Title: I love my BPD and our kids Post by: nonBPDBrazil on August 15, 2018, 04:52:31 PM We’ve just come back from the psychiatrist and now it’s oficial. She has BPD. Of course she won’t accept the diagnosis. We’ve been married for 15 years. We have two kids, a 4 year old girl and a two year old boy. Why did it take me so long to seek help? Why didn’t I leave before the kids came. I love her, until the “other one” takes over. I don’t waste anytime arguing anymore, I just take the kids and leave the house for a few hours. When I come back we pretend nothing happened. She does not accept, she doesn’t want treatment, after all, she’s not crazy. There is nothing wrong with her, or so she believes. I feel desperately lonely and trapped.
Title: Re: I love my BPD and our kids Post by: Harri on August 15, 2018, 10:34:35 PM Hi there and welcome to the site. I am sorry for the circumstances that brought you here but I am happy you found us. We are a group of people who are in similar situations and can help guide and support you as you navigate your way through your relationship.
You are not alone in your situation. there are so many people who are going through the same sort of struggle and many who have already passed through but are still here to help. What sort of behaviors does your wife exhibit that fit the BPD diagnosis? How does she respond when you remove yourself and your kids from the home when she dysregulates? It is good that you do that and take your kids with you. If you look over on the right hand side of the page you will see a list of links, including links to articles. Take a look at them. They are all very helpful and we have all benefitted through using the tools that are listed there. Please feel free to explore, read, post and engage in conversations with others here. It helps to know you are not alone and to work through the tools and situations with a group of peers. Be well and talk with you soon. Title: Re: I love my BPD and our kids Post by: Radcliff on August 15, 2018, 10:58:44 PM *welcome*
Let me join Harri in welcoming you. This is a great place to get support. Tell us more about the behaviors of your wife that pose the most difficulty, and we can start working with you on tools to make the situation better. WW Title: Re: I love my BPD and our kids Post by: ForeverDad on August 16, 2018, 05:18:01 PM We’ve just come back from the psychiatrist and now it’s official. She has BPD. Of course she won’t accept the diagnosis. We’ve been married for 15 years. We have two kids, a 4 year old girl and a two year old boy. Why did it take me so long to seek help? Why didn’t I leave before the kids came? A few thoughts here... .I too was married for over a decade before we had our child. He was a preschooler when the marriage imploded. When it got really bad, I did seek help. But by then we were already parents and she was far enough down the PD path that, like your spouse, couldn't or wouldn't listen to me. The mass of past emotional baggage was just too much for her to allow logic and reasoning to get through her Denial and Emotional Perceptions. I was so ashamed to tell others of her years of increasing rants and rages. Sadly, I hid so much of it, until it had gotten out of control. I had imagined them as post childhood abuse rages. I'd never heard of PDs before. I had the mistaken hope that having a child would help her to see life more positively and rejoice in watching our youngster discover a wonderful world. Instead, it (1) enabled her to relive her childhood traumas, (2) triggered her to separate herself emotionally and physically from her mate in favor of "her and her child against the world" and (3) having a child made unwinding a failed marriage vastly more complicated. However, now is a time to deal with What Is. What we wished, hoped for or dreamed about doesn't apply anymore. Well, there is one option that avoids separation or divorce... .Is there any way she could set aside her Denial and Blame Shifting, accept meaningful therapy and truly apply the counsel in her life, thinking and perceptions? And not just for a few sessions but long enough, probably years, to make lasting improvements? If so, then the relationship can be salvaged. If not... . Relatively few of us here ever got the mental health professionals (or other professionals that interact with family courts) to give a diagnosis. Many here have been in family court when all other options had failed and we have found that courts and the professionals evaluating and making recommendations seldom will identify precisely why the person is behaving that way. It's almost like they will say anything but what the root problem is. Partly, it's to avoid throwing diagnostic labels around. Partly too, they know it is so very hard to 'fix' a person who is unwilling to change. So what they do is they limit themselves to dealing with the behaviors and behavior patterns over time. Therefore, one of the best things you can do to help yourself is to document the poor behaviors. Documentation is far better than "he said, she said" that goes nowhere. Why do the courts studiously avoid diagnostic labels, if one doesn't already exist or isn't determined how 'actionable' it is? One conclusion here is that a general diagnosis does not describe sufficiently how negatively the children are impacted. For example, imagine you were diagnosed as an alcoholic. What should limit your contact with the children? What if you are an alcoholic but had avoided alcohol for years, a dry alcoholic? What if you did drink too much but always did it when away from the kids or after they were asleep or away? Those scenarios wouldn't impact the kids very much. But what if you drank and raged at the kids, or drove intoxicated with them in the car? In that case the kids would be put at risk, certainly actionable and ought to get legal intervention or restrictions. In the same way, a person with BPD (or some other PD) may have a variety of behaviors, the big question is how much the children are impacted. The conclusion is that explains why the courts seem to focus on the actual documented behaviors over labels. Also, courts seems to give much more weight to poor parenting behaviors (involving the minors) than to poor adult behaviors (conflict with other adults such as yourself). |