Title: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on May 30, 2019, 07:49:59 AM I've posted elsewhere that I finally had enough and can't continue to degrade my health in my relationship with my uBPDw. I'm having some difficulty explaining things to my attorney, who is probably only doing their job. She is very aggressive, and the biggest problem is I'm just not comfortable with some of the approaches. I fully understand my attorney works for me and I have control over my approach, but I'm wondering what can be done to help my attorney understand the situation better. She of course views my wife and her behavior as "bad" and wants to use it against her. I've read every book on BPD and understand it is more than that. I understand it's a condition that has grown since she was sexually abused at a very young age, as well as other environmental and biological factors. I do still understand that she is capable of making choices, particularly one to get help, but she is the one that chooses not to.
Quick background of my own traumatic three weeks: 19 y/o stepdaughter (I've fathered for 13 years) left for the Navy. My BPD wife took this extremely bad, and turned it into my fault, starting an episode for her, which eventually led to police call. My 17 y/o stepdaughter (also been fathering for 13 years) graduated from high school and is preparing to leave home. A 5 year old my wife and I had been care-taking for (not truly fostering, but she lived with us 99% of the time for two years) has not been here for three weeks (my decision given the toxic situation), but I miss her dearly. And, my biological 19 y/o daughter told me she was pregnant. I hired my attorney and started divorce proceedings the day BEFORE all of this happened. So, on top of my normal emotional roller coaster life with my wife - I've got all of these other life changing events I'm dealing with. Here's the thing. My life is not healthy. My bio daughter is going to need me to be healthier...my stepdaughters need me to be healthier...I need myself to be healthier. So - with extreme pain, I'm choosing to walk away (divorce) the women I've been with for 13 years, and who I still desperately love with all my heart. I just want a peaceful divorce, I want to be fair, I don't want to kick her while she's down. We're both retired from the military and stayed in our last location...so no family in the area. My attorney's petition for divorce included having my wife immediately removed from the house. I've been prepping my wife for the divorce, telling her the opposite: that I simply want a peaceful, fair process using a mediator to split our assets fairly (no kids involved). Now, I do understand that I have been codependent in the past and I need to be careful that I don't start trying to do that; but I feel guilt for having told my wife all of this and then possibly filing divorce for cause. I guess I'm just looking for a way to explain to my lawyer how emotional this decision is, and that I'm not divorcing my wife because I no longer love her, and I don't want to hurt her or make her situation worse. I also understand that my wife's behavior through this process could dictate a change to my approach, but for now, I really just want this treated like two people that no longer get along. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: worriedStepmom on May 30, 2019, 08:38:16 AM Wow, you have a lot of stuff going on at once. That's enough to make anyone overwhelmed.
What is going to happen with the 5-year-old? Are you intending that she come back to your home after the divorce is final? Is she permanently with another family now? Someone told me once that divorce is, by nature adversarial. That's why there's a "vs" in the name of the court case. Even so, many, many people who divorce still love their spouses, they just don't see a way to live together anymore. Just like you. To do their job, lawyers don't deal with emotion. Their job is to get you the best possible outcome. Your wife has domestic violence charges pending because she was violent towards you. I can't imagine there are many lawyers who wouldn't insist that she vacate the property during the divorce. The divorce will get contentious, because that's how divorce tends to work. Which means at some point there is a strong possibility that she will become violent toward you again, because she is incapable of regulating her emotions or behavior. My lawyer told me once that part of her job was to be the evil bad guy. If my stbx or someone else was angry about something happening during the divorce proceedings, I should blame it all on her...even if I was the one who suggested or agreed to it. "I really wanted to do it your way, but my mean old lawyer won't let me." Your wife made poor choices - to be violent. Now she has to deal with the consequences of those choices - not being able to leave the state for her child's graduation, and being asked to leave the family home. It is not your job to protect her from the consequences of her bad decisions. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: livednlearned on May 30, 2019, 11:22:29 AM This article (written by attorney for attorneys) might be helpful:
High-conflict Family Law Matters and Personality Disorders (https://bpdfamily.com/message_board/index.php?topic=270440.msg12566140#msg12566140) Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: ForeverDad on May 30, 2019, 12:34:55 PM I just replied to one of your other posts. I advised that you not let her problems become your problems. She's an adult, she has consequences that she has to own. You indicated she has more than enough monthly income to find herself a place to live during the divorce. It's not like she couldn't afford a simple apartment, even if only for 6 to 12 months during the divorce.
Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: formflier on May 30, 2019, 12:36:28 PM Since it doesn't appear there are children you will be arguing over, what are the issues in the divorce? What is your attorney trying to accomplish for you by "kicking her while she is down"? Best, FF Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: livednlearned on May 30, 2019, 01:05:40 PM I guess I'm just looking for a way to explain to my lawyer how emotional this decision is, and that I'm not divorcing my wife because I no longer love her, and I don't want to hurt her or make her situation worse. I think I get what you're asking for, Brian1977. What feels assertive to the lawyer feels aggressive to you. Out of love for your wife, you would like to feel that you're approaching this with her best interests in mind. She is ill and you have no desire to see her suffer more than she already does. Something like that? Have you run through the contingencies of how each possible approach (perhaps you could brainstorm with people here) could play out? For example, what happens if you move out and give her a month to find a place. Or, what if you file the papers, outline a safety plan of what will happen in the event of an attack, what you are prepared to do to protect yourself, outcomes for her if that happens. I think you're asking to outline a plan for how things can work peacefully, with her options and choices and outcomes outlined in advance so she can make those choices. Is that in the ballpark of what you're looking for? Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on May 30, 2019, 01:55:49 PM Excerpt What feels assertive to the lawyer feels aggressive to you. Out of love for your wife, you would like to feel that you're approaching this with her best interests in mind. She is ill and you have no desire to see her suffer more than she already does. Perfectly stated. Excerpt I think you're asking to outline a plan for how things can work peacefully, with her options and choices and outcomes outlined in advance so she can make those choices. I agree with this as well, and would add that my wife's behavior, while she is fully responsible for her actions, is not black and white. Where my attorney sees something to use against her and in my favor, I'm not interested in (at least as long as things are being fair; I mean if my wife starts making false accusations and stuff like that than I will certainly use everything available). Her first divorce has put a fear of God in her about court. Her ex beat hear, had no job, was an alcoholic, convicted felon, and they had two little girls to fight over. She gave him way more than she should have because she wanted to settle out of court. Court terrifies her. Her ex drug us through custody battles for years, and I recall that she works herself up so bad that she can't even remember what happens in court. She wouldn't even go to my daughters speeding ticket court, even though I hired an attorney and he had already worked out a deal...she is that terrified. Basically, where my attorney might see an angle, I still see a very hurting person. I want to protect myself, and I probably have enough evidence to take everything, but that stuff doesn't mean much to me. I want to be safe, and I want her to be safe (ultimately want her to get help). Your responses are so perfect, so helpful, so needed. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: worriedStepmom on May 30, 2019, 02:34:37 PM My H's xW is also terrified of court. She refused to attend the hearing when my H filed for primary custody of their daughter last year and agreed to sign whatever terms he proposed. My H bent over backwards to be fair, while giving SD the protection that she needed. (His ex still thinks he is a monster for stealing her child.)
If you were to bring your wife an agreement that was as fair as you think it ought to be, would she sign it, just to avoid court and the anxiety that it brings? When my H and his ex divorced, they wrote up the entire agreement and filed for divorce once they had agreed. Or would she avoid all of those conversations, just like she avoided being served, and refuse to engage at all? Or is it possible that she might stonewall for a long time to help her start to deal with the emotions and then hire a lawyer and start proceedings that you aren't expecting? (This happened to one of our other members.) Be very candid with your lawyer about what you expect her to do, while understanding that she may act in ways that you don't anticipate. That will inform your lawyer's strategy. At the very least, though, she is going to need to leave the house. It is not a good thing for her to be there when there are pending DV charges. And, honestly, it's not good for either of your mental health to be living together while a divorce is in process. It makes it a lot harder to start to heal. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on May 30, 2019, 03:46:04 PM Excerpt Since it doesn't appear there are children you will be arguing over, what are the issues in the divorce? Basically removed from the house immediately, she covers attorneys fees, I think just trying to get the most for me...but I'm not asking for that. I'm only wanting a fair split.What is your attorney trying to accomplish for you by "kicking her while she is down"? Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on May 30, 2019, 03:51:14 PM Excerpt At the very least, though, she is going to need to leave the house. It is not a good thing for her to be there when there are pending DV charges. And, honestly, it's not good for either of your mental health to be living together while a divorce is in process. It makes it a lot harder to start to heal. I don't disagree with this, but it's a tough one for me. We have planned our daughters high school graduation for months which is in mid June, and the 5 year old we've been raising for two years has a birthday party at the end of June. I guess that doesn't mean we couldn't work something out for those events, but, I believe they are important events to my wife and the kids.Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: ForeverDad on May 30, 2019, 04:10:13 PM Brainstorm ways to get the needed end result... you two living separately while the divorce proceeds. Yes, her having to move out will be very triggering for her. But the fact remains that you (we presume) are the owner of the house and afterward you will continue ownership. So she will have to leave sooner or later. Better to do it sooner, less opportunity for her to flame out again.
It comes down to perceptions. You have to accept that her moving out is necessary and you're not mean to require it. She has to accept that moving out sooner is better for everyone. Here's one idea how to redirect her likely overreaction to the moving news. Excerpt "You're already dealing with a DV case in court. The sooner you live elsewhere - and you know you can easily afford it - the less risk there will be of another incident like that. So in reality, you finding another place to live, even if only as a transitional residence, will help you to avoid things getting worse than they are now... Do you want some help finding an acceptable apartment? Here are names of a couple real estate agents who are familiar with available apartments in the area. I don't recommend you moving our for a month to give her time to move. You risk her becoming the spouse who gets declared "in possession" of the home. And what would you do if at the end of the month she hasn't moved out? Then you might have less legal standing than you have now since you had moved out, even if only temporarily. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: livednlearned on May 31, 2019, 12:03:42 PM Where my attorney sees something to use against her and in my favor, I'm not interested in (at least as long as things are being fair; I mean if my wife starts making false accusations and stuff like that than I will certainly use everything available). It may take a lot more work on your part if you can be patient -- this is where you might have to dig deep for the "my attorney works for me" thought process. If your attorney is ethical, he or she will not opt for the more expensive, more labor intensive approach, and may not even know what that looks like for you, leaving you to outline how you want things to go. Maybe we can help you think this through together so you can propose what works best for you to your attorney. One question: Does the petition have to be filed now? Since you are waiting for this graduation and birthday party to happen, does it make sense to hold? I recognize in your posts something I also felt -- that I had a better sense of my ex's abuse patterns than my lawyer's, or anyone else for that matter. Maybe it's the same for you. For example, you recognize that your wife is afraid of court, and has current charge hanging over her, and that you have enough documentation and understanding of 911 to feel relatively "safe," if that's the right word for the situation you're in... That is not insignificant leverage, and the nuance (in my interpretation of your story) is that you recognize she is (in a sense) cornered, a very fearful situation to be in. So in your interpretation of the situation, you feel some semblance of protection, even if a bystander would not necessarily see it that way. You even feel a sense of legal protection, which seems to be relatively rare for men when it comes to DV. Your lawyer is suggesting, "Let's move the danger out of the house." You are concerned that removing one danger (her) will create another (she harms herself or harms you with a false allegation). Something like that? And some part of you, the part that has been in a state of heightened vigilance about her abuse and dysregulations for the last decade or so, believes the greater danger is to herself than to you. You are willing to gamble on this because you're still working through conflicted emotions and are not sure you can tolerate the feelings that may follow if she harms herself once she's served. (If I'm off here, please say so. It will help us better support you to know how you're experiencing your situation.) The hard part of these marriages and divorces is the two sides of the aggression/victim coin. We may be 80 percent good at predicting when aggressive/abusive behavior will occur. The rest of the time aggression/abuse comes out of left field and we are stunned. People on this board have seen BPD spouse stun their partners by grabbing hold of the legal system and weaponizing it. I imagine your attorney has seen the same. We also see the suffering, victim side -- after you learn about BPD, your definition of victim may encompass even the abusive behaviors. You see her abuse as a byproduct of her illness, sort of rationalizing it. You feel you know the situation better than anyone else, including your lawyer, and others who have been through this -- and you may be right. With what you are asking (a slower walk to divorce with more options for her), I would suggest making some kind of decision tree/flow chart so you understand the implications of each decision point: what happens to her, what happens to you (including emotions), how exposed you might be legally, what if any legal protections you have to counter her moves, and any safety plans that might need to be activated. I don't know firsthand what a military operation feels like, even so -- that's the metaphor for I exited my marriage and it did seem to minimize the damage. What you are suggesting, at least it seems, is that your emotions are a factor here. You want to be able to live with your decision knowing you did everything with full awareness, not wanting to inflict harm on her even if she may not feel the same way toward you. Right track? Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: worriedStepmom on May 31, 2019, 01:33:14 PM I would suggest making some kind of decision tree/flow chart so you understand the implications of each decision point: what happens to her, what happens to you (including emotions), how exposed you might be legally, what if any legal protections you have to counter her moves, and any safety plans that might need to be activated. I don't know firsthand what a military operation feels like, even so -- that's the metaphor for I exited my marriage and it did seem to minimize the damage. What you are suggesting, at least it seems, is that your emotions are a factor here. You want to be able to live with your decision knowing you did everything with full awareness, not wanting to inflict harm on her even if she may not feel the same way toward you. As usual, lnl's posts are excellent. I just want to add one caveat. When I divorced (a non-BPD), I found that I twisted myself into knots trying to predict how he would react and continue to manage his emotions. I saw the same behavior in a friend who divorced a pwNPD, and in my husband as he worked through a custody battle with his BPDex. We had all been trained that it was our job to help keep them on an even keel - either because we'd be punished (verbal or physical abuse) or because we were terrified they'd try to harm themselves. It took me a lot of therapy to start letting go of outcomes. My mantra is to do my best to make decisions that fit my core values, to make genuine amends when I mess up, and to learn from my mistakes. (SD11's therapist is actually working on this same concept with her - they are currently working for her to define her core values.) Basically, I own my stuff, and other people own their reactions. Having a plan is a WONDERFUL thing. Having a safety plan is a necessity, especially when you've been the target of violence and are dealing with someone in danger of harming themselves. Just be careful that your plan --centers your well-being (you are not a secondary citizen in your own life) --doesn't require you to rescue or manage your wife (because you are establishing separate lives) --and doesn't make you a pretzel trying to predict every one of her reactions (because she is not emotionally stable and her reactions are often irrational) There's a balance to be had. Do you have a therapist? Sometimes they can be a great asset in helping you determine whether you are finding the right balance in your choices. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: zachira on May 31, 2019, 01:56:02 PM You sound like a kind caring man. You maybe struggling with seeing your wife in a completely negative light because you are not the kind of person she is, and would never do the kind of things she has done to you. Perhaps you feel that what your attorney is advising you to do is mean and you are not that kind of person. How can you protect yourself from further abuse and worse consequences down the line doing what your attorney recommends while keeping your self image of being a good person intact?
Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: mart555 on May 31, 2019, 03:28:09 PM --and doesn't make you a pretzel trying to predict every one of her reactions (because she is not emotionally stable and her reactions are often irrational) I am having a difficult time with this as well. I like to predict things so I can plan accordingly. This is damn impossible with a BPD during a divorce. "mine" is impossible to predict. She'll sometimes feel powerful and that everything is owed to her. Other times she wants to abandon the kids. I'm slowly less and less influenced by this but it is difficult to get out of the old habit of caretaking which I did for 19 years. I really hate it. Can't wait for it to be over but sadly it seems like a really long process. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: livednlearned on May 31, 2019, 04:55:54 PM The other thing to keep in mind is that sometimes a crisis turns into an opportunity.
My stepdaughter appears to have BPD traits and having a psychotic episode helped get her in front of services she desperately needed. It's good to know if your own emotions are a factor in your decision-making because your fears and care taking behaviors can be the exact thing that prevents someone from getting the help they desperately need. If you have codependent traits, you will not want a loved one to feel feelings that you yourself struggle to feel. So codependents tend to protect loved ones through rescue - fix - save behaviors that may be more about our fears than them. :( Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on May 31, 2019, 06:09:02 PM Oh my, to all of the previous posts, it’s like you know me already. Most everything is spot on. If nothing else, you understand what I’m feeling, as well as why I’m struggling. Thank you all so I much, I will try to reply to each of you...still learning how to excerpt into my messages.
Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on May 31, 2019, 06:59:07 PM Excerpt For example, you recognize that your wife is afraid of court, and has current charge hanging over her, and that you have enough documentation and understanding of 911 to feel relatively "safe," if that's the right word for the situation you're in... Perfectly statedExcerpt That is not insignificant leverage, and the nuance (in my interpretation of your story) is that you recognize she is (in a sense) cornered, a very fearful situation to be in. So in your interpretation of the situation, you feel some semblance of protection, even if a bystander would not necessarily see it that way. You even feel a sense of legal protection, which seems to be relatively rare for men when it comes to DV. Again, perfect. She is not stupid. For example, as crazy as she can get, as soon as the phone dialed 911, she cooled off real quick and retaliated to her room.Excerpt Your lawyer is suggesting, "Let's move the danger out of the house." Very much so. I know that if I start this off "fighting" I will get "fighting" in return. Now, I also understand that me doing the right thing all these years still led to my wife fighting whenever and wherever she was triggered. So that might not be the logical approach, but it is exactly how I'm feeling.You are concerned that removing one danger (her) will create another (she harms herself or harms you with a false allegation). Excerpt And some part of you, the part that has been in a state of heightened vigilance about her abuse and dysregulations for the last decade or so, believes the greater danger is to herself than to you. She has literally been locked in her bedroom (door shut, locked and dresser moved in front of door) for three straight weeks. I work from home and my office has direct site of the pathway from the room to the kitchen. She comes out no more than twice a day, sometimes none at all. I check on her every night...I can pick the lock, but won't push through the dresser. I just demand that she move or make some kind of noise so I know she is breathing/alive. Her response is that she has a broken rib and is just doing what her doctor told her to do, which is nonsense.Excerpt You are willing to gamble on this because you're still working through conflicted emotions and are not sure you can tolerate the feelings that may follow if she harms herself once she's served. This is a great point, but one I'm slowly getting frustrated with and starting to move away from. I think that is in conjunction with me finally putting my needs first.Excerpt People on this board have seen BPD spouse stun their partners by grabbing hold of the legal system and weaponizing it. I imagine your attorney has seen the same. Yes, my attorney has dealt with BPDs. That is why she wants to start aggressive, even if we back down during the process. She is afraid of the attacks that will come our way. She wants to strike while the iron is hot, so to speak.Excerpt We also see the suffering, victim side -- after you learn about BPD, your definition of victim may encompass even the abusive behaviors. You see her abuse as a byproduct of her illness, sort of rationalizing it. You feel you know the situation better than anyone else, including your lawyer, and others who have been through this -- and you may be right. Absolutely...sometimes to the point that I wish had not learned anything about it. I see a weak and fragile person who in one hand is acting outrageously inappropriate, but in another, a very broken person who is crying out for help (but won't get help)Excerpt What you are suggesting, at least it seems, is that your emotions are a factor here. You want to be able to live with your decision knowing you did everything with full awareness, not wanting to inflict harm on her even if she may not feel the same way toward you. I swear, I feel like we must have been on an identical path. This entire post has been spot on. Thank you!Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: ForeverDad on May 31, 2019, 10:37:46 PM Reciprocity is a concept foreign to a pwBPD who is prone to ranting and raging. Their moods and feelings are generally centered on self. You thinking of protecting her from herself, her perceptions and her consequences probably won't give her incentive to reciprocate. She is in Denial that she could be the cause of problems which is why she's an expert Manipulator, Blamer and Blame Shifter. That's why self-protection has to be one of your top priorities.
Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: MeandThee29 on June 01, 2019, 06:55:21 AM When I divorced (a non-BPD), I found that I twisted myself into knots trying to predict how he would react and continue to manage his emotions. I saw the same behavior in a friend who divorced a pwNPD, and in my husband as he worked through a custody battle with his BPDex. We had all been trained that it was our job to help keep them on an even keel - either because we'd be punished (verbal or physical abuse) or because we were terrified they'd try to harm themselves. It took me a lot of therapy to start letting go of outcomes. My mantra is to do my best to make decisions that fit my core values, to make genuine amends when I mess up, and to learn from my mistakes. (SD11's therapist is actually working on this same concept with her - they are currently working for her to define her core values.) Basically, I own my stuff, and other people own their reactions. Yes, I recently came to this point. I have to focus on a reasonable outcome for myself and our young adults and let him handle himself. It was hard place to come to. He can rage, blame, and accuse, but I have to look to my own affairs first. That seems so foreign to me, but it's what divorce is. It's legally dividing and going our own ways. It can't be all what he wants, and it can't be all what I want. I know that. I'm using my attorney much more than I had hoped, but it's an investment in my future. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: livednlearned on June 01, 2019, 08:57:10 AM I know that if I start this off "fighting" I will get "fighting" in return. Now, I also understand that me doing the right thing all these years still led to my wife fighting whenever and wherever she was triggered. So that might not be the logical approach, but it is exactly how I'm feeling. What does not fighting look like to you? In your mind, what is the best (most realistic) outcome, knowing the realities of how she has responded to extreme stress in the past? If she does something aggressive (physically and legally) in response to your not-fighting approach, do you feel there are things you can do to protect yourself? It's good to play these scenarios out by 5-10 steps so you aren't caught off guard. I gave my ex the house and it took multiple trips to court and a lot of money, plus a real estate lawyer, just to get him to refi so I could sign a quit claim deed and be done. It took years. Looking back, there was no surprise -- he is and was a stonewaller. Winning meant me losing as much as he could make happen, even if it meant he lost too. In retrospect, I wish I had known what I know now (and learned from friends here). That every legal decision, act, motion should have a consequence for non-compliance. By consequence, I don't mean a punishment. I mean if x happens, then y follows. If x does not happen, then z happens by day/date/year. A consequence might be, "We respectfully request that stbx find a suitable other home by day/date/year, allowing her time to celebrate the graduation party and birthday party in the marital home as planned. By day/date/year, if furniture and belongings have not been moved, they will be relocated to a storage unit paid out of stbx's settlement monies." I don't know what a reasonable consequence might be, I'm only pointing out how you can slow walk people through their choices and the implications. It costs more money for an L to figure out exactly how you want to do things. It took me years to get a handle on how things worked -- you might be a faster learner Whatever you choose to do, it's important to realize that your L is ethically bound to represent your best interests -- you are sort of working against her when you take the teeth out of her approach. She's also not your therapist :( so the more you show her you've thought this through and planned for contingencies, the more likely she will believe you understand why your way is going to work as effectively as her's. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on June 03, 2019, 06:12:00 AM Kind of an interesting development yesterday. My uBPDw started packing. I think she finally is taking this seriously, which makes me feel better that she is at least planning. I've had a whirlwind of a week, when I was literally having anxiety worried about what is going to happen to her, to an almost numb feeling while she laid in bed for 3 weeks doing nothing, to a little bit of joy that she is packing (peacefully by the way) and leaving. While I know my wife is a master manipulator, sometimes you just don't know. I think she's convinced herself that I don't love her anymore. Our youngest (my stepdaughter) just graduated high school, and twice this weekend my wife talked to her, while crying. The first time she said I didn't love her anymore, and her daughter stuck up for me by saying "Mom, he's stuck around this long, of course he loves you...but you won't get any help. Everyone has a breaking point, but this is just as hard for him as it is for you." That just opened my eyes to some truth...who would have thought my 17 y/o gives the best advice. Anyways, my daughter also told me that her mother told her yesterday she was leaving and asked if she wanted to go, and she said no, it was better for her to stay with me. This both shows me how mature my daughter is but also breaks my heart, that a daughter would choose a step-dad over a bio mother (I've raised her for 13 years so not like I'm not her real dad, but still).
Will a BPD seriously lose everything before they even try help, whether they truly believe something is wrong or not? My initial divorce hearing for temp orders is Wednesday, at which I point I firmly believe the orders will say she has to find another place to live. I just can't wrap my head around it...even as much as I've studied and learned about BPD. It reminds me of a speeding ticket a got a few years ago. The court offered defensive driving to drop the ticket. I understood the consequences of the ticket, so I took the DD class. Now, did going through DD mean I was going to become (or even intended to) the perfect driver; no, I just didn't want the ticket. Is this just another example of how she thinks, or doesn't think? Is the astigmatism of a diagnosis that scary, or is it a bit of narcissism? Anyways, as of right now, I'm both satisfied I'm doing the right thing by walking away, and, I no longer have bad feelings about how it is happening. I can look back and not feel like a bad person, that I did any thing to be ashamed of, nothing that was "wrong" or with wrong intentions. My heart and conscious are finally clear. Ironically, I think my wife woke up because her sister told her some truths. Her sister knows her very well, and we've spoken often over the years. Her sister is one that has told me many times why am I even hanging around. Of course, they're family so she is still there for her. I'm in TX, she is in TN. Anyway, her husband is an attorney. He talked to me the other day, and I explained (two rational people speaking) what was going on, even told him what my wife was up against legally (divorce). Now this is my wife's brother-in-law, who cares more about the health of his own wife than anything in the world, and I know that his wife will be healthier when she knows her sister (my wife) is OK. He told me I'm doing the right thing, my attorney is doing the right thing, and not to change anything. He explained how emotional everything is right now but everyone knows what I've been through. He said they will make sure my wife is OK, but he wanted me to take care of myself, and if he were my attorney, he would be doing exactly the same thing. This wasn't some eye opening thing from an attorney, but from someone who would directly benefit in his own marriage the sooner my wife is doing better, it kind of really hit a spot with me, almost a peace came over me. The only unresolved question for me, and I know I may never have a rational answer to this, is how/why my wife would think I don't love her. Leaving her is the hardest thing I've ever had to do. People have broken up with me before, and that hurts. My previous marriage ended when my ex- committed adultery...which still hurt. Nothing compares to choosing to leave someone you don't want to leave because you're health has left you no other options. I know I need to quit asking myself that question, it just reinforces the sad nature of the BPD mentality. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Panda39 on June 03, 2019, 07:26:57 AM Hi Brian,
I'm glad to hear you are finding some peace in your choice. You have a very wise step daughter who clearly cares for both of her parents and have also received good advice from your BIL. It's nice to get those types of validation in the real world from people that know you both and know the situation. Divorce is never easy BPD or no BPD, you want to do what is best for everyone and least painful for everyone but I found that you need to do that from a place where you put your needs first. It feels weird or selfish because many of us put the needs of the other person before our own. When we can do what is best for everyone that's great, but when we can't we need to choose ourselves. Just because we choose ourselves that doesn't mean that we don't care about our spouse...it can be both. We can choose us and still care about them. Excerpt The only unresolved question for me, and I know I may never have a rational answer to this, is how/why my wife would think I don't love her. There is a lot of black and white thinking that can come along with BPD, heck we all can be black and white thinkers sometimes. I think this is what this is what some of this is, black and white thinking. If you aren't with me you are against me. This has absolutely nothing to do with who you are and how you feel about her. For people with BPD feelings can often also equal facts. She feels it therefore it is. Again this is about her, her feelings, her perceptions and nothing to do with your feelings and your intentions. Panda39 Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: mart555 on June 03, 2019, 07:43:13 AM Anyways, as of right now, I'm both satisfied I'm doing the right thing by walking away, and, I no longer have bad feelings about how it is happening. I can look back and not feel like a bad person, that I did any thing to be ashamed of, nothing that was "wrong" or with wrong intentions. My heart and conscious are finally clear. This feeling will come and go. Guilt will come back and disappear a few times. It's weird and you feel like PLEASE READ (https://bpdfamily.com/safe-site.htm) when it comes back. I still feel occasional guilt even though she assaulted me at my workplace, was charged, breached her conditions a month later, told the kids incredibly mean things (their psychologist and lawyers were troubled when they read the messages). It does get much better over time. The only unresolved question for me, and I know I may never have a rational answer to this, is how/why my wife would think I don't love her. Leaving her is the hardest thing I've ever had to do. People have broken up with me before, and that hurts. My previous marriage ended when my ex- committed adultery...which still hurt. Nothing compares to choosing to leave someone you don't want to leave because you're health has left you no other options. I know I need to quit asking myself that question, it just reinforces the sad nature of the BPD mentality. Might be a case of caring vs loving? I realized that I stopped loving my wife years ago but I did care for her. At some point you have to save yourself. Count yourself lucky, your kid is old enough. I even consider myself lucky, my kids are 14 and 10. If they had been younger, the damage their mom could do would have been way worse. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: worriedStepmom on June 03, 2019, 07:43:46 AM I can feel the relief rolling off of you, and I'm so glad for you to get a measure of peace. Were you able to serve her? Were the papers the same ones she refused before, or did you have the lawyer change anything?
I want to caution you that divorce is like the worst kind of roller coaster. There are lots of moments when you feel like everything is going to get better...and then a few moments later it seems like your world is ending. That's normal, and that's okay. Over time, things are going to get better. Your wife's family has promised to help take care of her. That's great that they love her enough to help - and to reassure you that they will help. They can help her get settled in a place and help her to be physically safe. Even with their intervention, your wife may never get help for her emotional issues. BPD is an ego-syntonic disorder; people with BPD cannot recognize that their actions aren't "normal", because in their reality, the way they are acting IS normal. People with depression can usually recognize that the way they feel is "off", but people with a personality disorder can't. I can't even imagine trying to convince myself that everything I think and feel could be "wrong". I sincerely hope that my stepdaughter's mother becomes healthier, but I accept now that this is unlikely to ever happen. This both shows me how mature my daughter is but also breaks my heart, that a daughter would choose a step-dad over a bio mother (I've raised her for 13 years so not like I'm not her real dad, but still). My stepdaughter once came out of a therapy session in tears. She walked right past her mom and into my arms for comfort. I cuddled her close and cried because an 11-year-old couldn't depend on her own mom for emotional support. My sister told me that as far as SD is concerned, I am her mom. She's just lucky enough to have two moms and she can pick which one she needs when.You are dad to SD17. It sounds like to her, you are an excellent one. Excerpt Anyways, as of right now, I'm both satisfied I'm doing the right thing by walking away, and, I no longer have bad feelings about how it is happening. I can look back and not feel like a bad person, that I did any thing to be ashamed of, nothing that was "wrong" or with wrong intentions. My heart and conscious are finally clear. I cannot overstate the value of this. Write it down and post it somewhere to remind yourself that you did the absolute best that you could for as long as you could. You tried. That means something.Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Deb on June 03, 2019, 08:25:34 AM Excerpt Will a BPD seriously lose everything before they even try help, whether they truly believe something is wrong or not? Sometimes they will. My dBPD sister lost everything and still insists that she is fine. That someone (actually me) turned her older kids and husband against her. It's been 20 years and she still clings to that rather then look at her own behavior. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: MeandThee29 on June 03, 2019, 08:42:30 AM Will a BPD seriously lose everything before they even try help, whether they truly believe something is wrong or not? My initial divorce hearing for temp orders is Wednesday, at which I point I firmly believe the orders will say she has to find another place to live. I just can't wrap my head around it...even as much as I've studied and learned about BPD. It reminds me of a speeding ticket a got a few years ago. The court offered defensive driving to drop the ticket. I understood the consequences of the ticket, so I took the DD class. Now, did going through DD mean I was going to become (or even intended to) the perfect driver; no, I just didn't want the ticket. Is this just another example of how she thinks, or doesn't think? Is the astigmatism of a diagnosis that scary, or is it a bit of narcissism? The only unresolved question for me, and I know I may never have a rational answer to this, is how/why my wife would think I don't love her. Leaving her is the hardest thing I've ever had to do. People have broken up with me before, and that hurts. My previous marriage ended when my ex- committed adultery...which still hurt. Nothing compares to choosing to leave someone you don't want to leave because you're health has left you no other options. I know I need to quit asking myself that question, it just reinforces the sad nature of the BPD mentality. You can't reason it out. When I have troubles in my thinking or life issues, I go for help. I talk to a wise friend or see a professional. Through this I've seen a therapist, a life coach, and now am involved in a 12-step group that gives me the group support I need from people that get it. I want to get better and turn this into better chapters ahead. I stumble at times, but I go to work, keep up with my affairs, and do things with friends and family. It doesn't dominate my life anymore. This morning I read a few chapters from a book (Les Carter's "When Pleasing You Is Killing Me") that didn't do much for me several months ago. Today it was meaningful to me because I understand more of my part in this. I helped me see some of the issues I've had at work in a new light too. So it's a growth process. In contrast, a person with disordered thinking doesn't see the problem and won't get the help. Whether they initiate it or not, divorce deregulates them. They may go into a spiral. They may believe can get rid of their partner that is causing problems and feel better. Maybe they find someone new and start over. But unless you deal with the core issues, it won't be better. My therapist has emphasized over-and-over that you have to face your problems and situations you've created to work through solutions. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on June 03, 2019, 10:05:47 AM Excerpt I can feel the relief rolling off of you, and I'm so glad for you to get a measure of peace. Were you able to serve her? Were the papers the same ones she refused before, or did you have the lawyer change anything? We did not change anything. I tried my hardest to get my wife to "wake up" from her three week state of lying in bed. I do believe that after speaking with my BIL, my wife's sister must have given her some advice that she had better start waking up. She's not been kicked out of the house, but I think realizes that is inevitable...or she is leaving by choice. Server comes one last time today, we'll see if she accepts it. If not, TX has a way to file that we made three attempts then the court will simply appoint someone to look out for her during the pretrial orders. From both my lawyer, as well as my BIL, we left it as is because they all know that crazy accusations against me may surface at anytime, so better to have those included and we can always lay off the consequences as we mediate division of property. I feel good with that.I can't thank everyone who has followed my posts. There are times I am just at such a loss. The toughest decisions in my life are the ones where I don't know what is right and what is wrong. I've had to make very hard decisions in the past, but I knew it was the right thing to do; so I did it rather easily. In this life with my BPDw, there are all kinds of "I just don't know what is right" and that is my biggest struggle. Starting to come around on that. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: livednlearned on June 03, 2019, 10:24:19 AM Will a BPD seriously lose everything before they even try help, whether they truly believe something is wrong or not? She hasn't learned to attend to her own feelings, so she expects others to make her bad feelings go away. Likely, she was relying on you (and others) to make herself feel worthy, and now that it's clear you cannot do this, she blames you (and others) for her feelings of low self worth. If, in her mind, you are to blame then it makes no sense for her to get help because someone else other than her is the cause of her problems. She has used physical aggression and abuse to (dysfunctionally) get a need met. From what you've described, she is somewhat boxed in because she fears court. Without learning other skills to deal with emotional pain, she literally has no other way to cope other than to hole up in her room. Has she self-harmed in the past? What did she do when her first marriage ended? Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on June 03, 2019, 12:00:14 PM Excerpt Has she self-harmed in the past? Not that I'm aware of, but it's possible she has over medicated. It's hard to tell when her emotions are just raging verse Xanax or Klonopin OD.Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on June 03, 2019, 12:02:46 PM Excerpt What did she do when her first marriage ended? She was truly a victim in that case. Ex was convicted felon, alcoholic. She worked full time which I think really kept her BPD traits under better control. He didn't work, beat her, abused her, etc. She just wanted out.Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: MeandThee29 on June 03, 2019, 03:13:26 PM She hasn't learned to attend to her own feelings, so she expects others to make her bad feelings go away. Likely, she was relying on you (and others) to make herself feel worthy, and now that it's clear you cannot do this, she blames you (and others) for her feelings of low self worth. If, in her mind, you are to blame then it makes no sense for her to get help because someone else other than her is the cause of her problems. Oh my, those are gems. They also blame for their own shame. And project their problems on you. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: ForeverDad on June 03, 2019, 06:22:11 PM As a comparison, Bipolar and Borderline PD may have similar symptoms but they are quite different. Bipolar is said to be a chemical imbalance and meds do help tremendously. However, Borderline (and other PDs) are behavioral imbalances, the traits are at extreme ends of the normalcy ranges. With BPD it is exacerbated but self-centered perceptions where the person always has to be right and in control, where feelings and moods trump facts and reality. Meds may help moderate a pwBPD's behaviors but the practical solution is intensive therapy diligently applied for years.
Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Brian1977 on June 06, 2019, 05:26:24 AM I went to court yesterday for temporary Orders Hearing. BPDw didn’t show up, very quick and painless. She has been packing for two days, now prepared to leave this weekend after my daughter graduates tonight. If you have read my past messages, I felt fine with the order, it is basically just the standard order about mail, money, physicality, etc, but also gave me exclusive use of the house.
Someone please tell me this is “normal” and perhaps an overdose of FOG; but we have both cried a lot the last two days, even crying together (I don’t mean at the same time, I mean actually crying together). We don’t hate each other, we’re not indifferent to each other. My wife definitely does not want to get divorced, but she’s not even getting an attorney (she completely trusts me, which she should because I would never screw her; of course her family wants her to get an attorney which I can also understand and have no problem with...again, I just want to be fair). The main thing I’m focusing on is that she still doesn’t want to talk about getting help...at least not for BPD. It’s so weird because she says she is seeing her pastor (I know that to be true), attends group therapy (related to her childhood abuse) and a psychologist (this one I’m not so sure about because when I press her about it she won’t tell me who she’s seeing or even what for, and she says she won’t tell me because I would contact him and use it against her. She then professes she’s had every psych test done and medicine just turns her into a zombie. I tried to explain to her that I feel she needs specific help for BPD from someone who’s familiar with it, and the research shows treatment is not some test and there is no magic pill, it’s just specific talking therapy that can help her control her emotions and thus her anger/outrage. She said to send the information to her sister where she is heading. I’ve never seen my wife so weak. Packing up her stuff, I see how very broken she is. The complete opposite of how strong she can appear during a rage. My heart is broken, while I can’t feel what she is going through I understand because I have done so much research on BPD. We talked more the last two days than the last month. While I feel she is full of excuses, I know that a lot of it is true in her mind. I try to explain that her threats when she is angry are not tolerable, her answer is “but I never carry them out.” I feel like I’m rambling, not even sure what kind of responses I’m looking for. I’m still very conflicted about my feelings...again, my love is still very alive and real, but I go back to my journal and realize how unhealthy things are the majority of the time. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: MeandThee29 on June 06, 2019, 07:12:23 AM I feel like I’m rambling, not even sure what kind of responses I’m looking for. I’m still very conflicted about my feelings...again, my love is still very alive and real, but I go back to my journal and realize how unhealthy things are the majority of the time. Many of us feel the same. I know I do. I truly love mine, but being together nearly destroyed me. If we tried to make it again on their terms, I doubt that it would last week. Mine disregulates and doesn't remember many of the really bad interactions. Then they flip them on me, saying that I'm mentally ill. There were so many cycles, I can't count them. There was also a suicide attempt, and I'm concerned about that. One of their people convinced them that if we just started over in a new place, all would be well. I told that to my therapist, and she laughed. She said it's very common among those battling mental illness to think that, but it never works out unless you treat the problem. Uprooting me from friends and family would take away much of my life too, which is what they want. Not healthy. Starting over may help if you trying to get away from people who are dragging you down, but not if you bring the problem with you. I have a friend battling cocaine addiction, and moving did help her with that, but she's also active in her recovery with a 12-step program. Being with different people in a new place has helped her. But she's working her program. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: formflier on June 06, 2019, 07:23:00 AM but I go back to my journal and realize how unhealthy things are the majority of the time. Very wise of you to have a journal and to regularly consult it to stay anchored to "your reality". Hang in there. Keep working the process. Best, FF Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: mart555 on June 06, 2019, 08:28:35 AM My wife definitely does not want to get divorced, but she’s not even getting an attorney (she completely trusts me, which she should because I would never screw her; of course her family wants her to get an attorney which I can also understand and have no problem with...again, I just want to be fair). Yeah... that will likely change. They go from being the victim (ie: Take everything) to feeling powerful (I'll take all you have and will screw you in court!). Ie: she'll split and you'll be seen as the demon. These cycles are damn annoying. I'm at cycle 4 I think... And she may end up carrying out threats. I got the "I never wanted to hit you, I did it because I wanted to be sure that you don't take me back. You know I don't want to cause you arm" on Christmas eve... I then found out that she had written to her sister that morning and said "I can't fake it anymore, I want to hit him until he stops moving". I got that same threat a few months later and was assaulted at my office two days later. Nothing major, but an assault none the less with a nasty bite mark. There was no sign of violence before that. Rage episodes can be scary. Thanks to the no-contact I feel a bit safer but I know how much anger there is inside her. There was none of that before mid december. Things can change fast. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: hope2727 on June 06, 2019, 09:33:10 AM I understand what you are experiencing and am so sorry you have to go through this. I've been there. As a decent, lovinghumna being its so hard to attack the ones we love. However, My biggest regret is that I didn't just go full bore at the beginning. Its what multiple professionals told me to do and I should have. It cost me tens of thousands of dollars and years of my life. You cannot logic a broken brain and pwBPD do not react based on our logic. If I had been the bad/strong person up front I could always have given things back later. Its a bit like staff management. Be tough up front so the expectations are set high. Then be nice later as a reward or kindness not as an expectation. I've learned the hard way on both the divorce and employee front. So listen to your lawyer. Yes your wife is a hurt person and this will be painful for both of you. So be the strong one and take the tough stance to protect everyone involved then give back kindness from a position of power and safety once its all over. Seriously learn from my mistakes.
Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: Panda39 on June 06, 2019, 11:26:50 AM Excerpt Someone please tell me this is “normal” and perhaps an overdose of FOG; but we have both cried a lot the last two days, even crying together (I don’t mean at the same time, I mean actually crying together). We don’t hate each other, we’re not indifferent to each other. I would say yes it is normal to mourn the end of a relationship/marriage and to care about the other person and at the same time to know that to end the relationship/marriage is still the right decision. It's Gray, it's not black and white. I felt much the same when I left my marriage. I didn't deliberately go out of my way to hurt my husband but I was still ending it because the relationship was not working for either of us (or our son). Ultimately, in my case my leaving was a catalyst for positive change for all of us, me, my ex and my son. The end of a marriage/relationship does not necessarily have to be a bad thing. Panda39 Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: hope2727 on June 06, 2019, 11:41:00 AM Yes totally normal. It is sad. Very sad. Cry, grieve, and honour your loss. Then rebuild your amazing new life and find peace and happiness.
So sorry you have to endure this. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: ForeverDad on June 06, 2019, 01:06:31 PM If you look up the traits of BPD, there are more than a few. All of these traits would be 'normal' if balanced. But these are BPD traits since they're out of balance and to one extreme or another. People with BPD can and do have different levels of action, reaction and overreaction. Be thankful her perceptions are not as aggressive as others described here. However, be cautious... separation gives distance and her behaviors may appear less abnormal when apart but they're lurking below the surface if you get back together.
As for her comment about meds. Bipolar does have a chemical imbalance basis and so meds can help greatly there. But Borderline is a disorder focused greatly on perceptions, particularly of close relationships. Meds may moderate the severity of the BPD behaviors but intensive therapy diligently applied for years is the primary answer. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: MeandThee29 on June 06, 2019, 05:41:10 PM I understand what you are experiencing and am so sorry you have to go through this. I've been there. As a decent, loving human being its so hard to attack the ones we love. However, My biggest regret is that I didn't just go full bore at the beginning. Its what multiple professionals told me to do and I should have. It cost me tens of thousands of dollars and years of my life. You cannot logic a broken brain and pwBPD do not react based on our logic. If I had been the bad/strong person up front I could always have given things back later. Its a bit like staff management. Be tough up front so the expectations are set high. Then be nice later as a reward or kindness not as an expectation. I've learned the hard way on both the divorce and employee front. So listen to your lawyer. Yes your wife is a hurt person and this will be painful for both of you. So be the strong one and take the tough stance to protect everyone involved then give back kindness from a position of power and safety once its all over. Seriously learn from my mistakes. Yes, that's what I was told too. You can always dial back, but you can't get back something you give up right away. So contrary to my nature though. I'm not a negotiator, I'm a giver. Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: ForeverDad on June 07, 2019, 10:50:44 AM Yes, that's what I was told too. You can always dial back, but you can't get back something you give up right away. So contrary to my nature though. I'm not a negotiator, I'm a giver. My observation has been that our second nature is to be too fair, too nice, too overlooking for our own good. If we get a good, proactive, experienced lawyer then we can appreciate the lawyer looking out for Gifting traps and too-fair inclinations that would sabotage us as the more stable parent. Remember, this isn't you the healthier parent versus the misguided problematic parent. This is about you ensuring the best outcome for your children as well as for you. The standard flight instructions... "In the event of an emergency put on your own oxygen mask first before helping others." Title: Re: Any advice from an attorney to my attorney? Post by: MeandThee29 on June 07, 2019, 11:58:27 AM My observation has been that our second nature is to be too fair, too nice, too overlooking for our own good. If we get a good, proactive, experienced lawyer then we can appreciate the lawyer looking out for Gifting traps and too-fair inclinations that would sabotage us as the more stable parent. Remember, this isn't you the healthier parent versus the misguided problematic parent. This is about you ensuring the best outcome for your children as well as for you. The standard flight instructions... "In the event of an emergency put on your own oxygen mask first before helping others." Exactly what my lawyer said. He said I'm too nice and not thinking about my future when I need to think about my future. I have "preparing for launch" young adults who live with me and who are not financially independent, and I hope to retire in 10-12 years, not dependent on them. He's been kind about it, but I need my lawyer. |