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Title: Advice on reversing a breakup Post by: stevemcduck on June 07, 2026, 02:50:00 PM I'm not looking for reassurance or validation. I'm trying to understand what is most likely happening psychologically.
My ex and I were together for just over 5 years. She was 20 when we met and 26 when we separated. Throughout most of that time I was effectively her primary attachment figure. We lived together, travelled together, built a life together and had a very intense bond. The relationship also had a Dom-sub dynamic where I was generally the provider, protector and more emotionally stable partner. She has what I would describe as quiet/internalised BPD rather than the more outwardly explosive presentation. Her struggles seemed to revolve around shame, fear of abandonment, favourite-person attachments, splitting, identity issues, validation seeking and emotional avoidance. About a year ago the relationship suffered a major rupture. She became emotionally attached to another man who appeared to become her new favourite person. There was lying, emotional betrayal and behaviour that caused significant damage to trust. We separated. What makes this situation more confusing is that after several months apart I wrote her a deeply personal book. To my surprise she came back. When she returned she was extremely emotional. She apologised repeatedly, told me she loved me, admitted she had made huge mistakes and eventually moved back in with me. For a period of time it genuinely felt like we had overcome something impossible. However, the reconciliation was difficult. More information emerged about what had happened during the separation. My trust had been badly damaged. Arguments became more frequent. Her shame appeared enormous. There were ongoing issues around validation seeking, emotional regulation and accountability. One important point: despite all the emotional turmoil, there had never been physical violence throughout the previous five years of our relationship. A physical incident occurred during the final breakdown of the relationship and was completely out of character compared to the majority of our time together. Approximately two months ago the relationship ended following a serious argument. She became physically aggressive during the conflict. I left the house because I felt the situation was escalating. I then made the stupid decision to drive after drinking and was arrested for drink driving. When police saw injuries on me and asked what had happened, the situation escalated further and she was subsequently arrested and removed from the house. Because of the legal situation she currently cannot contact me. I have not seen or spoken to her since. A few weeks ago I sent her an 8-minute video. The video was calm, reflective and compassionate. I apologised for my own part in the relationship problems, told her I still cared deeply about her, acknowledged the good and bad in both of us and made it clear there was no hatred from my side. I also told her that if she ever wanted me to call her one day when everything had settled down, she could simply change her WhatsApp profile picture as a signal. She watched the video. Shortly afterwards she removed her WhatsApp profile picture entirely. She didn't replace it with another picture. She simply removed it. Because she currently cannot contact me, I have no way of knowing whether that meant anything or not. Since then she has remained very active on social media. Recent content has included: A selfie with "Miss me?" written on it. Reposts about being misunderstood or hurt. BPD-related reposts. Posts saying things like "I've got a new life." Multiple dancing/thirst-trap style TikToks. Selfies in new outfits. Songs about exes and relationships. General validation-seeking content. I fully recognise that social media is a poor source of information, but I'm struggling to know whether I am seeing genuine patterns or simply projecting because I still love her. The contradiction I can't reconcile is this: On one hand: We were together over 5 years. I was her primary attachment figure through most of her adult life. She previously left and later came back. She apologised deeply during the reconciliation. She told me she loved me. She has my name tattooed on her body. We shared a life together. On the other hand: There was significant betrayal. Serious trust damage. The ending was traumatic. There is now complete silence. Her online behaviour often appears attention-seeking, contradictory and confusing. My questions are: How often do you see shame rather than lack of love prevent someone with BPD from reaching out? Have you seen people genuinely avoid someone they still loved because they believed they had caused too much damage? If somebody was a primary attachment figure for 5+ years, how quickly does that attachment typically fade? How much weight would you place on social media behaviour in situations like this? Does removing the WhatsApp picture after watching the video sound potentially meaningful, or is that exactly the type of thing partners tend to overanalyse? If you were advising someone in my position, would you maintain complete silence until restrictions end, or take a different approach? One final thing: I am aware that part of me still wants her back despite everything that happened. Another part of me knows the relationship was unhealthy and that I would probably have far more peace without it. Those two sides of me are currently at war with each other. I'm interested in honest analysis, even if the answer is that I'm reading too much into things or asking the wrong questions.vAnd the best advice you can give me to reconcile. Thank you I advance Title: Re: Advice on reversing a breakup Post by: ForeverDad on June 07, 2026, 07:42:58 PM What you're looking at are the leaves on the trees which can vary in many ways. If you step back you will see the forest. Translation: Individual actions and reactions may provide indications but the bigger picture is more important for long term success, or not. That's my observation... Does it matter that much about the details, since mental health issues (PDs) influence the big picture?
Here is a factoid that is admittedly somewhat general yet in most cases true:
The first separation was non-violent. The second separation was violent and resulted in legal repercussions for both of you. If you try again - without her seeking and continuing serious long term therapy - then future separations may easily be much worse, emotionally, legally, financially. Years ago, you weren't aware of the risks, now you are. There's a saying, "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me." There's also the old story of the frog and the scorpion. The scorpion wants to cross the stream and promises not to harm the frog for safe passage across the stream. Once across, the scorpion stings the frog and the frog cries, "But you promised!" And the scorpion replies, "You knew I was a scorpion." In time the court is likely to let the no-contact order expire. Will she have learned from this? Will you have learned from this? You know she has serious relationship issues. Sadly, as much as we wish it were otherwise, we can't live other people's lives. To a large extent, they will do what they will do. On the other hand, you have control of your own life, your decisions, the paths you choose. |