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 1 
 on: January 28, 2026, 10:24:18 AM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by maxsterling
Wendy -

She says she wants happiness and joy and fulfilling relationships.  In BPD language, she wants to feel engulfed for awhile.

Doesn’t change my opinion, because her “searching” is self destructive, no different than if she was drug-seeking.  We did talk about that a little, and she recognizes what she is doing, admitting that she sees some major red flags with this woman, and that even if I was okay with her having an extra marital relation, it would not bring her joy.

One thing clear to me - this is something I can’t fix and won’t ever go away, no matter how much she is aware her behavior is self destructive.

All married people need outside lives and relationships to be happy.  It’s just that people like me have hobbies and no issues making and keeping friends.  Apparently, that is beyond W’s skill set.

 2 
 on: January 28, 2026, 09:45:59 AM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by Pook075
I also thought my mother was doing surprisingly well and better than we expected after my father passed away, so I assumed that her helplessness was partially a consequence of enabling. It was an illusion. We just didn't know until it became obvious.

The BPDs in my life all work, and they all pay their own bills today.  That wasn't true before because someone was enabling them to be co-dependent.  What starts at "help" eventually becomes an entitlement that they can't live without because it's expected.

I remember my BPD daughter in particular, I paid her car insurance until she was 24 because she always blew through her paychecks.  I finally had to cancel it due to my own money struggles, and she had auto insurance within an hour.  And I thought, "Huh.  I've been asking her to do this for six years...and she does it within an hour once I had no other choice.  Is that her fault or mine?"

Of course it was my fault, LOL.

I said all of that to say, your wife may not seem like she can work and support herself.  Today, maybe she can't.  But once her life changes, you'd be amazed what she will do when she has no other choice.  Or maybe she goes a different route and reconnects to family or old friends.  Either way though, she will figure it out on her own once the decisions are no longer in your hands.

 3 
 on: January 28, 2026, 09:33:10 AM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by Notwendy


she has never been able to have stable long term relationships or friendships because of an inability to control sexual urges and maintain boundaries. 

after reading a book on poly relationships (suggested by the other woman), she felt validation that monogamy is not right for everyone.

She revealed that the current behavior and the behavior from her past is not about seeking pleasure or because monogamy is not what she wants. 

 
So what does she actually want?

And does giving you a reason for her inability to have her needs met through platonic friendships make meeting up with women for sex OK with you?

What's she going to do about this.


 4 
 on: January 28, 2026, 08:51:56 AM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by maxsterling
We talked last night.  Difficult conversation for me to initiate because with W’s combative mood the past few weeks, my instinct is to avoid communication for fear of what it has been turning into. And I don’t want to have the role of “therapist” either.  She seemed like she wanted to talk and I did a good job of keeping the conversation productive.

I asked about this other woman, and asked if that if we were to have an open relationship was this the type of woman she wanted.  I asked if she was looking for a girlfriend or Just sex with a woman on the side.  That helped her open up some, and I learned this is probably is coming from a place of trauma and that she has never been able to have stable long term relationships or friendships because of an inability to control sexual urges and maintain boundaries.  after reading a book on poly relationships (suggested by the other woman), she felt validation that monogamy is not right for everyone.

After talking with her last night, she revealed that the current behavior and the behavior from her past is not about seeking pleasure or because monogamy is not what she wants.  It’s basically the push-pull of BPD.  I think most emotionally healthy people engage in sexual activity as an extension of emotional closeness.  What W described is that for her, sexual activity is to fill a void or to force an emotional closeness or satisfy a curiosity.  This current desire is probably rooted in loneliness and changes due to aging.  Healthy people can satisfy those urges through platonic friendships or hobbies or social groups. It seems that for W for her whole life that she tries to satisfy those feelings of loneliness through sex and knows no other way.  It sounds to me this is about wanting to feel emotional closeness outside marriage (as we all need) but not being able to separate sexual desire from the desire for emotiknal closeness. 

 5 
 on: January 28, 2026, 07:23:32 AM  
Started by ladymedtrina - Last post by Pook075
Our biggest repeating issue is misunderstandings. He constantly thinks that my face/body language/tone is saying something different than the words I'm actually saying. Now that we have been together over a decade, I can usually tell when he takes something I said a different way so I am actually able to confront it then, but that is hard.

I'm a highly logical person so I completely get it, I'd argue and explain and justify and wonder why we kept going around and around in circles.

Most people are a mix of logic and emotion.  They don't sound like opposites, but they absolutely are.  Think about it, if you smash your finger in the door, you don't care what you say or how you react...it's just all emotion for that first 5-10 seconds.  Logic is the opposite of that, smooth and steady thinking to find the best possible solution.

If your husband is "not himself", there's a good chance he's in a disordered state and thinking with heightened emotions...like he just slammed his finger in the door and his brain is still reeling from the sudden shock of it all.  You must fight emotion with emotion:

- Oh my gosh, what happened?
- Are you okay, what's going on?
- What can I do to help?
- Let's talk about this and figure a way through it.

The biggest issue with our arguments however is that we don't seem to grow from them often. He will shut out what happened. Tell me he doesn't remember any of it. Or that he remembers it a completely different way.

I'm not defending your husband here, but he is remembering it a different way because it was very different within his mind.  His emotions were saying that he was upset and confused, but the argument was about the dogs barking or whatever.  When you responded with logic, he's thinking, "Can't she clearly see what I'm going through right now?!?"

Mind you, he didn't SAY what he was going through, but his emotions SHOWED that he was facing something unspoken.  Then he just ranted about the first thing that frustrated him (the dogs, whatever).  For him, the argument was never about the dogs though...it was about you not loving him enough to understand what he was going through.

Why would he think that?  Because he needed affirmation and sympathy, he received logic.

I hope that helps!  I don't want to share too much at once and make it confusing.

 6 
 on: January 28, 2026, 06:58:21 AM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by Notwendy

Maybe she can't take care of herself.  That might be so.  But isn't it possible she can take better care of herself if/when she has to?  Just a thought.

I also thought my mother was doing surprisingly well and better than we expected after my father passed away, so I assumed that her helplessness was partially a consequence of enabling. It was an illusion. We just didn't know until it became obvious.

I wouldn't blame anyone for choosing to not be in a damaging relationship if that is the overall best decision. That Max's wife qualifies for SSDI and has documented psychiatric history could be in his favor for custody, it does add another complication to the decision to divorce.

 7 
 on: January 28, 2026, 05:00:45 AM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by Notwendy
Well, i certainly hope so.  But - she is 50 and the longest she has held onto any job - any - is maybe 2 years.  She was given permanent SSDI disability before she turned 30 - and that is jot easy to get.  So someone at some point before the age of 30 determined that she was unlikely to be able to support herself financially - ever.  Could she maintain an income without me?  I don’t  know, but her history says no.

I also wondered how much of my BPD mother's seemingly inability to manage on her own was affected by my father's enabling her, but I also didn't realize the extent of her impairment from BPD.

That she would not be able to hold a salaried job wasn't as obvious in her younger years because it wasn't expected of women at the time . I think in current times, she would have qualified for SSDI disability but also I think that  would have caused her shame.

While child custody was a likely concern for my father if he considered divorce, I also think her inability to manage on her own was a significant one too. She could have appeared competent in court, and gotten custody, but she wouldn't have been able to manage that.

I mention this because, while divorce is a consideration, the extent of your wife's impairment is an additional concern. It is like the bridge story- how to not go over yourself but also how to let go. I think that your wife is receiving SSDI is a significant step, but I think looking into what supports and services are available to her could be part of the legal inquiry of what to do if you do pursue divorce.

I also think at some level, your wife is aware of her struggles, even if she doesn't directly admit it. This is why I don't think she's going to jeopardize her marriage, and that her inquiry into open marriage is more imaginary than action. BPD mother often would back out of social plans at the last minute. My best guess is that your wife might agree to meet this person, maybe even get there but at some point back out. Possibly blame you- the "controlling husband" for it.


 8 
 on: January 27, 2026, 11:50:53 PM  
Started by SilentTide - Last post by SilentTide
I found this book while reading “The essential family guide to borderline personality disorder.” Our daughter was diagnosed with bipolar and BPD a year ago.
Her symptoms started as a teenager about 10 years ago. We walk on eggshells all the time and her personalities and outbursts have controlled our family for so long, that many of us are broken emotionally and even suffering physical ailments from the stress.
She has two small children, and they all live with us. We would ask her to leave if it wasn’t for the children. We are the only stability that they have. We feel stuck and alone.
We’re looking for support and any advice available. Thanks!

 9 
 on: January 27, 2026, 10:22:06 PM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by maxsterling
Well, i certainly hope so.  But - she is 50 and the longest she has held onto any job - any - is maybe 2 years.  She was given permanent SSDI disability before she turned 30 - and that is jot easy to get.  So someone at some point before the age of 30 determined that she was unlikely to be able to support herself financially - ever.  Could she maintain an income without me?  I don’t  know, but her history says no.

 10 
 on: January 27, 2026, 08:41:28 PM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by ForeverDad
While your spouse is certainly different than my ex, BPD exists across a broad spectrum, let me explain something I had noticed in my case over the years...

I had been married over a decade and watched my hard working spouse gradually display more and more poor behaviors, more of the behaviors that fit the Borderline traits.  Little did I realize it, but when I came up with the idea for her to feel better with a child, it made our marriage worse.  As I look back, she unconsciously perceived me morph from a husband to a father, triggering her childhood FOO of an abuser stepfather and a complicit mother.  Our marriage imploded before our child was 4 years old.

As I stated above, she was hard working all those years.  But she stopped working and became a SAHM once she was a mother.  Home life became filled with her arguments, rants and rages like never before.  In the final months she was moaning and groaning so much, slamming doors and locking herself in with our child at night.  Never could I ever imagine she could dig herself out.

Then we separated.  Suddenly, she morphed again.  I never heard her moaning and groaning again.  It's been two decades and she went back to work and has supported herself over the years.  Yes, there was short term spousal support and child support that helped her until I was awarded majority time, but apparently her financial life worked out.  She's still what I consider somewhat dysfunctional in relationships but otherwise she is functional enough to get things done in her life.

Might your spouse be of that sort, where she might do better post-marriage than she leads you to expect?  Could the support you've provided for years be allowing her to let herself remain financially unproductive and claiming to be helpless and dependent?

Maybe she can't take care of herself.  That might be so.  But isn't it possible she can take better care of herself if/when she has to?  Just a thought.

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