship over the divorce not being filed. I'm more thinking now we're going to have a weekly check in until this gets taken care of or until I make a new decision with a new counselor. Right now without a counselor that is the best I can do. I definitely don't want to go through a break up on my own. When I ended my last marriage I did not have a counselor and that was awful. I don't want to do that again.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: formflier on September 24, 2015, 06:20:46 PM I'm pretty sure i'm not going to end the relationship over the divorce not being filed. Is there some middle ground between the r/s going forward as if nothing happened and "ending it"? Before you had talked about "taking a break." What did "taking a break" look like? I'm not advocating to end the r/s. This is the staying board and it is obvious that you want to be a stayer. However, sometimes things get really out of what in a r/s and "taking a step back". Taking some space. Things like that will help you get perspective and allow you to think about YOUR values, without your partner's input. Last point for now. FOG (Fear, Obligation and Guilt) Anytime you find yourself making a decision based on one of those red-flag should go off. Think about what you said about the reason you didn't want to go through a breakup right now. What would you fiancee do to your phones? Do you see yourself making decisions based on FOG? Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: myself on September 24, 2015, 06:41:35 PM Not only did I ultimately have less respect for my fiance when she lied (especially when lies were used to cover other lies, and it was being done deliberately), I felt less respected by her.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: maxsterling on September 24, 2015, 07:00:05 PM Formflier, I spoke too hastily. How do you deal with a situation where a person claims they are not lying but the facts do not line up? Obviously confrontation does not work and I'm not recommending that. What do you do when a person claims they're not lying but the facts claim they are? If you know a person is lying, and the facts lead you to that conclusion, does it really matter if the other person fesses up? Suppose my partner is cheating on me. The facts say she is. She denies or makes excuses. Would I feel any better if she fessed up? I certainly know how you feel here. It's very frustrating to be in this kind of situation when all you need is someone to own up to his/her behavior. But I am slowly learning that most of my discomfort comes from trying to press the issue and expect a result (an apology). Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 08:13:13 PM Formflier, I have read extensively about FOG in SWOE and the workbook as well as stop caretaking the borderline and get on with your life. I don't think I don't want to take a break from my fiancé because he's going to blow up my phone and i think that would be something to talk about with my next therapist. I've placed calls to two more therapists and am waiting for calls back.
I think I don't want to take a break from my r/s right now because my fiancé is helping me with my daughter and I need his help. Nobody else is doing what he's doing. He stepped into a void in my life. I've been a parent without a partner pretty much from the start. Even when I was married I didn't have a partner as far as a parent was concerned. So I don't think that taking a break from the r/s is the best idea right now considering the struggles I'm having with my daughter and the fact I don't currently have a t. Oh I should add that my dad definitely reminds me of my fiancé so I probably should start dealing with that on the parent board, because i don't just have one problem person in my life. My issues are far more complex. I need to say again that everything was fine back in August. My outgoing t didn't think I needed another t. Then I found out my fiancé hadn't filed for divorce. That changed everything. That's what I'm talking to him about tomorrow morning. My dad asked me why do you care that he didn't file for divorce? I don't really to be honest, I care that he lied to me. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 08:16:51 PM Maxsterling, that's brilliant! I don't really want an apology. I just want my fiancee or is it fiancé? to tell me he lied to me. I don't need him to apologize. He's putting me in the position of having to call the county clerk a liar. Perhaps I can tell him that over FaceTime tomorrow.
My dad asked me a really good question after I explained to him how helpful my fiancé was with my daughter. He asked me why I cared whether my fiancé filed for divorce or not. I told him I didn't really, what I care about is the fact that he told me he did. That is the problem. Its really hard having this problem when my fiancé is so helpful when it comes to my daughter, and to be honest, he looks out for me too. This is so complicated. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: HappyNihilist on September 24, 2015, 09:03:11 PM My dad asked me why do you care that he didn't file for divorce? I don't really to be honest, I care that he lied to me. This is completely understandable, unicorn. It hurts to be lied to. The two of you have a very close relationship, and this is a sensitive issue, so it hurts even worse. It's natural to feel betrayed, confused, distraught, angry. You have every right to care that he lied to you - you have every right to care that he didn't file for divorce, for that matter. I personally wouldn't advise trying to make hard relationship decisions right now, given your situation and your commitment to him. You've been hurt deeply. Let yourself feel and process that hurt. Sit with your feelings. You don't have to come to a conclusion about a 3-year relationship overnight. What are you thinking you might say to him tomorrow? Oh I should add that my dad definitely reminds me of my fiancé so I probably should start dealing with that on the parent board, because i don't just have one problem person in my life. My issues are far more complex. It's tough having to deal with two problem people, especially when they're such important people in your life. I encourage you to explore your relationship with your dad on the Coping and Healing (https://bpdfamily.com/message_board/index.php?board=7.0) boards. There are lots of people there who understand what it's like to have a disordered parent. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 24, 2015, 11:23:00 PM Thank you happy nihilist, I absolutely adore your name! It alone makes me want to find out more about you.
I already told him tonight tomorrows conversation is going to be a check point, that I wasn't expecting to resolve anything. He thinks I'm going to breakup with him. I'm simply going to state the facts, that I called the county clerk again yesterday and asked them to look up the divorce, they asked for the husband's name, I gave it to them, they told me nothing was there, I told them he said they didn't post and the county clerk said if he filed it would've posted immediately. When he starts talking about his pride and his integrity and his word should be good enough I will simply repeat the facts. I will say I need to know why you haven't filed yet. My dad reminded me that I said I would give my fiancé until moved out to my state to straighten this out and I'm going to remind me fiance of this. He has a little over a month to file, or tell me why he hasn't. The distance currently is its own boundary. I hope to have a t in place by the time he moves. I appreciate your support! Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: HappyNihilist on September 24, 2015, 11:52:46 PM Thank you happy nihilist, I absolutely adore your name! It alone makes me want to find out more about you. You're welcome, unicorn - and thank you, as well. :) It's funny... .when I first signed up for this site, in the midst of emotional chaos and feeling completely broken, I was trying to think of a user name that reflected who I really was, at my heart. I felt like all I had left in the world was my (bruised and vulnerable) core self. And I couldn't think of anything that summed up my essence better than 'happy nihilist.' I already told him tonight tomorrows conversation is going to be a check point, that I wasn't expecting to resolve anything. He thinks I'm going to breakup with him. I'm simply going to state the facts, that I called the county clerk again yesterday and asked them to look up the divorce, they asked for the husband's name, I gave it to them, they told me nothing was there, I told them he said they didn't post and the county clerk said if he filed it would've posted immediately. When he starts talking about his pride and his integrity and his word should be good enough I will simply repeat the facts. I will say I need to know why you haven't filed yet. I think this sounds like a good plan. It was very thoughtful and kind of you to soothe his fears by telling him that you're not expecting to resolve anything or break up with him tomorrow. You sound like you want to approach this calmly and neutrally, without judgment, and also express your needs in a clear way. |iiii That's a solid starting point for a productive, open conversation. What do you think you would do if he tried to hedge and not answer? Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 25, 2015, 12:22:20 AM Happy nihilist, I'm sure he's going to hedge and get defensive. I think I'm going to simply state the facts. I called the county clerk again yesterday afternoon and asked if you filed and they said you did not and when I told them you said you did they said that if you had it would have shown up immediately. He already knows that I'm seeking out another t to deal with this situation. I guess I could remind him that his not filing is only getting in the way of our relationship, that he knows he can not stay with me again until he files.
I've been giving this a lot of thought and I realize his actions do not reflect on me. That is what has been bothering me about this whole thing, I think I had been taking it personally up until now. I'm not happy about the situation however he is really proving himself with my daughter, church, community and family so its just me that he has the problem with. The big problem is he lied to me. He told me filed and he didn't. I think I'm going to tell him we're going to have a weekly conversation about this until the problem gets solved. I think I will tell him that I will call the county clerk once a week to ask if he's filed yet. :) If he has pride or integrity issues that should definitely trigger those because the county clerk is going to get mighty familiar with his name. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: Turkish on September 25, 2015, 12:35:07 AM People,.BPD or not, can live in the grey areas, or the in-betweens. My Ex did for a while, compartmentalizing her life. Of course he can't legally marry you unless he's divorced. Aside from everything else, even his r/s with your D, that's the kicker.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 25, 2015, 12:56:05 AM Turkish, which begs the question why did he propose before he filed? I guess that's the hard question I have to ask him, and tomorrow morning will not be the time. I actually had to ask him to stop calling me his bride because it was upsetting to me since he was still married. Its like what a couple of other posters have alluded to, he sees me as his wife therefore he thinks it doesn't matter that he's legally married to someone else. It not only matters to me, but to his wife and the legal system too. It almost seems like he's delusional, although I know he's not. I think this is more a BPD feelings create facts kind of thing, but if I point that out to him he'll vehemently deny it. Sometimes I feel like a prisoner because I'm engaged to a man who can't marry me. I'm going to have eventually tell him that too, but that will really set him off, so tomorrow morning is also not the time for that. Tomorrow morning I will merely state the facts, I called the county clerk office again, asked about you, nothing turned up, said you said you filed, they said if you had something would've turned up immediately. I'll remind him I'm going back to therapy to deal with this, that when I left therapy in August I did not know that he had not filed. That of course will set him off because he will claim he has. I think I will let the facts speak for themselves. I'm certainly not making any decisions without the help of a t.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: Turkish on September 25, 2015, 01:14:57 AM Stating the facts is good. Like others have said, though, what's the motivation here? To catch him in a lie is like he playing a "Kick Me" game. Like being the Parent, catching a little kid in a lie. Though you have a lot invested, going that route may not be entirely healthy either, trying to "catch" him. However, you want and need to know the truth.
You're emotionally invested. You're also mad, understandably so, not knowing the truth. Instead of The Parent response, what's the Adult (wisemind) response? Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 25, 2015, 01:38:01 AM Turkish, actually right now I feel nothing. I don't really want to catch him in a lie. I think I simply want to tell him I called the county clerk again, asked about him again, told them he said he filed, and tell him what their response was. If he says he filed I will tell him I can't deal with this on my own so we will talk about it again after I've established a relationship with a new therapist. That's what my wise mind tells me.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: waverider on September 25, 2015, 04:30:04 AM A lot of the problems with needing to have a lie acknowledged is the belief that it will help you understand why, when it seems there was no point to it in the first place.
Lies for no real obvious reasons simply make you feel like you are unimportant, as though they simply dont care whether you know the truth or not. As though it is their business and non of yours... Kind of "hey stay out of my life" It is hard to have a relationship with someone who operates on a "need to know" principle based on meeting their needs,and totally ignoring yours. It is hard to feel like you are even on the same team Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: formflier on September 25, 2015, 05:03:17 AM My dad reminded me that I said I would give my fiancé until moved out to my state to straighten this out and I'm going to remind me fiance of this. He has a little over a month to file, or tell me why he hasn't. Unicorn2014, I wish you the best today! Most likely won't be able to check in until later this evening. Consider staying away from deadlines, unless you are going to hold a deadline. Otherwise you are training your fiancee to understand that deadlines are not deadlines. Also, before you call today, try to think through how much you want to "get into" the subject. Shorter, more to the point, conversations usually go better with pwBPD traits. Longer ones tend to get off track. Focus on staying centered, staying calm... . You can do this! FF Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 25, 2015, 06:14:17 AM Wave rider, those are excellent thoughts and I may write them down and take them to my meeting with my fiancé. In addition I just discovered an old dbt worksheet from 2 years ago where I was sad that my fiancé hung up on me because I told him I wanted to tell my therapist that he told me was moving out to my state in April. This was April 2 years ago. He still has not moved. I woke up angry at 3am, and I pulled out my dbt binder and found that. I discovered another lie. I can not believe this.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 25, 2015, 06:17:05 AM Wave rider, I should add that my fiancé has totally attacked me for these very same issues, saying I'm not a team player and I act like I don't want him in my life. Now I know he was projecting. This makes me really mad.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 25, 2015, 06:23:22 AM For flier, thanks. I'm really pissed now, both from what I read in my dbt sheet from January 2 years ago and from what I just learned from wave riders post. My fiancé has totally been projecting all over me. It is textbook, straight out of walking on eggshells. I am so mad. My fiancé used to say I would read books and apply them to him or make them fit. He is so wrong. They do fit. I agree with you about deadlines and I'm really pissed about that too. I feel like have another child and that's really funny considering my fiancé used to denigrate my child's father saying he was like another child.
This topic is making me remember all the old feelings I suppressed from two years ago. It was my fiancé who trained me not to take deadlines seriously. He's been telling me he's moving out to my area for over two years. I remember talking to my former therapist about this who is now seeing my fiancé. My finances moving timeline really pissed me off. I can not believe this is happening. my-issues Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: Daniell85 on September 25, 2015, 07:52:06 AM Hopefully you can step away from that stuff a bit so you can go into your discussion on facetime in a calmer frame of mind. I don't know if it's possible to gain radical acceptance in a few hours.
As it sounds like he has not be on track like he promised, what are you intending to present to him as goals moving forward? You have Plan B since Plan A hasn't gone well? I wish you the best and that your mind and feelings are calm and clear when you talk to him Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: ForeverDad on September 25, 2015, 10:15:02 AM How soon are you planning to marry? As a matter of law, I don't think you can marry before he's divorced. While some divorces can take just a few months, many here have had divorces that took a year, two years or even longer. My divorce, from filing to final decree, was 23.5 months. Clearly, with him being the one dragging his feet (and his spouse not filing either) he doesn't have any desire to be remarried anytime soon. That's how I see it, how do you see it?
I may be jaded but I've also seen people get burned, at least from my perspective. My SIL finally settled on a boyfriend in her early to mid 20s. (While they probably had their assorted issues, I doubt either of them had PDs.) He was getting divorced and had children from the marriage. They moved in together and lived in his parents' home. He was still getting divorced. They had a baby. He was still getting divorced. They had another baby. He was still getting divorced. Their kids were older and attended school. He was still getting divorced. After 8-10 years his divorce was finally final. They still didn't get married. When they went to another state and bought a home together they finally married, not for love but for financial reasons. As I wrote, I don't think either of them was obstructive or disordered. Apparently marriage was not a big deal for them. What about you? How do you view engagement and marriage? If they mean a lot to you then it will surely be hard living halfway between engagement and marriage for what might turn out to be years. Do you really think he views them the same? The FOG has been mentioned here. O stands for obligation. You mentioned that many friends and relatives know of the engagement. So is that part of your reluctance to step back from the relationship now, being in the marriage spotlight, in addition to not having a counselor right now? The point I'm making is that IF the relationship does fail, it would be better for it to occur before the marriage than after the marriage. While breaking an engagement is hard, going through a divorce is much harder. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 25, 2015, 11:37:24 AM Forever Dad, thank you for your comment. I am divorced, previously I was married to a man with untreated bipolar disorder as well as alcoholism and addiction issues and I have a 14 year old daughter from that relationship.
My fiancé still maintains that he filed so he's going to talk to his lawyer on Monday and we're going to talk about it again on Wednesday. I talked to him about several points that people raised here and told him I was not in any position to be making any decision without a therapist, so that was off the table. Engagement and marriage are very important to me. My friends and family would not be surprised if I called off the engagement. They all know he hasn't filed for divorce yet, even though he says he has. I think for now this issue is going to have to wait. I should add that currently we are in a LDR so marriage isn't even an option right now. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: formflier on September 26, 2015, 06:22:07 PM It was my fiancé who trained me not to take deadlines seriously. He's been telling me he's moving out to my area for over two years. I remember talking to my former therapist about this who is now seeing my fiancé. My finances moving timeline really pissed me off. I can not believe this is happening. my-issues So, it would seem that for the majority of your r/s "deadlines" have been slipping. Is this correct? (Honestly... .want to make sure that I'm understanding the situation correctly) Divorce filing, moving. Are there other things that are promised but don't happen? These things make you mad, which would seem to indicate they are a big deal. Correct? Just want to make sure I have this right before making further observations. FF Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 26, 2015, 06:40:10 PM Formflier, you have it correct except for the making me mad part. I am not mad today. I went and saw a nurse and got some medication to help me sleep and saw a social worker for talk therapy to help me deal with the anxiety this situation is causing. I have decided to practice radical acceptance around this issue because right now the pros of staying in the relationship outweigh the cons of leaving it. I am currently reading through the workshop on radical acceptance and once I am done with that reading I will either reply there or start a new thread here. Radical acceptance is something I worked hard on in DBT and I will be taking another DBT course as well to help me through this difficult period of my life. I should add that my fiancé is not the only person that is stressing me out, I have other stressful factors as well which ironically enough he is helping mitigate, hence the pros outweighing the cons at this point.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: formflier on September 26, 2015, 10:22:40 PM So, what are you radically accepting? What are the pros of being in the r/s? FF Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 27, 2015, 12:01:53 AM Formflier, I am radically accepting that my fiance said he filed for divorce and the court said he didn't. The pros of staying in the r/s are I like my fiance, I enjoy his company, he's funny, warm, engaging, endearing, smart, talented, my daughter likes him, my family likes him, my church likes him, my community likes him, he's a good cook, he's handsome, he's wise, he's helpful, he's caring.
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: Turkish on September 27, 2015, 12:14:01 AM Dealing with what you feel is something only you can deal with. It might be time to state the truth instead of beating around the bush:
"Fiancée: you're a married man. I Throw the ball completely into his court. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 27, 2015, 12:20:17 AM Turkish, I did tell him something along those lines today. I'm giving him an opportunity to talk to his lawyer. We had another conversation today about another issue which another member had posted about. I actually was able to tell my fiance something I learned from this board. As a result of this board I also went and saw a social worker and will be taking another dbt class. I also talked to my dad again. I think my biggest challenge right now is forgive what happened before my fiance started taking medication and started working with a sponsor. I actually printed out the radical acceptance article and I realized I got that in my last dbt class. :)
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: waverider on September 27, 2015, 09:08:04 AM You will find radical acceptance comes more as an evolution, rather than as a decision. There is quite a lag between saying the words and instinctively feeling them. Being aware of the process is the first step.
What I am getting at is don't be too down on yourself if in the heat of the moment it all seems to go out the window. It is in effect a personality change, and that takes time Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: formflier on September 27, 2015, 09:27:54 AM Formflier, I am radically accepting that my fiance said he filed for divorce and the court said he didn't. |iiii There are a lot of pros to staying in the r/s. This is good. There really are some good things there... .sounds like a great guy. The "others" that you are talking about radically accepting seems a bit "focused" or "narrow" (In my opinion) for long term success. I would suggest that if you are able to RA that many times there will be things he says, which don't seem to add up with the "facts" that you are able to assemble, and if you are ok with that. Then, I think that is a good RA. In other words, it's part of his personality rather than a one time/one issue thing. Same thing for deadlines. I'll share a personal example. My wife's core issue is paranoia. It would be too "narrow" or "focused" if I radically accepted that she believed I was secretly in love with (fill in the name). That is a one time event. Unfortunately, paranoia affects the way she perceives the world. It's part of per personality. She sees conspiracies everywhere and paints me into them... .often. Yes, tools have made this better. I'm confident I can work through this. But, she is who she is. Nothing in my plan for the future is contingent on my wife not being paranoid So, if you can get to a point where you are ok with your future being "OK" with a guy where many times, randomly, with no seeming explanation, the stories about (fill in the blank) don't add up and that promised deadlines often slip. Then, I think you are on the right track. Focusing too narrowly, IMO, will set you up for future frustration. Thoughts? FF Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 27, 2015, 12:00:55 PM You will find radical acceptance comes more as an evolution, rather than as a decision. There is quite a lag between saying the words and instinctively feeling them. Being aware of the process is the first step. What I am getting at is don't be too down on yourself if in the heat of the moment it all seems to go out the window. It is in effect a personality change, and that takes time Thank you wave rider, that's why I'm doing dbt again, I need help too. I may post about thinking I was in one r/s and finding out I was in another one. Yesterday I had a really irritating phone conversation with my fiancé that's really bothering me today. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 27, 2015, 12:09:41 PM Form flier, I've read elsewhere about accepting that your partner lies and I don't know if I can do that. Yes, I hear what you're saying. It's a general behavior pattern and not a specific issue. He claims he has problems with institutions and I think his wife even backed him up on it. I think it may due to his learning disability. I also think it may be b/s and maybe his wife enabled him all those years.
In terms of his charm, yes he has many attractive and alluring qualities. Some have even said he seduced me in the beginning of our r/s. Regardless of all that he has proved himself with my daughter, family, church, community and sometimes even me. So because of that I want to give him another chance. He's a flawed human being. I know he's trying, I know he knows he has problems. It is very hard for me to accept things as they are. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: ForeverDad on September 28, 2015, 11:00:03 AM So the time is past for him to keep saying, "The court is wrong, I did the paperwork." That won't work any more. That should only work once and then it gets old very quick. Now is the time for him to say, "Well, court says they never got it so I will have the lawyer file it this week and he will give me copies showing it was received, timestamped and filed with the court and I'll share those copies with you." If he continues to drag it out then that would be a growing concern you mustn't ignore.
Clearly this is very low on his priority list. Yet it affects so many things. Depending on his state's laws, his spouse may have a right to anything he owns. So until this is resolved you shouldn't own anything jointly with him. Also, he should be filing his annual tax forms either "Married Filing Separately" or "Married Filing Jointly" if a divorce case and Final Decree didn't happen. Hmm, I wonder how he and his spouse filed earlier this year... . Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 28, 2015, 01:28:29 PM Forever Dad, he told me he is now looking for a new divorce attorney. I did ask him about how he filed and he said he was filing separately. He hasn't filed personal taxes yet. He's hedging about having his lawyer file. When I told him to have his lawyer file this week and give him copies showing it was received, timestamped and filed with the court he said that is not where it was at. He's acting like he doesn't know what I'm talking about or he's being sarcastic, saying he already knows I want those copies. I guess now I have to let him find a new lawyer?
I think this thread is going to get locked soon since its so long. I'm going to start a new one about not having the r/s I thought I had, I wrote a rough draft of the first paragraph. I'm still reading through the workshop on radical acceptance and then I will either reply to that or start a new thread on that as well. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: myself on September 28, 2015, 03:35:39 PM Unicorn, how have his lies affected your ability to respect him?
Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 28, 2015, 03:43:34 PM Myself, probably pretty severely since he accuses me of devaluing and dismissing him all the time now. On Saturday when I tried to talk to him about how I thought I was in one r/s and then found out I was in another one first he tried to accuse me of doing the same thing and then when that didn't work he accused me of devaluing and dismissing him. I'm tried to remind him that just because he feels that way it doesn't actually mean I'm doing it but that fell on deaf ears too.
I have to say it feels so good to have somewhere I can come to talk about these issues without being told to leave the r/s, or asked what I'm going to do, or being told there's something wrong with me for me being in a r/s like this. I really appreciate it when people read and reply to my posts without judging me or putting me down. I find it to be a real relief. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: formflier on September 29, 2015, 06:16:00 AM I really appreciate it when people read and reply to my posts without judging me or putting me down. I find it to be a real relief. I'm glad you are finding relief here. Some of the posts here (mine are most likely in this category) that seem to be pushing for a choice are not judging you. The judgement is that a certain path (choice) does not lend itself well to being a long term stayer and being "happy" long term or being content, satisfied (use the term you want). That is why I believe that relatively soon you need to come to a decision about how you will view your r/s and work on that. So, a view that says I am in a r/s with an interesting, funny guy that has issues with what I see as the truth... .but I am ok with that. I can see that view working out long term. I can also see a view working out that says "I am going to be in a r/s that values honesty and follow through on "deals". I can see you being satisfied by going down this path and having action that matches this worldview. I suspect there will be in turmoil inside of you as long as you stay on the path of your happiness and satisfaction coming from him following through on promises. Note how deftly he has shifted things so now you have to wait on HIM getting a new lawyer Very slick... . I believe ForeverDad had some concerns about conman type "always having an answer" things... . I have slid closer to ForeverDad's view now. (FD... if I am wrong... .please correct) FF Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: unicorn2014 on September 29, 2015, 10:09:11 AM Some of the posts here (mine are most likely in this category) that seem to be pushing for a choice are not judging you. I don't feel judged by you, I was talking about people outside of this board telling me to leave the r/s. Excerpt That is why I believe that relatively soon you need to come to a decision about how you will view your r/s and work on that. I was on the staying board until I found out he hadn't filed for divorce. Excerpt So, a view that says I am in a r/s with an interesting, funny guy that has issues with what I see as the truth... .but I am ok with that. I can see that view working out long term. I can also see a view working out that says "I am going to be in a r/s that values honesty and follow through on "deals". I can see you being satisfied by going down this path and having action that matches this worldview. Neither of those views work for me, so I need to find a third view. Excerpt I suspect there will be in turmoil inside of you as long as you stay on the path of your happiness and satisfaction coming from him following through on promises. My happiness and satisfaction never came from him following through on promises. I actually don't know what happiness and satisfaction are, I didn't experience them in my FOO or my first marriage. I'm not so sure I'm concerned about happiness or satisfaction right now. As the single mother of a teenager I'm not looking for happiness or satisfaction to come from any r/s with a man. My child's father had his chance to provide me with that and he failed. Excerpt Note how deftly he has shifted things so now you have to wait on HIM getting a new lawyer I am the one who suggested he get a new lawyer if his lawyer wasn't doing his job. Excerpt I believe ForeverDad had some concerns about conman type "always having an answer" things... . I can understand that and I can tell you my fiancé is not a conman. I would not be involved with a conman for three years, nor introduce him to my family, friends, church and community. I also don't think my family, friends, church and community would like him if he were a conman. I don't think that's his problem. I think his problem is he bit off more then he could chew with divorcing his wife, closing his business and relocating. As I said I am now working with a social worker and am going to take DBT again to help me with radical acceptance. I also appreciated the discussion on circular arguments on another topic. I understand that being on the undecided board is not recommended long term however I actually got moved to the undecided board less then a week ago. Its true I do need to find new ground to stand on in the r/s. Title: Re: How lies affect your abilty to respect Post by: once removed on September 29, 2015, 11:08:17 AM *mod*
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