My wife called for divorce, after a few weeks of conflict and trying to work through some long term challenges and trauma related to our marriage. We loved each other very much, and had been married almost 12 years. But there were always some hard to explain challenges, and eventually she was diagnosed with autism.
I kind of cracked eventually under the pressure, and had to let her know how hard things had been for me. And this seemed to trigger fear of abandonment, and everything escalated and spiraled into a mess. She needed time apart, told our counselor I "yelled" at her and "threatened" her, and interpreted some things I did and said in the worst possible light. I have regrets, but don't' think I did anything that was normally divorce-worthy.
She cut off all communication after calling for divorce (which was over Zoom... I hadn't seen her for almost a month in person), and I have no way to know what exactly is going on with her, or how to get any kind of closure.
It feels like BPD patterns make the most sense of the situation and things that were happening for years. I've read the standard literature, listened to podcasts, talked to others who have been through these things, etc. Mostly feels like the quiet or discouraged subtype, but with some emotional meltdowns and explosions. But so much of the marriage was good and beautiful, and we built a life together that I was proud of, and were anchored in faith and had done a lot of counseling trying to find help.
It does seem like she "snapped" and usually I would be with her to help de-escalate things, but since she demanded time with me away, I think her mind went places that made things really hard to come back from, and she was not open to compromise, trusting me more, etc. She thought I was having an emotional affair and was pathologizing her when she learned I was thinking BPD might be involved (she had looked into it in the past).
Now the hard part is having no closure, and wondering if I really was as bad as she has said I am. Did I just make up how hard things were for years? Was it a character defect in me? Or was there something that for years was a bit more below the surface that was stressing me out and eventually caused me to crack under the pressure (I got super depressed and almost had to go into inpatient therapy). Now it seems like BPD makes sense, given her abnormal behavior during the separation and after calling for divorce (I could give more details, like how she told the court I was "harassing" her when I sent a few emails of love and apology trying to find closure, wouldn't respond to my request to even see our dog one last time, etc. She thought of me as unsafe, when in reality I am a very gentle person.
It's such a struggle; I'm a sensitive guy, and I go back and forth between clarity and feeling confident that her reactions were disproportionate and outside of my control, and then feeling like "wow, what did I do? Am I a terrible person?" And on top of that, I have lost friends and employment (I work in Christian ministry) because people don't understand or believe me or give grace for what I was going through. Encouragement and perspective appreciated!
The short answer is it sounds like a lot here is BPD (or CPTSD or anxiety, depending on which therapist diagnoses her).
You say you're sensitive and were married 12 years? Did you see any other behavior prior that hinted at this?
In terms of whether you contributed, did you do anything in the past 12 years you felt guilty for doing? If so, then think on that more. Why do you feel guilty? Is it because you did something or merely because she felt bad?
If you can't think of anything, then why would you think so now?
Two things about that: 1) Women, in particular, with BPD are excellent at manipulation, whether they're conscious of it or not. Much of everything they do is an act, and that act is designed to get what they want and to fool you into giving it to them. When the manipulation doesn't work -- when they don't get what they want -- the mask comes off. When it does, it can be followed by rage, retribution, and hallucination. All of that is potential for disaster, especially if they make false accusations that they might actually believe.
You should talk to a professional. But from what you've written, it doesn't sound like you really did anything wrong. If so, that's pretty much SOP for the victim of someone who is with someone with BPD. That is, you try sincerely to have a relationship with someone who has profound mental and emotional problems, thinking that you can approach that relationship like one with a healthy person. You can't. And the truth is you can't really plan for treating them as being mentally and emotionally ill, either. In other words, they're like a bomb with a timer only you can't see the clock. There's no knowing when they will go off, and there's not much you can do to stop it, if anything.
So, think earnestly about what you did or didn't do, but don't dwell and don't fool yourself into thinking you didn't something wrong when you didn't. Be honest. And then move on, hopefully with the help of a therapist.