Reading through these posts sometimes this hit so close to home. I think this is where the tragedy lies. The hurt part of me wants to think there was no love. However I do feel like even with my ex there was a lot of it. That's why I got the brunt of the BPD. It's really sad. Such a counter intuitive type of disorder.
My ex also said random things looking back as "reasons". It was most likely because she wanted to just push me away in any way possible. It's really sad. Unfortunate.
Wish there was a magical cure for something like this haha.
My ex also said random things looking back as "reasons". It was most likely because she wanted to just push me away in any way possible. It's really sad. Unfortunate.
Wish there was a magical cure for something like this haha.
Definitely no magical cure; it's more like dealing with someone's phobia (heights, spiders, etc). They might know logically that the spider is not going to harm them, yet something in their mind screams to panic, run, shout, fight, and 100 other things.
BPDs go through the same thing. In their minds, they're the victim of something terrible...which is true (mental illness). But they can't accept that because of mental illness, so their minds try to blame everyone and everything around them. What's the most likely problem? The people they're closest to- it has to be them because that explains why they're so mentally unbalanced all the time.
When they're with someone new (that doesn't realize they're mentally ill), everything feels great. When they're near loved ones, they feel lousy because real life and all their problems are there. So why not just toss everything aside and chase the new person since it feels so wonderful?!?
Only, that only fixes things temporarily, because eventually BPD shows up and everything repeats itself. So this happens over and over and over again.
The fix, if we can even call it that, is to continually build enough trust so things never reach that meltdown stage where everything is thrown away. Yet, that's the hardest thing to do in a BPD relationship because it takes vulnerability on both sides. BPDs hide their feelings and often deny where they even come from in the first place. So it's always an uphill battle.
My BPD ex wife cheated on me and left me for those same reasons- she was happy there, she wasn't happy at home. But I genuinely believe that she never meant to hurt me and she never had any ill intent; she's just really sick and made some horrible choices due to mental illness and disordered thinking.
For us to have a chance at reconciling, she'd have to overcome 20+ years of disordered thoughts that I knew very little about. There were moments when she'd reach out for attention, but it wasn't too long before she scared herself away once again by what she thought would inevitably happen.
And it sucks, every part of it is horrible, but that's severe mental illness for you.
Make no mistake though, I believe BPDs love unconditionally until a part of their brain tells them to run. It's exactly like being fearful of a spider or a snake, and their brains are telling them that you're a deadly species.


