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I think anyone in your situation would feel emotionally drained and burned out. What you are doing is a lot of emotional caretaking for your husband. It's good you are learning about boundaries, and that you are taking the first step to change for yourself. It can be done, in steps. Take this one step at a time. To make a change like acting on a boundary is a change for you and for your husband. He is used to this level of emotional caretaking and when you pull back, he will likely emotionally react. On your part, you will need to have some emotional stamina to manage your own feelings if/when this happens.
First, I hope you can believe in yourself and your self worth. You are not a bad wife, you are a worthy being. You are a good person. IMHO ( and we are not professionals here but have walked this path with a BPD person) the first thing you need is some self care, some support and get counseling. Yes, he's the one with the disorder but couseling for you is to support you as you make personal changes.
Between us women here- 6-10 hours is beyond excessive. I can't speak for the guys, but this would be exhausting and stressful, physically and emotionally for you, and probably for him too. Intimacy is important in marriage, but not if it's emotionally and physically taxing for you.
This is one example of a boundary- what is your body and what is his body. His issue may be medical, emotional, or a side effect of a medication but- it's his body that is having the issue, not yours and you can not fix a medical issue. It isn't your fault. Something else is going on here. It may be that he functions when he's alone but not with you, or he's got a physical/emotional/medical issue. If he's truly concerned and wants to fix this, he would be willing to see a doctor to get checked. A boundary is that you can leave this issue to him to solve, but I think emotionally it would be scary for you to do this all at once. This is why a counselor can help support you as you do start with boundaries. But know- you are OK just the way you are. There's nothing wrong with you and you are a good and worthy person. For boundaries to be effective, we need to be emotionally ready to do this.
My BPD mother was very emotionally needy. While this wasn't a marital relationship, her emotional needs were with other relationships too. She also didn't want to be alone. She wanted someone to be with her all the time. If we did leave her alone to run an errand, she'd call every few minutes asking where we were and when we'd get back. This was emotionally taxing on my father and also other family members.
At the bottom of all of this was her extreme anxiety. If she was alone, she'd feel completely overcome by this. Having someone around her was one way she coped with it. However, I think this is common with pwBPD. The "reason" stated is not the actual reason. She didn't have the insight, or could not admit to feeling anxious, or ask directly, so she'd come up with some other reason to get someone to stay with her. She might ask for help with a task and then drag the task out so long, it might even not get done.
While your husband may have a medical issue and that should be checked out, another possible reason for wanting you to be "helping him" for 6-10 hours is that is 6-10 hours with you being with him, focusing on him. It may be that his actual need is emotional.
While there is no specific medicine for BPD, medicines for anxiety did seem to help my mother's anxiety. It didn't eliminate it but it helped her manage and she was able to tolerate being along better- not perfectly- but better.
First though- you need to take care of you. You are worth it!! Your task is to find a counselor for support. Next, if you can, take husband to get a check up for his issues and possible medication. If he won't go- that's on him, but you can still make changes, with support of a counselor, for your own well being.
Self care is important - can you find some time for just you? Some ideas- on the way home from work, stop at a coffee shop, get a nice hot tea, and sit for a while. Even a few minutes, just to be alone. You can increase that as you go along. Can you go get your nails done? Take a walk? Anything to help you fill up your emotional tank a bit- this and the counseling are first steps.
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