Title: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 12, 2018, 05:42:03 PM Hello all,
I need help with setting a specific boundary, and your opinion of it seems reasonable. I’ve been travelling with my uBPDh to another city, 6 hrs away, to “support him” on a new business venture. To make things clear, it’s a business that was bought out by a public company. The same company hired my uBPDh and his partner to manage it for xyz salary per months as consultants starting January. My uBPDh has been dutifully keeping his end of the responsibility, all the while his partner has been frequently traveling for a long distance relationships, he is simultaneously going through a divorce from a third wife. Side note, they also opened up another franchise of the same nature privately, invested their own resources, with two other people, who happened to be involved in the public company acquisition. To make things complicated, my husband’s partner is on a punishing mode “because his ex didn’t like his mother”, she is basically getting 10% out of 50% of their assets. He is also extremly and deliberately slow on account receivable, which means he didn’t produce invoices for my husband and himself till the end of April. Finally, when I nudged my uBPDh for coming all the way to “work” for nothing, he insisted on the pay out. His partner went berserk, saying he wanted to use this money for investment, and his life is complicated as is (his divorce negotiations are coming up, he wants to declare as little income as possible, his strategy is “full disclosure” to show how “broke he really is”, NOT! When my husband kept pressing under pressure from me, for salary for 5 months then, he supposedly agreed. Only to call him back the following week, saying that the investors/ prospective partners are delaying bringing in their 50% of the franchise. Due to pressures from the set up costs, they need to “invest their own money” (aka their salaries that I asked for). Yes, either my uBPDh husband is really delusional, or they are on to this together. Only a blind person would not see that because of the “legal scamming of his wife”, my husband’s partner is delaying the pay out till his divorce. WhAt does it mean for me and the children: 1. No summer camps 2.no travelling 3. Feeling financial constraints, which aren’t necessary, as we aren’t hiding anything, and have no need 4. In my eyes it defeats the purpose of going to “work” all together, as another member pointed out to me, the stakes are higher with questionable payout Now to the question. I do t want to waste my time babysitting my uBPDh if he doesn’t get paid. If my kids aren’t garnishing or enjoying the fruits of his labour and my sacrifices, I’m going home and entertaining my children, period. Ultimatums don’t work on my uBPDh. Yet, I want to be clear on one thing, either he demands his partner to play fair, and our family gets what’s owed to us for the past 5 month, or I leave to do the best I can with two children stuck in the house for the summer. How do I present it to him? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 12, 2018, 05:45:41 PM Slight clearification, the salary is coming in into their companies account. As long as it’s not withdrawn and paid out as salary it isn’t considered to be income. Hence my uBPDh partnwr’s reluctance at taking it out. Last I heard, he is turning in financials from another company he shares with my uBPDh during his Marriage to soon to be ex wife, to show that he is “limited on financial resources”, never mind he now has another company which is doing well.
Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on June 12, 2018, 06:31:15 PM To start with, boundaries are not about the other person but about what you wish to do according to your own values.
Boundaries do not control another person. They are only about what you would do in response to their behavior. For example- a boundary on infidelity isn't about controlling the other person's decision to cheat or not. If a person decides to cheat or not, that is their own decision. It is about what your values are- what would you do if that person cheated. I.E. If my husband cheated I would insist on: a) divorce b) he has to break it off and go to counseling c) nothing, we have an open marriage. There is no right of wrong answer. A person chooses a, b, or c ( or something else) according to their own personal values. We don't even have to discuss a boundary. Sometimes it is better not to. Sometimes we just act. For example once, my BPD mother started raging at me at her house. I didn't say anything- I just left and went home. Boundary- I don't sit there and let her rage at me. She can rage or not, but the boundary is about my actions. Your situation is complicated. We need to untangle it. First of all there are three people. Husband, partner, you. This is a drama triangle. Your H is playing victim to his partner. Your H is not standing up for himself. Then there is you- the potential victim of his not standing up for himself. The partner issues are leading the two of you. H is being co-dependent ( pwBPD can be co-dependent as well )with his partner, you are being co-dependent on your H by trying to rescue him and the money. The best learning experience is natural consequences. Sometimes if we help too much, we get in the way of that. My H had a learning experience with a business partner who was taking financial advantage of him. I saw it, but when I said something, it became a triangle. My H didn't see it until I backed off and let him handle this business situation and he realized he lost a lot of money. Yes, it was our livelihood and we had to adjust, but the learning had to be his. I could not make him see it. Once he did see it though, he learned a lot- not to be naive to these things and he doesn't fall into this kind of thing now. For things to get better at his business, he had to learn this lesson. Although it is your family's income, it is in the hands of your H and this partner. So long as you enable your H may not learn the hardest lesson which is- he is placing his finances in the hands of a questionable person. The best lesson for your H could be to learn what happens when he does this and yet, until you allow him to learn the consequences of his actions, he won't learn them You are making your plans contingent on two unreliable people. That isn't a boundary. A boundary is doing what is in accordance with your values. One boundary might be " honey, the kids are home all summer. I want to spend this time with them". Don't see this as stuck in the house. You can have an awesome summer with little money. Picnics at the park, go to a lake for the day, hiking, swimming at a public pool ( or at a friends house if they have one), go to the library and get movies and books for free. Is there a children's museum? Your kids want you more than they want stuff, and they are not little forever. Make this summer count for them- for you. If your husband has a fit, too bad. If this is your value system, it is about you, not him. It isn't blamed on him or his partner. It is you upholding your values. Do you think you need to be there for your kids? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 12, 2018, 09:31:40 PM Here is the thing... . Stop pushing your husband to put in the invoices. You put them in... for your husbands work. if the partner wants to invest his money... that's his deal. Hubby bills for his work... .or you bill for him. You've mentioned on here this is YOUR business as well... with your husband... .so... take care of your business. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 09:18:53 AM To start with, boundaries are not about the other person but about what you wish to do according to your own values. Not Wendy, thank you so much for making it clear I’m a daylight for me. Yes, of course it’s a triangle, he doesn’t want to be “bad or ruin his relationships” with kids partner, who is abusing the legal system and makes him accomplice in his dirty business. He sends me to be the bad guy, while his partner is a prosecutor and I’m the rescuer. When I come to think of it, he develops these codependent relationships with everyone around him. He used to be codependent on his foo, he is codependent with me, he did it with his friends. It’s everywhere around us, while I try to remind him that the family is a priority. I see no other option but to leave both of them alone. Boundaries do not control another person. They are only about what you would do in response to their behavior. For example- a boundary on infidelity isn't about controlling the other person's decision to cheat or not. If a person decides to cheat or not, that is their own decision. It is about what your values are- what would you do if that person cheated. I.E. If my husband cheated I would insist on: a) divorce b) he has to break it off and go to counseling c) nothing, we have an open marriage. There is no right of wrong answer. A person chooses a, b, or c ( or something else) according to their own personal values. We don't even have to discuss a boundary. Sometimes it is better not to. Sometimes we just act. For example once, my BPD mother started raging at me at her house. I didn't say anything- I just left and went home. Boundary- I don't sit there and let her rage at me. She can rage or not, but the boundary is about my actions. Your situation is complicated. We need to untangle it. First of all there are three people. Husband, partner, you. This is a drama triangle. Your H is playing victim to his partner. Your H is not standing up for himself. Then there is you- the potential victim of his not standing up for himself. The partner issues are leading the two of you. H is being co-dependent ( pwBPD can be co-dependent as well )with his partner, you are being co-dependent on your H by trying to rescue him and the money. The best learning experience is natural consequences. Sometimes if we help too much, we get in the way of that. My H had a learning experience with a business partner who was taking financial advantage of him. I saw it, but when I said something, it became a triangle. My H didn't see it until I backed off and let him handle this business situation and he realized he lost a lot of money. Yes, it was our livelihood and we had to adjust, but the learning had to be his. I could not make him see it. Once he did see it though, he learned a lot- not to be naive to these things and he doesn't fall into this kind of thing now. For things to get better at his business, he had to learn this lesson. Although it is your family's income, it is in the hands of your H and this partner. So long as you enable your H may not learn the hardest lesson which is- he is placing his finances in the hands of a questionable person. The best lesson for your H could be to learn what happens when he does this and yet, until you allow him to learn the consequences of his actions, he won't learn them You are making your plans contingent on two unreliable people. That isn't a boundary. A boundary is doing what is in accordance with your values. One boundary might be " honey, the kids are home all summer. I want to spend this time with them". Don't see this as stuck in the house. You can have an awesome summer with little money. Picnics at the park, go to a lake for the day, hiking, swimming at a public pool ( or at a friends house if they have one), go to the library and get movies and books for free. Is there a children's museum? Your kids want you more than they want stuff, and they are not little forever. Make this summer count for them- for you. If your husband has a fit, too bad. If this is your value system, it is about you, not him. It isn't blamed on him or his partner. It is you upholding your values. Do you think you need to be there for your kids? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 09:22:46 AM Hubby bills for his work... .or you bill for him. You've mentioned on here this is YOUR business as well... with your husband... .so... take care of your business. FF He already asked for his share of the salary, and as I explained in the previous post, got a yes... .but... .(because it doesn’t suit his partner) When I say it’s our business, on paper, it’s only two of them. It’s ours because I researched, borrowed money from our mutual line of credit, helped him deal with logistics and installation in the early stages. I encouraged him when he wanted to quit, I feel I deserve a share in something I helped him to build. As NotWendy, it has become a triangle, so I’m gonna back out of it. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 13, 2018, 09:52:19 AM I'm not suggesting that you ask him again. I am suggesting that you inform him that if he doesn't submit his billing for the 5 months that HE is owed... .you will submit that billing for him. Then he has a choice... he can go along with it. Instead of submitting billing he can submit something to the company that would pay saying ignore this... .I suppose there are other options. He won't like this... it's not designed to be "liked". It's designed to produce a payment for work rendered... that HE has chosen not to bill for. Just like the partner hasn't given a choice or asked if it is OK to not bill. You are not asking if it is OK to bill. Either you will be treated like a partner by your hubby... or not. If you are not a partner... .I would advise you to leave and offer no support whatsoever... until you are treated like an economic partner... . Again... .this is not created to be liked... .it's created to change the results of previous things that YOU are not happy with. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on June 13, 2018, 10:05:05 AM I'm going to share with you some of the skills I learned in 12 step groups ( which is why I and other are encouraging you to attend and get a sponsor). A sponsor held me accountable for my part in the relationship.
1) Know what you can control and can't control. This is behind the serenity prayer- God grant me the wisdom to know the difference. It is also step 1. The message behind step one is that- we can not control everything. If someone believes in a higher power, it is easy for them to comprehend that they are not God, not everything is up to them. If someone is an atheist, it can be understood as " you don't control everything that happens" - there are other forces like nature and human free will. Other people have their own free will. The other part is to know that we need to ask for help with managing our urge to be addicted ( or co-dependent) . It is not something we can easily stop on our own. This has been stated by FF too- we need a support system. It's important to get one. 2) A part of step 4 is examining what is called our "character defects" but we are not defective. We look at things like our fears. We write them all down and share them with a sponsor. It gets them out in the open and we deal with them. Some we have to realize we can't control - we don't run the universe and we let them go to our higher power or nature. One of your fears is that your H may harm himself like Lamar did, but truly you can not control him. You could sit by him 24/7 and he could go in the bathroom and OD on drugs. He is the one in charge of that decision. He is an adult. You can hope he doesn't harm himself but you can not control his actions. Lamar had family, friends, and a lot of money. Yet, he was in control of his behavior. He's a smart man and knew the risk. For all we know, people did try to stop him. It was a tragic outcome. But could anyone have stopped this? I don't know. You aren't the ruler of the universe. Your H has his own decisions to make. When you decide to control him you are also managing your own fears because- if you are there, you can see what he is doing and if you are not there, you can't and that scares you. It's similar to what your H is doing by keeping you with him. If you are with him, he doesn't have to worry you are with someone else. We may think we are helping someone, but we can also be serving our own fears when we do. This doesn't mean you have to decide not to monitor him. It just gives you all the angles to help you decide what to do. Step 4 also analyzes the cost of our behavior. The cost of managing your H is that you are not able to be with your children or finish your education. What you do is up to you. These are not easy choices. One is that you be with your children and pursue your degree- but you have to live with the fear of the unknown- hubby is out of sight and possibly upset that you are not there to be his supporter ( enabler ). The other decision is you continue to manage your husband like you are doing. It helps to have support with these dilemmas. Your H is unlikely to change a situation he benefits from. It will be up to you. If you decide to go back to your children, it helps to avoid the YOU word or any blame. Make it about you. This is my choice. Honey, I love you but I have decided to stay with the kids. It's important to me. He's likely to be upset, threat, but if this is your choice and you can believe it is the best for you- stay the grounds. This assumes you are not in danger of physical abuse. If so, work with your counselor, have a safety plan in place. IMHO physical abuse requires professional guidance. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 10:06:04 AM I'm not suggesting that you ask him again. I am suggesting that you inform him that if he doesn't submit his billing for the 5 months that HE is owed... .you will submit that billing for him. Then he has a choice... he can go along with it. Instead of submitting billing he can submit something to the company that would pay saying ignore this... .I suppose there are other options. He won't like this... it's not designed to be "liked". It's designed to produce a payment for work rendered... that HE has chosen not to bill for. Just like the partner hasn't given a choice or asked if it is OK to not bill. You are not asking if it is OK to bill. Either you will be treated like a partner by your hubby... or not. If you are not a partner... .I would advise you to leave and offer no support whatsoever... until you are treated like an economic partner... . Again... .this is not created to be liked... .it's created to change the results of previous things that YOU are not happy with. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on June 13, 2018, 10:12:02 AM Yet, in the current situation, when I can’t afford to give my kids something that they are entitled to, it gets too far.
Beyond basic needs, do your kids also need a parent to be present for them? Do they need summer camps or a parent to take them to the park and tuck them in at night? They are going to grow up and leave home faster than you know. Do you want to miss these times? Yes money is important- to a degree that needs are met, but what about love, attention, time with parents? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 10:28:18 AM Yet, in the current situation, when I can’t afford to give my kids something that they are entitled to, it gets too far. This is absolutely important, for that reason my plan for the summer was to bring them to work, and take them around, spend time, entertain, the camps were needed to give me a bit time during the day to run errands. For the fall, should he get a contract, I was planning to relocate the kids here (to work place), rent another property, separate from the partner and attend university here. Only, this “paper rich” situation isn’t helping in terms of facilitating Beyond basic needs, do your kids also need a parent to be present for them? Do they need summer camps or a parent to take them to the park and tuck them in at night? They are going to grow up and leave home faster than you know. Do you want to miss these times? Yes money is important- to a degree that needs are met, but what about love, attention, time with parents? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on June 13, 2018, 10:39:02 AM How old are the kids?
Who is taking care of them? Are they happy there? What grades are they in? Do they like their schools ? Do they have friends? If they are old enough to express their preferences - have you asked them what they want to do? How does their caregiver feel about their position? Do they enjoy it? Are they providing a loving stable home? Kids need their parents but if the situation is dysfunctional it could be better for them to not be living with drama, a drugged sexually inappropriate father and his scheming partner and the stresses involved for you. Also consider what they want. They could be attached to thei caregiver, schools and friends. Is what you want to do really what is best for them ? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 13, 2018, 10:47:16 AM Why speak to the partner at all. You and your husband are married... .you are not married to the partner although somehow you are in business with him... I get it you are connected. Speak to hubby first... privately. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 11:01:43 AM How old are the kids? ->Kids are 15 and 11, d15 and s11 (on a spectrum for ASD)Who is taking care of them? Are they happy there? What grades are they in? Do they like their schools ? Do they have friends? If they are old enough to express their preferences - have you asked them what they want to do? How does their caregiver feel about their position? Do they enjoy it? Are they providing a loving stable home? Kids need their parents but if the situation is dysfunctional it could be better for them to not be living with drama, a drugged sexually inappropriate father and his scheming partner and the stresses involved for you. Also consider what they want. They could be attached to thei caregiver, schools and friends. Is what you want to do really what is best for them ? ->My parents are live in caregivers since my s11 was born, they have always been secondary caregivers after me, uBPDh contributed between 5-10% of child rearing ->:)15 is extremly busy with competitive sport, she is at professional level and is an honour student, she began to show some early BPDish behaviours last year, we saw a therapist, i adjusted my approach. S11 loves my parents very much, his grandfather (my step-dad) is his favourite person on the entire planet. They have very nurturing and gentle relationships, both kids are well adjusted, for them, nothing changes, they have the same house, schools, friends, my d15 has tutors and sports and s11 has daily therapists and extracurricular. They are happy kids ->they are going into grade 10 and grade 6 respectively, d15 doesn’t like her school, as anyone at that strange high school period, s11 doesn’t mind it, both have some friends, not too many. -> neither of the kids want to come and replicate to “work” site, d15 has friends from other schools that she wants to spend her time with, s11 doesn’t like a change due to his diagnosis -> my parents live and breathe these kids, especially my step dad who never had kids of his own. To him, my s11 is an apple of his eye, as he has been raising and nurturing him since he was 2 weeks old. They love being their “caregivers”, plus my mother is getting paid a fair salary by my uBPDh for providing “extra”. They are actually glad that the “turbulence of BPD” isn’t there (at home) all the time (we are away had of the time). It’s a stable 2 people household, my father is extremly balanced and emotionally intelligent, mother is her stable routine and also feels useful (they are young grandparents, mid 50s, I’m 34 yo) -> @NotWendy, you opened up a can of warms, in a good way, here is why. My parents report the kids being calmer, more compliant and overall in good emotional state. Although my uBPDh isn’t druged all the time (every 3 months or so, when he is high I don’t let him resurface from the basement, so my kids don’t see him like that), most of the time he is in a foul mood, irritated and snapping. I don’t know what to say, perhaps it is better for them to be far away from all this madness. The problem is, when I’m away, it actually makes the things worse even back at home. From cutting down on the financial aspect to him calling and constantly threatening and demeaning me, making it his mission to bring me down. I don’t know what to do... . Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 13, 2018, 11:26:53 AM Hey... .this is in response to both threads. There is zero chance I would change the situation with your kids, unless/until major changes happen with business and your marriage. Not promises of changes but changes that have happened and stayed happened for a while. I've been very direct about what I believe you need to do (either he bills... or you bill). Here is why (stay big picture) Choices as I see them. 1. Continue enabling 2. Leave and let him figure it all out and accept the result (there is some wisdom to this choice, although its not my favorite) 3. Figure out if you really are a "partner" "employee" or (fill in the blank). I'm obviously pushing you towards 3. Right now... as I see it... .you "claim" to be going with him to "keep an eye on your interests". Which you are... .you are watching them go down the tubes. I would much rather you go to "influence what happens to your interests". No... you don't get to be a dictator either... .pwBPD don't compromise well... .and this may not work. But at least you will know... .vice fear... .if it will work or not. If it turns out you have "no influence"... .then you clearly need to spend your energy elsewhere. Here is the thing. You can get nothing and stay with him and enable... .or worst case... .he cuts you off... .and you still get nothing... .yet you are not in abusive relationship anymore. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 11:40:10 AM Hey... .this is in response to both threads. @Ff, I’m leaning towards doing whAt is in family’s best interest... I am stuck on how to speak to him. Based on what’s happening in his field of work yesterday and today, it’s completly down, as you probably saw, so is his stock I the public company. He just sent me 3 texts back to back, undoubtedly to shake me up;There is zero chance I would change the situation with your kids, unless/until major changes happen with business and your marriage. Not promises of changes but changes that have happened and stayed happened for a while. I've been very direct about what I believe you need to do (either he bills... or you bill). Here is why (stay big picture) Choices as I see them. 1. Continue enabling 2. Leave and let him figure it all out and accept the result (there is some wisdom to this choice, although its not my favorite) 3. Figure out if you really are a "partner" "employee" or (fill in the blank). I'm obviously pushing you towards 3. Right now... as I see it... .you "claim" to be going with him to "keep an eye on your interests". Which you are... .you are watching them go down the tubes. I would much rather you go to "influence what happens to your interests". No... you don't get to be a dictator either... .pwBPD don't compromise well... .and this may not work. But at least you will know... .vice fear... .if it will work or not. If it turns out you have "no influence"... .then you clearly need to spend your energy elsewhere. Here is the thing. You can get nothing and stay with him and enable... .or worst case... .he cuts you off... .and you still get nothing... .yet you are not in abusive relationship anymore. FF 1. Hello new lows 2. New lows today are at 20% 3. We will have to sell the house Now the truth, he still holds assets that are 200% higher then our outstanding mortgage He is in an organic industry that changes in a minute notice We don’t have to sell the house, or we can sell and buy something cheaper His whole rant is to create chaos, confusion, panic and fear My reply to him: Yes, I saw, it’s devastating (validating his feelings) Now, I don’t know how to ask without tripping over the barber wire for money, when he is in this mood/state he is incoherent. What’s worse, his drug abuse last Monday doesnf help to keep him mentally stable Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on June 13, 2018, 11:42:24 AM Seems like the best thing for the kids is to not relocate them and leave them with your parents.
Consistency is important, especially for a child on the spectrum. The 15 year old doesn't have much more of high school left and then she will be off to college. Moving her at 15 in high school can be a disruption. It isn't my decision, but pulling the kids away from a stable environment to go live at the worksite away from your parents who are important caregivers is not in their best interest. They are part of this, and they have their wishes. At the age of your kids if someone had given me a choice to live with my parents- BPD mother, enabling father or my extended family ( we stayed with my fathers family a lot and they were loving and stable) I would have chosen to live with his family immediately. It wouldn't even be a question for me. Considering your H doesn't seem to care that he isn't parenting them and when he is home you need to shield them from his drug habit and he stays in the basement, what's the point of bringing them closer to him ( and away from stability and people who are invested in them. ) I don't know your parents' situation but if they have a home ,and your H cuts you off financially, the kids will not be homeless and your parents won't let them starve. As a kid who grew up with an unstable BPD parent and enabling father, the situation your kids are in sounds like a piece of heaven to me. The next question is you. It appears the best place for the kids is to stay and I think they and your parents would agree. Your decision is stay with your H or leave and stay with the kids. I don't know what to say about that decision. It really is up to you. If you stay there and watch your husband, the kids will be fine, but will you be? If you return, are you able to keep boundaries on the chaos he may create- ie speak to him at scheduled times, don't always answer the phone. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 11:53:32 AM Seems like the best thing for the kids is to not relocate them and leave them with your parents. It is certainly in their best interest to stay away from him... .I guess I just haven’t processed it fully... .when I stay away, he tries to enforce this chaos onto the children. They both have phones, so he can tell to d15: “you are gonna have to quit sport immediately, you are lazy, hood for nothing, it’s cheaper for me to have you quit” (when he is facing financial struggles), or to s11; “answer me xyz”, you don’t know?. Why am I spending so much money on therapy (never mind it’s s15’s recommendation of clinical psychologist to keep it going till he is 18 yo)? I should go and blow this money on guns and parties (trying to provoke my reaction). So it seemed like the only solution, to take the heat so they wouldn’t have to. He is resourceful, if I ever came swinging openly, at that time he would manically locate the resources to crush me down (according to him). Consistency is important, especially for a child on the spectrum. The 15 year old doesn't have much more of high school left and then she will be off to college. Moving her at 15 in high school can be a disruption. It isn't my decision, but pulling the kids away from a stable environment to go live at the worksite away from your parents who are important caregivers is not in their best interest. They are part of this, and they have their wishes. At the age of your kids if someone had given me a choice to live with my parents- BPD mother, enabling father or my extended family ( we stayed with my fathers family a lot and they were loving and stable) I would have chosen to live with his family immediately. It wouldn't even be a question for me. Considering your H doesn't seem to care that he isn't parenting them and when he is home you need to shield them from his drug habit and he stays in the basement, what's the point of bringing them closer to him ( and away from stability and people who are invested in them. ) I don't know your parents' situation but if they have a home ,and your H cuts you off financially, the kids will not be homeless and your parents won't let them starve. As a kid who grew up with an unstable BPD parent and enabling father, the situation your kids are in sounds like a piece of heaven to me. The next question is you. It appears the best place for the kids is to stay and I think they and your parents would agree. Your decision is stay with your H or leave and stay with the kids. I don't know what to say about that decision. It really is up to you. If you stay there and watch your husband, the kids will be fine, but will you be? If you return, are you able to keep boundaries on the chaos he may create- ie speak to him at scheduled times, don't always answer the phone. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on June 13, 2018, 12:15:16 PM It seems the main power he has is money. ( the drug/woman issue is a threat, but the main "hook" is the money).
What is your part in this? You are attached to something he controls. Because of that, he controls you. You speak of "entitled to" in context of the kids, a certain share of the money. And you are hanging on here to get your part of that share. But what is the personal price you are paying for this potential money? Is it worth basically your whole life being focused on managing him? He can do what he wants with that money- whether it is legally correct, fair, right or wrong. He controls it. The only way I could gain independence from my parents was to not need them financially. My father made a very good living but my BPD mother controlled every penny of it. When it came to college, I didn't even apply to private colleges. I purposely applied to an affordable state college that I knew I could put myself through because I didn't know if BPD mother would approve tuition or not each semester. Relying on my mother for money meant being at her disposal. When my father died, he left my mother in a good financial situation. We were afraid she would spend her money too quickly. It was a selfish fear- because we didn't want her to run out of money for her needs. She has been mismanaging it but it is her money and we have no power to control what she does with it. She uses it to control people. The only way we can stay out of her control is to disconnect from her money, or anything else she has ( she also uses my father's possesions to manipulate me- " if you want your father's things you need to do this or that). I was not attached to her money but I was attached to his memories - and to be free of her cruel manipulations I had to let go of that. You can't control what your H does with money if it is in his hands. All you can do is control your attachment to it. It appears he is keeping you trapped but if you were not attached to it, you would not be trapped in this. If you were not spending all your time and mental energy focused on his business issues, would you be able to work yourself? You may not earn what he earns, but any job would pay something. Or work part time and go to school. I know that some money is necessary for basic needs and survival, but beyond that, what is the personal cost to you of the money he has? If it is worth it to you to hang in there, from my own experience, IMHO the children should be spared from his behavior and left where they are. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 12:29:18 PM It seems the main power he has is money. ( the drug/woman issue is a threat, but the main "hook" is the money). @NotWendy, you are absolutely correct in your observation. My own fears and issues, combined with high overhead costs associated with my kids literally puts me on my knees. To drive point further, I could take the blame for being money hungry if I spent it on my own needs or wants. The reality is such, I’m clawing money out of him to pay for our children. Perhaps this is where I’m going wrong about? I’m on a wait list for my son’s therapy from the government affiliated agency. Sometime next year he will be funded. My d is 15, and if I asked her which one would she rather choose, being with me everyday or competing she would choose me. I believe in this wholeheartedly. I don’t want to make her choose, as it’s not her burden to carry. I won’t be able to maintain the same lifestyle for them, there will be a lot of adjustment. He is also likely to flip out and either threaten or start the divorce punishment. It has happened in the past, when I didn’t comply. My entire marriage has been built on threats and my cooperation and overcompensating. What is your part in this? You are attached to something he controls. Because of that, he controls you. You speak of "entitled to" in context of the kids, a certain share of the money. And you are hanging on here to get your part of that share. But what is the personal price you are paying for this potential money? Is it worth basically your whole life being focused on managing him? He can do what he wants with that money- whether it is legally correct, fair, right or wrong. He controls it. The only way I could gain independence from my parents was to not need them financially. My father made a very good living but my BPD mother controlled every penny of it. When it came to college, I didn't even apply to private colleges. I purposely applied to an affordable state college that I knew I could put myself through because I didn't know if BPD mother would approve tuition or not each semester. Relying on my mother for money meant being at her disposal. When my father died, he left my mother in a good financial situation. We were afraid she would spend her money too quickly. It was a selfish fear- because we didn't want her to run out of money for her needs. She has been mismanaging it but it is her money and we have no power to control what she does with it. She uses it to control people. The only way we can stay out of her control is to disconnect from her money, or anything else she has ( she also uses my father's possesions to manipulate me- " if you want your father's things you need to do this or that). I was not attached to her money but I was attached to his memories - and to be free of her cruel manipulations I had to let go of that. You can't control what your H does with money if it is in his hands. All you can do is control your attachment to it. It appears he is keeping you trapped but if you were not attached to it, you would not be trapped in this. If you were not spending all your time and mental energy focused on his business issues, would you be able to work yourself? You may not earn what he earns, but any job would pay something. Or work part time and go to school. I know that some money is necessary for basic needs and survival, but beyond that, what is the personal cost to you of the money he has? If it is worth it to you to hang in there, from my own experience, IMHO the children should be spared from his behavior and left where they are. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 01:42:56 PM When it rains, it pours, rather quickly, update:
I asked my uBPDh if he spoke to his partner regarding the financials, he replied that he doesn’t want to stress his partner out (that’s new, he doesn’t stop himself in my behalf) because he is doing negotiations for a new contract. Fast forward an hour, uBPDh called me, here is exchange: Him: how are you? Me: not great Him:I have news Me: really, what is it? Him:we got an offer, which is (half of what he was asking, in a range of 2times of his salary from another business). I thought of first rejecting it, yet... . Me: no f... .way, it doesn’t make sense to go through all this trouble for only xyz amount (not a sweet offer) Him: profanities, I’m not asking for your opinion, don’t say anything if you aren’t being asked, can you make that amount (in my field I would make about half, after many years of experience) Me: how about we start by getting what you owed for the past 5 months, how about that? Him: no, go ... .yourself, you ... ., I’m not asking what you want Me: we don’t speak to each other this way Him: continued the rant Me: we don’t speak to each other this way He hung up the phone This didn’t go well at all, I should have held back on my dismay of the salary, from what I know about a business world, and the amount of time and effort he is putting into this, this isn’t a sweet deal worth of grabbing. He is all pissed because business is down, I didn’t validate him (why should I? No, he didn’t ask me, he just called to inform me). I’m all swimming in my head. Years before I found this site and your support I would be calling back and apologized, now, I’m trying to make sense of it. WAs I wrong? I remember him saying explicitly that he won’t move his little finger for an amount twice as big. How did we come to this “good offer”? His enmeshment with partner is going at the full speed, he is stealing money under my unpdh’s Nose while stroking his ego. My uBPDh takes it all the way. How do I behave? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 01:55:46 PM What it means for the family, is that he will need to spend twice as much time at work, away from the family for very little profit when you consider living between two households, Kids need to eat, heating needs to be paid, all the same expenses plus living costs in another city. I’m hurting from visibly having no say in his matters, only when the things go bad does he remember me suddenly. He wants immediate comfort and consolation, made feel better. When it comes to me, I don’t have a say. I want to go home, away from this all, I’m so tired and exhausted.
Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 13, 2018, 02:17:00 PM He worries about stressing out his partner... because his partner "stands up to him"... ."demands respect"... . You don't... .therefore... you don't get it, because it's not required. He can send the invoice, or you can send it. He can be stressed... or not. His partner can be stressed... or not. Being in business is not about "potential money"... .it's about actual money. Generally money that shows up kinda regularly. My two cents. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on June 13, 2018, 02:44:53 PM I want to address the kids. This is another triangle. Him, the kids, and you. He's their father too and he actually does have a choice to fund sports or therapy or not. The decision is between him and them. With you in the middle as their rescuer, in the drama triangle, it becomes a three way ,not a two way decision. When you approach him, the kids are the victims, you are the rescuer, and he is in bad guy position. What he hears is ay up or be the bad guy. He's going to feel resentful of that position and you are going to feel hurt "don't you care about your kids?"
Maybe he does and maybe he doesn't but he won't get the chance to decide if you are in the middle of this. Your daughter is old enough to say ":)ad, are you willing to support my sports" . When the bill comes for your son's therapy, it can be sent to him. You don't have to decide to do this or not. The risk is he will say no, but the other potential is that he is in the position to really make his own choice. For your children, they will see what kind of person he is. You do need to protect them from harm, but if Dad won't pay for what they ask him for, then that isn't abuse, it is reality. He will then bear the responsibility for that choice. Lets try this conversation again: the original: Him: how are you? Me: not great Him:I have news Me: really, what is it? Him:we got an offer, which is (half of what he was asking, in a range of 2times of his salary from another business). I thought of first rejecting it, yet... . Me: no f... .way, it doesn’t make sense to go through all this trouble for only xyz amount (not a sweet offer) This completely shuts the conversation down. He doesn't even finish what he is thinking. It all goes downhill after that Now he is getting defensive: Him: profanities, I’m not asking for your opinion, don’t say anything if you aren’t being asked, can you make that amount (in my field I would make about half, after many years of experience) Me: how about we start by getting what you owed for the past 5 months, how about that? This communicates resentment and you do feel that, but then he reacts to that. Him: no, go ... .yourself, you ... ., I’m not asking what you want Me: we don’t speak to each other this way Him: continued the rant Me: we don’t speak to each other this way A version that may make a difference because it leaves room for him to share his thoughts and doesn't shut the conversation down. Him: how are you? Me: not great Him:I have news Me: really, what is it? Him:we got an offer, which is (half of what he was asking, in a range of 2times of his salary from another business). I thought of first rejecting it, yet... . Me: What are you thinking about it ? ( this opens the door for discussion) Him: I agree it is a bad offer but money is trickling in and I am thinking maybe it is better to take it now. Me: I hear you but do you think it is enough? Him: I sort of do, I am not sure though. Me: How much time do you have to think about it before you have to reply? Him: By the end of the week Me: Ok well think about it and let me know. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 03:40:27 PM I want to address the kids. This is another triangle. Him, the kids, and you. He's their father too and he actually does have a choice to fund sports or therapy or not. The decision is between him and them. With you in the middle as their rescuer, in the drama triangle, it becomes a three way ,not a two way decision. When you approach him, the kids are the victims, you are the rescuer, and he is in bad guy position. What he hears is ay up or be the bad guy. He's going to feel resentful of that position and you are going to feel hurt "don't you care about your kids?" Regarding kids, thank you for opening this conversation. As their primary caregiver and decision maker I feel responsible for them all the time. I never really gave my uBPDh a chance to take this responsibility. What’s more, I was always fearful, which isn’t baseless, if he was in charge of d15 professional career, she would never get as far as she did.(he can’t accept failure, after every loss he wants her to quit. Which isn’t compatible with sport)Maybe he does and maybe he doesn't but he won't get the chance to decide if you are in the middle of this. Your daughter is old enough to say ":)ad, are you willing to support my sports" . When the bill comes for your son's therapy, it can be sent to him. You don't have to decide to do this or not. The risk is he will say no, but the other potential is that he is in the position to really make his own choice. For your children, they will see what kind of person he is. You do need to protect them from harm, but if Dad won't pay for what they ask him for, then that isn't abuse, it is reality. He will then bear the responsibility for that choice. Lets try this conversation again: the original: Him: how are you? Me: not great Him:I have news Me: really, what is it? Him:we got an offer, which is (half of what he was asking, in a range of 2times of his salary from another business). I thought of first rejecting it, yet... . Me: no f... .way, it doesn’t make sense to go through all this trouble for only xyz amount (not a sweet offer) This completely shuts the conversation down. He doesn't even finish what he is thinking. It all goes downhill after that Now he is getting defensive: Him: profanities, I’m not asking for your opinion, don’t say anything if you aren’t being asked, can you make that amount (in my field I would make about half, after many years of experience) Me: how about we start by getting what you owed for the past 5 months, how about that? This communicates resentment and you do feel that, but then he reacts to that. Him: no, go ... .yourself, you ... ., I’m not asking what you want Me: we don’t speak to each other this way Him: continued the rant Me: we don’t speak to each other this way A version that may make a difference because it leaves room for him to share his thoughts and doesn't shut the conversation down. Him: how are you? Me: not great Him:I have news Me: really, what is it? Him:we got an offer, which is (half of what he was asking, in a range of 2times of his salary from another business). I thought of first rejecting it, yet... . Me: What are you thinking about it ? ( this opens the door for discussion) Him: I agree it is a bad offer but money is trickling in and I am thinking maybe it is better to take it now. Me: I hear you but do you think it is enough? Him: I sort of do, I am not sure though. Me: How much time do you have to think about it before you have to reply? Him: By the end of the week Me: Ok well think about it and let me know. Regarding conversation, I could have definetly handled it better, what’s worse is now I’m not in the know and his partner is coming in as a rescuer. I will try to lay low, and keep questions to minimum. Do you have any suggestions on how to repair it? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 13, 2018, 03:53:35 PM The best way to repair it is to STOP doing things that got it in need of repair. Am I correct that you are controlling D15s career? FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 13, 2018, 03:57:30 PM The best way to repair it is to STOP doing things that got it in need of repair. UBPDh enrolled her in sport when she was 3 yo, the couch saw her potential and encouraged us to take it seriously. Through financial hardship, unpdh’s Meltdowns, I managed to budget and keep her going. She loves it and feels very confident and achieved as a result. She trains 20+ hours a week, which also leaves little time for getting into trouble. So yes, I have been managing her career from near and far for the last 12 years. Am I correct that you are controlling D15s career? FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 13, 2018, 04:07:24 PM And... what if you saw an in person therapist... .that advised you that you have potential (as we have)... .would you "manage" your own career and life? She's 15... .isn't it about time to turn it over to her? Your husband is how old? Isn't it time to turn his life over to him? That should leave you plenty of energy and time to "control" your life. My intent is to be direct, please don't take this as harsh (that's not my intent) You do have "business interests" and "financial interests" with your husband's business... .either control them or walk away from the entire thing. That is different than trying to control what your husband does. (please think about this for a while to make sure that is straight in your head) If you husband is going to "fight you" to prevent business money from coming in via billing... .which should have been done monthly (from the sound of the deal), but hasn't due to a partners personal preferences for hiding assets... .then you need to "know" that... and not "fear" that. Personally... I think your hubby will fold and bill. However... .after so long of threats, you really need to know if there is substance there or not. Living a life based on fear is no good. Living a life based on knowledge gained through experience is manageable, even if the knowledge you gain is unpleasant. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on June 13, 2018, 05:17:22 PM Snowglobe-
I am glad I got the chance to see this exchange between you and your H and to read the situation. It may sound as if I am focusing on you - I know your H has serious issues- but you are the one who is here, and the only person you can control or change is you. Having gone through a lot of work on co-dependency, I can see some of the things you are doing that I needed to work on. Sometimes things are more apparent when we had to learn them ourselves. You have several big things that need to be decided. Whether to live with him or return to where your kids are, your schooling and future career, the money issues, his business issues. These are really big things. I know it is frustrating to feel like you are in a pattern that keeps on going. A site on the internet describes this as the dance of co-dependency. I don't know if this site is a reliable source or not, but the title, the dance makes sense. To change the dance, you need to change your steps and it starts with small steps. The conversation you posted shows the resentments in your responses. Also the control. You have one idea of what needs to be done and he's doing it wrong. There is no room for his ideas. Take the offer, counter offer, negotiate, reject it. He didn't have the chance to finish his sentence and the whole thing deteriorated. It isn't that you could have handled it better. You handled it with the best tools you have for communicating with him now. To do differently, there has to be new tools. Most of what I have learned is from personal counseling, 12 steps, and this board. All are useful and all are better than only one learning situation. Several have suggested counseling and 12 steps in addition to this. The 12 steps directly address control, resentments and fears. This is a good first step for learning to do something different. You are not wrong but what you are doing isn't working well for you in some areas. We have the relationship tools we have from our experiences and also the families we grow up in. Some of them may have worked with our families growing up ,but are not working so well now. Counseling and a 12 step group can really help you get into these issues - and from that, you can make the bigger changes. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 13, 2018, 06:43:46 PM The conversation you posted shows the resentments in your responses. Also the control. You have one idea of what needs to be done and he's doing it wrong. There is no room for his ideas. Take the offer, counter offer, negotiate, reject it. He didn't have the chance to finish his sentence and the whole thing deteriorated. It isn't that you could have handled it better. You handled it with the best tools you have for communicating with him now. To do differently, there has to be new tools. There are two pathways that I see... . If you are on your trip to help him manage money... .then do that. ( If you are not able to bring yourself to stand up for your business interests... .then you need to go get new skills... .ASAP. 100% agree with Notwendy... .the way the interaction was handled was crushing to him. What you should make sure DOESN'T happen is that a couple weeks from now you are wondering which path to go down. The only way to make sure your story doesn't repeat... .is to not repeat it. Gaining new skills or actually managing the money (or attempting to)... .would be new things. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Radcliff on June 14, 2018, 01:52:19 PM On the narrow issue of your daughter's sport, I think it may be a sport I'm familiar with. By "manage her career," do you just need to make sure she is paired with the coach, pay the money, encourage her, and make sure that she has access to physical therapy and any medical care necessary? Doesn't the coach pick the competitions and manage her progress? If that is true, then all of that is normal parenting activity. I know at the very upper levels, beyond my experience, things may be different, though.
This isn't the main issue on this thread, I was just sensitive because of my sport parenting experience. WW Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 14, 2018, 03:24:20 PM On the narrow issue of your daughter's sport, I think it may be a sport I'm familiar with. By "manage her career," do you just need to make sure she is paired with the coach, pay the money, encourage her, and make sure that she has access to physical therapy and any medical care necessary? Doesn't the coach pick the competitions and manage her progress? If that is true, then all of that is normal parenting activity. I know at the very upper levels, beyond my experience, things may be different, though. Thank @Wentworth for acknowledging this aspect of my parenting. It has a lot of nuances, first, it’s a partnership, between her and her male partner. There is a lot of negotiation between myself, another set of parents and the coaches. A lot of planning and budgeting, we make an estimate a month ahead, with her home coaches and guest coaches. She is 15 and competing in adult category, her partner is 2 years older, so that is already a difficult fight. We go by what is required, plus what we can afford in addition to that. Think of the range of a mortgage,monthly. She is a champion in 2 separate categories under 18 in our country. Which means a lot of physical traumas, physio, sport rehabs, specialists, bickering with her partner (any partnership involves conflicts, who does more/ less/commitment level/ homework, etc). Reminding her to keep her eye on the prize, which could mean full scholarships to prestigious universities around the world, priorities (why do I have to train 3 hrs after school, when my friends are at the mall?.) weight management (in a healthy way, nor starving, keeping her on high fat and protein diet with less carbs) we were asked to sit out a few completions because she was “too slow because of the weight gain”, and the list goes on and on. I manage to work cooperatively with my parents, partnwr’s parents, coaches and physio therapists even when I’m not there physically. Everyone including me is exceptionally proud of her achievements, it is a great way of giving her discipline, structure and general understanding of how life works. It’s a long term plan, there aren’t any immediate gratifications, she needs to put in the work to be there best, or instead of disappointment that stems from loosing, to think of what she could have done better. It is also an excellent way of earning a dollar from teaching other people, once she turns 16 years old. Everyone raises their kids according to their belief system and values. In my opinion, buying her nice things will not benefit her in any way. Spending my resources on giving her skills and tools will provide beneficial regardless what path she will choose in life. This isn't the main issue on this thread, I was just sensitive because of my sport parenting experience. WW So, to you @WW, it takes a lot of dedication and self discipline to see children through. I applaud you for doing that. P.s. if only I had a courage To do same things for myself, sigh Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 14, 2018, 04:00:14 PM Perhaps another place to reflect on... .
I bring this up because as a military guy with combat background... .it's easy to "frame" the world as "a fight". I try to be vigilant to "assume the best" and "be empathetic" with others as one way to move away from the "fight mentality". It takes a lot of effort... but I believe it is worth it for me. so that is already a difficult fight. Remember... I'm on your side. The curious thing that I'm hoping you can look at is the "inconsistency" in your use of "fight mentality". Perhaps in the quoted context it was just an unfortunate choice of words... .or perhaps not. Think back a bit to where Notwendy did a solid job of pointing out where you derailed a phone call with your hubby over a potential deal he obviously wanted to discuss. Seeming of nowhere it seemed like you were "fighting" or using "fighting words". What has me scratching my head is that when situations come up where it seems obvious to me to be appropriate (and thoughtful vice reactive choice) to "fight" (such as not getting paid for 5 months)... .it appears you have little interest in fighting for what you state is the purpose of you being there in the first place (to manage money). So... .hubby wants to talk... .fight.  :)aughter excels at sport... .fight. No or little pay for 5 months... .boy I wouldn't want to bring that up because? (I'm kinda interpreting what I see... .I know you didn't exactly say that) Do you see this pattern? Is there something there? FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 14, 2018, 06:39:56 PM Perhaps another place to reflect on... . When I wrote “fight” it was the exact word that poped into my head. Fight, as for the first place, at the age of 15 with people who are mostly adults for both partners, or at least one. It isn’t a fair fight, in my eyes, due to the fact that the same competitors have at least 3+ years of training under their belts. Avail, fairness is highly subjective, especially in sports. I bring this up because as a military guy with combat background... .it's easy to "frame" the world as "a fight". I try to be vigilant to "assume the best" and "be empathetic" with others as one way to move away from the "fight mentality". It takes a lot of effort... but I believe it is worth it for me. Remember... I'm on your side. The curious thing that I'm hoping you can look at is the "inconsistency" in your use of "fight mentality". Perhaps in the quoted context it was just an unfortunate choice of words... .or perhaps not. Think back a bit to where Notwendy did a solid job of pointing out where you derailed a phone call with your hubby over a potential deal he obviously wanted to discuss. Seeming of nowhere it seemed like you were "fighting" or using "fighting words". What has me scratching my head is that when situations come up where it seems obvious to me to be appropriate (and thoughtful vice reactive choice) to "fight" (such as not getting paid for 5 months)... .it appears you have little interest in fighting for what you state is the purpose of you being there in the first place (to manage money). So... .hubby wants to talk... .fight.  :)aughter excels at sport... .fight. No or little pay for 5 months... .boy I wouldn't want to bring that up because? (I'm kinda interpreting what I see... .I know you didn't exactly say that) Do you see this pattern? Is there something there? FF I applaud you for seeing this pattern in my thought process, it’s something I’m not attuned or aware of. I fight for my marriage, I fight to keep my daughter’s title, I fight Autism so my son can have a good chance at productive life. @Ff, fighting became symbiotic with living, because I fought, I survived. I’m so tired, I just want to take a moment and rest my head. The more I look around, the more my wise mind is telling me that I’m fighting someone else’s battles. I don’t fight for my health, numerous issues that need to be addressed, “no time”, “not right now” are my excuses. School and career needs to be adressed, again, same excuse. When my uBPDh came home from work, and started saying that he isn’t sure we are going home, and that everything will stay the same, meaning living arrangements shared with partner, no predicability when and how long we go to work for, I had mixture of disappointment, sadness and rage that took over. The entire exchange was doomed from the start, yet I couldn’t keep my mouth shut. Me: weren’t we supposed to go home this weekend, since we are coming back around 25th? Him: not sure (doesn’t look up from computer) Me: we have been here for two weeks already, this month alone, when is it enough? Your partner is here, why can’t we leave? Him: profanities Me: (still going at it) do I need to start recording you to show you promised schedule, so you don’t play amnesiac? Him: you lying b... .you stupid... .I hate... .bring me the belt so I can smack you (he’s been punished with a belt as a child, likely flashback) Me: when are you going to start discussing things with me? (Referring to living arrangements and issues related to how and when we see the kids) Him: you made plans with my partner, you agreed (what? I only discussed options and possibilities) Me: I thought the contract is a year long, and that we move to a separate place so we can reunite as a family Him: keep your nasty hole shut, be quiet, (more raging and eyes popping) I went outside to take a drag of sigarette, I don’t usually smoke, it made me sick, physically. I got a head rush and could barely function to make dinner for uBPDh and his partner Few observations of mine, on me, if I was an observer. I self distruct, examples, picking up sigarrete, not working out I fight a lost cause- I can’t bring him back to kids, I can’t make him choose to compensate his time away when all he wantes to is fishing, shooting guns and watching sports, doing drugs and watching porn I’m stalling my personal growth, by focusing all of my energy on keeping my husband faithful, financials straight, so it goes towards the family, and not towards his new toy I isolate myself from people, no one can listen to this “reality tv” for long I don’t meet new people or make connections I don’t foster my relation ships with my children, too busy chasing after their dad I’m lost my confidence and self esteem from hearing about other women, or that my ass isn’t a perfect peach I don’t know for certain if I will get another pay check, take my kids on vacation or sign them up for camp, because “master” can change his mind, if I don’t comply Based on all of the above I would recommend myself 1. Get into in person therapy ASAP, DBT is the best choice, best on reactive decisions, hightened emotional state, I need support in person and via phone calls 2 find consistent AA and CA team to attend 3 dust off resume, go the recruit company, so they will do professional linked in profile, coach me for interview, take good head shot, explain me the rules of the industry, ultimately help me find a job with good medical benefits so I can use them for psychologist 4 sign up to gym classes, kill your self there, if your muscles hurt, you are alive 5 start keeping a journal, write down ever day, how much time he spends with kids, what he says or does, when the time comes for him trying to hurt you through taking them away, you will have the leverage 6 force yourself to make new friendships and revive the old ones, the more you socialize with normal people, the more you will see the contrast 7 STOP FOLLOWING HIM, stop being the doormat, stop providing extras to the person who isn’t capable of valuing it 8 make that appointment to do the elective surgery and physical appointment 8 it can’t get worse, if he divorces you, you already lived through not seeing your children half of the time, yet you are breathing and your heart is beating 9 believe in yourself! You were able to get loans, connect with people, get invited by very high and prominent figures in the community, because of who you are. You have helped him build it from the ground up, you can help yourself 10 practice DBT skills of not making it worse, don’t take a drag of sigarette or distract yourself with social media, you can’t run away from pain. Sit with it, accept it, it’s another side of healing 11 let go, let go of expectations, let go of fears, do your best, every day, trust that the problems will resolve them selves out 12 be kind to yourself, nourish your body, read beautiful books, listen to music and go to art galleries, you love it, go to theatre, seek like minded people 13 learn how to ride a bike, learn how to skate, you weren’t allowed those things as a child, you never had those skills. Learn them so you can be a good company to your daughter and teach your son 14 you are a good person, you tried, you did all you could to make it work, I’ve never seen you fight for anything as hard as you fought for this marriage, you need to let go 15 don’t bring bitterness into your heart, forgive him, he also did his best, he can’t change the disorder or himself to make you happy, kids, playing home, family travels, celebrations, non judgemental friends don’t make him happy, this isn’t who he is, accept it 16 don’t try to cover all the basis, you will gain peace of mind, but loose financial security, you will have to learn how to earn more money or how to be happy on a smaller budget, start practicing 17 accept every day as a gift, it’s not guaranteed, your body does extraordinary job, despite the stress and inconsistency that you are putting it through 18 not being with him 24/7 means you don’t get yelled At daily, insulted or belittled, made feel unworthy, you will choose when and how you communicate 19 seek options 20 thank each and one of the people on this forum who gave you a time of their day, they have lives and their own issues, yet they take thier time to focus their attention on yours Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 14, 2018, 06:58:34 PM Another big one:
Drop if I do, be, make... .them he will love me mentality. He won’t! You support him, you cook for him, you stand in for him, you clean his and his partners condo, do laundry, cook dinners and iron their clothes, wash the toilet, create a well balanced menu, try to look good for him by maintaining your weight, make up and dress in appealing clothes, you massage his feet and wash his body with love, his clip his nails and tuck him in every night, you did cosmetic surgery upon his instistance so you look better for him, does he love you now? Your body will become older, if you are lucky and privileged to grow old, if you continue serving him as your master, you will loose connection to your children who matter the most, you will forever damage their self esteem by making them believe that they were not worthy of your time. You will become an old lonely ailing woman, empty and miserable because you didn’t love you enough to take care of yourself. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: babyducks on June 15, 2018, 08:38:20 AM Snowglobe,
Wow, that’s quite a post. And I want to answer it with the energy and effort you put into writing it but first I want to pause and say. Nice job. You are putting in a lot of hard work and effort to identify and work with the issues that are causing difficulties. I can see a big a shift in your approach and I think that’s very good. The more I look around, the more my wise mind is telling me that I’m fighting someone else’s battles. I don’t fight for my health, numerous issues that need to be addressed, “no time”, “not right now” are my excuses. When our needs don’t get met, resentment builds. It’s natural, almost unavoidable. When we are busy fighting some one else’s battles at our own expense frustrations grow and resentment festers. I had mixture of disappointment, sadness and rage that took over. The entire exchange was doomed from the start, yet I couldn’t keep my mouth shut. And just like you observed, resentment and frustration do not stay buried forever. They will pop out sometimes. Usually in not productive ways.Me: (still going at it) do I need to start recording you to show you promised schedule, so you don’t play amnesiac? No Snowglobe, not likely a flashback. Let’s not sugar coat this. It’s a threat. He is responding to your threat but threatening physical abuse. Do not normalize this type of verbal abuse please.Him: you lying b... .you stupid... .I hate... .bring me the belt so I can smack you (he’s been punished with a belt as a child, likely flashback) [need to split this into two posts because of length] Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: babyducks on June 15, 2018, 08:49:23 AM part two
1. Get into in person therapy ASAP, DBT is the best choice, This is a great list. It’s a good working model, a great place to start. I would suggest that you be careful to not let “the best” be the enemy of the good. What do I mean? If DBT is the best choice and it’s not available right now, that doesn’t mean you can’t find benefits in what is available. It might not be the ‘perfect solution’ but it may be a stepping stone to a single solution.2 find consistent AA and CA team to attend 3 dust off resume, go the recruit company, so they will do professional linked in profile, coach me for interview, take good head shot, explain me the rules of the industry, ultimately help me find a job with good medical benefits so I can use them for psychologist I am going to suggest you Not Kill Yourself there. I am going to suggest a reasonable amount of moderate exercise. Don’t set up expectations that are impossible to fufill.4 sign up to gym classes, kill your self there, if your muscles hurt, you are alive 5 start keeping a journal, write down ever day, I like the idea of a journal. And not just about him. But as a place to write down your totally unfiltered thoughts and emotions. Getting them out on paper will be a stress/tension release.6 force yourself to make new friendships and revive the old ones, the more you socialize with normal people, the more you will see the contrast 7 STOP FOLLOWING HIM, stop being the doormat, stop providing extras to the person who isn’t capable of valuing it I do like the idea of your list because I am a list writer myself. It helps to hold me accountable. I understand you might have written these in no particular order but I wonder. Which three, and only three do you see as the most important?8 make that appointment to do the elective surgery and physical appointment Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: babyducks on June 15, 2018, 08:54:38 AM part three
8 it can’t get worse, I really like this part because it turns the attention and focus on you. Not on fixing him or dealing with him, or improving him but on you. Where it belongs. This is, what I believe they call, a break through moment. Way to go Snowglobe. 9 believe in yourself! 10 practice DBT skills of not making it worse, you can’t run away from pain. Sit with it, accept it, it’s another side of healing 11 let go, let go of expectations, let go of fears, do your best, every day, trust that the problems will resolve them selves out 12 be kind to yourself, 13 learn how to ride a bike, learn how to skate, 14 you are a good person, you tried, you did all you could to make it work, 15 don’t bring bitterness into your heart, forgive him 16 don’t try to cover all the basis, 17 accept every day as a gift, 19 seek options One last question? Where can you borrow a bike? It’s not hard to learn. Pedal like mad and find your personal balance. |iiii 'ducks Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 15, 2018, 09:15:48 AM I can see a big a shift in your approach and I think that’s very good. I see this too and haven't been as clear about it as BabyDucks has. It's a bit hard to describe but there is less "xyz because my hubby is abc" and there is more "xyz and I need to deal with it better" That is a fundamental shift to get away from blame. Continue that journey. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 15, 2018, 09:59:44 AM @babyducks and @formflier,
Thank you for replying to my long post, essentially to myself. It was cathartic experience, connecting with my own personal issues and looking at my life through my own lense. My emotional navigator was telling me, and has been for a while now, that this isn’t right, it’s not a life worthy or living, the cost of continuing is too high and the benefits are too low. My rational mind was telling me steps I need to take to help myself mature and transition. Who am I kidding, when you live your whole life doing what you are told, you don’t develop a sense of autonomy. Being away from my children really put a perspective of things, as a short term measure, if he was making a lot of money, I could sacrifice to ensure kids future. Eg. putting the money into their education fund, buying them a property, sending them to good camps and making their life better in some way, that can be done. I can justify that for the “greater good”. That would be tolerable if my uBPDh wasn’t using me as a toilet for flushing his emotional negativity and respected me enough to also give me what I want (e.g we work for two weeks, then we can do xyz with the children). Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 16, 2018, 02:15:52 PM UBPDh is testing the new lows.
It began yesterday when he called me around 3 pm while I was grocery shopping to prepare for dinner. He said: “I will be home in 20 min and leave immediately”, and hung up. I decided “he was on the way home, and he is preparing to leave to our home where the children are”. Just to make sure that I got it correctly I called back, and asked him if we were going home. What about the dinner, I asked? No dinner he replied, so I dropped everything and ran home (I don’t have an access to the vehicle while we are at work). I barely made it home and immediately started packing and simultaneously fixing him a snack, as he doesn’t eat breakfast. My uBPDh started doing it especially frequently, such as telling me about leaving at the minute notice. While he sees new frantically packing and trying to increase the pressure by saying “I’m leaving in 5 min if you aren’t done, I’m out” and he goes out of the door. This is problematic for many reasons, one, it’s disrespectful, I deserve to know at least as soon as he decides, it takes him an hour to get home, I could have gotten an ample notice to reduce my pressure and prepare fully. Once he came, he didn’t look me in the face to greet me, bad sign. It’s a beginning of him “dehumanizing” me, it’s easy to torture and abuse someone emotionally when you don’t look them in the eye to see the pain you are inflicting. Always the case, when he beggins splitting. While I packed he was brooding and taking to his partner, irritated and annoyed he sat into the car with me. I delayed any serious conversations, as I know that he isn’t able to make any decisions while so emotionally distressed. We listened to audiobook, I tried to speak to him, he was defiant and appeared cold. When we got home the behaviour continued, his interaction with children was limited, hi, bye, give me a kiss. Our little guy, s11 climbed into our bed, as he missed us, I let him stay. In the morning when we woke up, I already knew that he was painting me black, just like an addict that I am, i reached for the tool that I know doesn’t work, and makes it worse, most of the time. I took the cream, sat beside Kim and tried to massage his feet. He told me to stop and not touch him, so I left him alone. I sat in the bathroom and tried to do my make up. Then I heard him moan, (he moans from pain in his joints, when I hear that, I almost always jump to massage him to decrease the pain and give him the attention he is seeking). So I went again, sat beside him and tried to massage his feet (he does a lot of standing and walking at his job), he told me to stop touching him or he goes away. I backed off of him again, by then I knew I activated the “punishment mode in him”. The morning proceeded grimly, me interacting with the children, while feeling this constricted feeling in my chest, as I’m about to start weeping from emotional pain, and him avoiding me all together. I then walked into the bedroom while he was watching the tv alone, and tried to interacting in a nonchalant way. D15 wanted to catch I movie, I said, do you want to come? His reply stung me: “either I can go with them, or you go” (money is not an issue in this case, he is rejecting the possibility of us being together as a whole family). So I didn’t reply anything, what could I say? Ok, you go? I want to spend time with my children. So I bought us all the tickets and plan on attending with my children. I’m so close to starting crying, as I’m so fed up with uBPDh behaviour. All I ever wanted was to be a family, keep him close to his kids, I wanted a family, I did not want his money, I loved him when he was broke and didn’t have two cents to run between his fingers. How could someone that I loved so much become this ugly person?. This person who is constantly punishing and detaching, selfish and wicked who sees only his needs and wants? I know I went wrong on trying to console him, I need to detach and try and be present and mindful for my children. I’ve been reinforcing and enabling all the wrong behaviours and as a result he is blind, deaf and frankly uncaring to mine/ my kids needs. It’s him, future fame and his money that is the only focus of his life. I’m sorry for the rant, how do I recalibrate this? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 16, 2018, 08:53:30 PM So... .why rush home? If he leaves you there and goes home alone, there are other ways for you to get home. (I really don't think he would do that... but just saying) You are right... what he did was disrespectful... .so... why did you respect it with your actions? FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on June 16, 2018, 10:53:07 PM So... .why rush home? @ff, If he leaves you there and goes home alone, there are other ways for you to get home. (I really don't think he would do that... but just saying) You are right... what he did was disrespectful... .so... why did you respect it with your actions? FF My desperate attempts to keep him “in” while all his behaviour says is “out”, I can’t answer to that. I try not to make any waves to keep this delicate peace, and then I get fed up and I attack, with all of my core values being compromised. D15 wanted him to go to the movies with us, so she went and asked him to come. Surprisingly, he agreed. All throughout the movie night he appeared tense and angry. The kids seemed to enjoy the movie, while I tried to focus my attention on them. There has been a glimpse of what normal could look like, for about two years prior to me finding this board. There wasn’t any indication of domestic violence, less threats and more functional and engaging relationships. Times when he actually cared about making the me and children happy. When I had my school, my friends and he had his. I’m not sure how all of that slowly slipped away. It wasn’t by any means the golden age, as he still raged and split, I was happier and healthier then. Back at you, if I don’t respect myself, my body, my time and my abilities, how can he respect it? From reading all of you, I beggin to see that the key to a change lies within non partner, rather then change in pwBPD. @ff, how could have this situation been dealt with differently? Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on June 17, 2018, 06:53:42 AM From reading all of you, I begin to see that the key to a change lies within non partner, rather then change in pwBPD.
Exactly. This is the key, and it takes effort, but for me, the effort was and continues to be worth it. There are no guarantees- your H can choose to accept the changes , or not, and leave the relationship. You can keep doing what you are doing- and likely get the same results- or do something different- and get different results. That's the risk, but if you hold on to your values, you are likely to have a better sense of self regardless of that your H does. You need to consider safety first. If you are in danger of physical harm, then seek professional advice before doing anything. Have a safety plan. This board is a good support, but the process is going to be faster and you will have more support if you have counseling, 12 step groups, a sponsor to guide you through making changes in you. If I don’t respect myself, my body, my time and my abilities, how can he respect it? He won't. One of the slogans I learned in 12 step groups is " we teach others how to treat us". I can identify with being a doormat. When I was a doormat, people treated me like one. Not everyone is disrespectful, but acting like a doormat can result in people responding to you as one and it sounds like your H is. then I get fed up and I attack, with all of my core values being compromised. This starts with you. Our core values are a part of us, and if we feel they are compromised it is most likely that we have compromised them ourselves- given them up in hopes of keeping the peace, love, approval, fear of abandonment. What core values have you given up to try to appease your H? You can learn to take them back. When you get to the point of attack, you are in victim mode- lashing out. This is how you feel but it isn't effective- it is classic drama triangle. Your H, feeling attacked, will then go into victim mode and lash out back, in an abusive manner. Then you both are hurt. It doesn't lead to resolution. He may act contrite later, you may be acting in caregiving ways ( rubbing feet) and then reset, until the next conflict. If you can calmly but firmly uphold your own values, you may not get to this point. Times when he actually cared about making the me and children happy. When I had my school, my friends and he had his. I’m not sure how all of that slowly slipped away. It slipped away when you started focusing on making him happy instead of doing what made you happy. Believe it or not, we don't make someone happy. We actually can not make someone feel a certain feeling. Our feelings are a part of ourselves and we can't control someone else's feelings. This is a hard concept to grasp- we can give someone a gift and imagine they will feel happy or we can do something mean and imagine they feel hurt. But our own core feelings- if we are content with ourselves, if we don't let every mean comment bother us- is under our own control. We really can't make someone else happy with themselves. This is up to us and it is our responsibility to be content with ourselves. Maybe your H isn't able to consider making you happy but you can do the things that make you happy. Consider that all you think you are doing to bolster your H is actually diminishing him and his self esteem? This is a tough concept to grasp. I also was doing some of these things with my H, to try to keep the peace in the family and the MC pointed out that I was catering to him at his lowest, not his best self. I was reinforcing the behaviors I didn't respect. I also observed this in my parents. My father wanted to keep my mother as comfortable as possible. She learned that she could get what she wanted by raging. It gave her power and control. But by him doing so much for her, it also took away any learning to do these things herself and eroded her self esteem. She can't cook because she didn't have to. She can't drive because he drove her. Now she is elderly and this has normalized because it is normal for the elderly to have assistance with self care tasks, but every adult person is responsible for their own self care tasks. Certainly a couple can trade off these tasks, one may cook, one may work more than the other, but each is ultimately responsible for their own self care. You may think you are helping your H by making sure he has a snack, or clean socks, but these are basic self care tasks that even children need to be taught to do. If your H is hungry- that is his hunger. He can get his own snack. If he takes drugs and then looks like a mess, he is responsible for cleaning himself up. If he is drugged, and misses work - then he faces the consequences of his own messing up. Sometimes when people are learning we have to step back and let them make mistakes. It is how they learn. We can step in if the situation is life threatening, but it may be that your H would have to lose a deal, or face an angry coworker himself to see the consequences of his behavior. Same with a victory. If you do things for him, could he own his accomplishments? These situations are complicated. Like peeling an onion. You might get the first layer peeled, then be working on the next. Lots of layers in these situations. They are hard to do all at once. But acting from your own core values can be a start. Stop doing the things that diminish you. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 17, 2018, 11:37:54 AM @ff, how could have this situation been dealt with differently? Come home at normal time... .at normal pace. If he calls you again to hurry... gently say that you will consider a request when disrespect is not between you. Notice that... .you haven't accused him of anything. You have stated what is "in between" your relationship. He can own it... or not. Let him connect the dots... .(you will hear that a lot) Because here is the thing... you "trained" him further in how to get you to hurry... .with disrespect. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 21, 2018, 07:43:42 PM *bump*
Howgozit? FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on June 29, 2018, 12:37:59 PM *bump* Snowglobe, Are you around? I'm concerned that we haven't heard from you in a bit. Can you give us an update on things? FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on July 03, 2018, 05:34:36 PM *bump* Snowglobe, Are you around? I'm concerned that we haven't heard from you in a bit. Can you give us an update on things? FF Dear Formflier, Thank you for reaching out to me. I’m currently “at work” setuation with eldest d15, her friends from sport and uBPDh. Many things happened, for instance, he self medicated, again, three weeks ago. I ceased the opportunity to tell him that I’m not doing this back and fourth anymore, clearly stated that I need to be with kids. He on the other hand took it as it’s time to move to work place suggestion. I’m not selling the house “back at home” under any condition for several reasons: 1. His contract is only a year old, once it expires I’m not sure what will happen next 2. Realestate Market dropped significantly, it’s bad timing to sell 3. My parents rented out their home for a year thinking that they are still helping us, I can’t kick them out 4. I’m questing the move for the children; dad is uBPDh, unstable, sexually inappropriate (he has exhibitionist tendencies, for instance to hurl my skirt up around the children, squeeze my private parts knowing they are in close proximity, or just doesn’t care), he abuses illegal drugs at times, this isn’t the best case scenario, my parents are mahout buffers for fhe children, they shield them UBPDh wants to take me away on vacation next week. Sounds nice, the only catch is we fly to Amsterdam first, and it’s not to see Anne Frank’s museum. He wants to explore “my” sexuality? It’s a boundary, I stated, restated and explained that No, I won’t have a three some with another woman, I’m certain in my sexual preferences, and it’s a line I won’t cross with him No, I won’t have sex in a second club for other people to see me No, I won’t use drugs and roam the streets, so he can “hopefully convince me to experiment” Gosh, these uBPD stuff are so exhausting, he thinks I’m some kind of onion that has many layers that require for him to be peeled back. I’m majorly turned off my the lack of emotional connection and intimacy. It’s always animalistic and depersonalized. We are supposed to fly and meet our friends in Europe after, for another week. I imagine it sounds vain and ungrateful a bit, but I don’t want to go. I don’t want him to try and convince me to do something I don’t want to. The more he talks about it, the less I want to participate in this trip. His mood swings make any travel plans terrifying. I don’t know what will happen one moment to the next. Back to living arrangements, I agreed to come and try it out, meaning live with him full time “at work” if he keeps the house for a year and if I get to consider the best option for the children. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on July 03, 2018, 06:40:26 PM So... how did the billing go? Is everything caught up and paid? It doesn't sound like you want to go on the trip. I hope you have made that clear to him and that you do not get on the airplane with him, especially with the sex stuff. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: snowglobe on July 03, 2018, 10:55:42 PM So... how did the billing go? Is everything caught up and paid? Guess what, regarding the billing?. I got paid for 2.5 months, which is a start. Partner’s new love interest is coming to town, which means he wants me to be nice and placid. So he generously authorized for my uBPDh to get paid ahead of him. I also got my uBPDh convinced that we need to get a separate living arrangement from his partner to live in. Among other things, such as smoking in the bathroom at night, dictating when and what time I can take a shower (only one bathroom) I got a wart from cleaning (found an open and used box For watt removal on his bed table). What’s next? Knowing his love for paid services I wouldn’t be surprised if we contracted something far worse. It doesn't sound like you want to go on the trip. I hope you have made that clear to him and that you do not get on the airplane with him, especially with the sex stuff. FF I read your post regarding your emotional intelligence and not caring so much for what comes next. I find myself in the same predicament. I am too exhausted to care. He is back to buying me lavish gifts, but all I feel is a crippling fear for what he would ask for it in return. Or how bad things might get if I don’t comply with his demands. We are both going on a DBT retreat trip, he paid for tickets and the cost of the retreat. I’m happy to attend. However, I’m afraid of what his reaction to being unable to be/talk to me while we are there. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Notwendy on July 04, 2018, 07:07:21 AM Sometimes it is difficult to work on several boundaries at once. It seems the most immediate issue ( of many) is this trip to Europe. You don't want to go.
Your fear is that your H will sexually experiment there if you don't go, or he will demand you do something you don't want to do if you do go. Being with him 24/7 and also indulging his desires helps you to calm this fear, but it also means violating your own personal boundaries to try to satisfy him. Your choice seems to be to - hold your ground and deal with your fear, or go with him and do things you don't want to do. Those are tough choices. Warts - on the feet or hands-are common and not sexually transmitted. Genital warts are. If you have concerns that your H has had sex outside the marriage, please protect yourself- see a doctor and get tested. Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on July 04, 2018, 07:20:07 AM I got paid for 2.5 months, which is a start. I also got my uBPDh convinced that we need to get a separate living arrangement from his partner to live in. |iiii |iiii Solid work! (I'll pester you for details later) Your world is on track to being "calmer". You have a lot of flying monkeys throwing things at you right now. Living with "just" your hubby removes a flying monkey. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: formflier on July 26, 2018, 10:18:51 AM *bump* Snowglobe, How are you doing? Haven't seen any updates from you in a while. Hoping things are going better. Please update us when you have some time. FF Title: Re: Learning how to set a boundary Post by: Woodchuck on July 26, 2018, 01:27:43 PM Snowglobe,
I had what I would consider my first boundary setting experience a month or so ago. I was shocked that it actually worked. I laid out my plan and allow my uBPDw to make a choice. She wanted to drop our children (11 and 14) off at the movie theater while she was at work. I told her that I was not comfortable with that. I expressed that I felt that they needed to be with an adult when at the theater. She told me that I was free to feel however I wanted but that she was going to do what she was comfortable with. I told that I did not feel like she was being very respectful of how I felt and that she was obviously free to do as she pleased. I went on to tell her that if she did drop them off at the theater and I found out about it, I would get the authorities involved. To my knowledge, she has not dropped them off at the theater. I did not like setting that boundary and did not set it to control her but set it as a measure of safety for the children. Fortunately I did not have to follow through with the consequences that I outlined. I have attempted to set other boundaries in the past but have had a very difficult time with keeping them up. It definitely takes practice to set and enforce boundaries but the benefits seem to be worth the work. Hopefully you will be able to establish and enforce some boundaries for yourself to help your situation. Woodchuck |