Happy New Year and thanks for coming back to update us.
Am I remembering correctly that you and your H have separate finances?
So true, all we can do is push on with what life sends our way.
Wishing you a more peaceful 2026!
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January 07, 2026, 01:02:56 AM
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Board Admins: Kells76, Once Removed Senior Ambassadors: SinisterComplex |
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11
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Conflicted About Continuing, Divorcing/Custody, Co-parenting / Re: Update on BPD life
on: January 06, 2026, 04:01:44 PM
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| Started by townhouse - Last post by kells76 | ||
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Happy New Year and thanks for coming back to update us.
Am I remembering correctly that you and your H have separate finances? So true, all we can do is push on with what life sends our way. Wishing you a more peaceful 2026! |
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12
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Conflicted About Continuing, Divorcing/Custody, Co-parenting / Re: Using security cameras to turn tables
on: January 06, 2026, 04:00:07 PM
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| Started by SuperDaddy - Last post by kells76 | ||
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What would the goal be of installing the cameras?
What might be the best case scenario? What might be the worst case scenario? What is the most likely outcome based on history? |
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Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Conflicted About Continuing, Divorcing/Custody, Co-parenting / Re: Invented stories and triangulating therapists
on: January 06, 2026, 03:57:31 PM
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| Started by Zosima - Last post by kells76 | ||
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Agreed that couples therapy, while it can be immensely helpful, is not always the right path at certain places in a BPD relationship.
If you both are just hitting a wall in couples T then that isn't helping you, isn't helping her, and isn't helping your relationship. Another approach is that each spouse has their own individual T, and you both sign consent forms so the individual T's can talk with each other. That can turn down the hot dynamic where you both are competing for one T's belief. Whether your W agrees to that setup or not, getting an individual T for yourself sounds helpful right now. I think you may be in a "validation deficit" as I suspect your W struggles to validate your experience and feelings. We all need validation, BPD or no, and I hear you deeply desiring someone to see what you're seeing and "get it" about your pain. Your W's disorder is so impairing that she can't provide it well, and it's not appropriate for you to seek validation from her individual T (any more than she should be trying to convince your T that she is right), so my hope for you is that you can find someone you really mesh with who can be there for you. For a season, I wonder if it could actually help your relationship if you both stop trying to get validation from each other. She gets some from her T and you get support from your T. Might take some pressure off of the needs you have of each other, if that makes sense. Any of that landing? |
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Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Conflicted About Continuing, Divorcing/Custody, Co-parenting / Re: Another vacation ruined - so surprised! (Sarcasm)
on: January 06, 2026, 02:59:26 PM
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| Started by campbembpd - Last post by ForeverDad | ||
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Concerning taxes, there is typically a financial benefit to file a joint return. However, getting a signature can be daunting. I filed for the standard extension but since we had just separated, it took the lawyers to convince her to sign, yes, with days to spare.
Depending on what transpires over the next several months, you may have to weigh the financial discount of joint filing versus filing separately due to her poor withholding choices and lack of cooperation. If you do file separately then dump that in the Consequences folder. |
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Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Conflicted About Continuing, Divorcing/Custody, Co-parenting / Re: Invented stories and triangulating therapists
on: January 06, 2026, 02:53:32 PM
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| Started by Zosima - Last post by Me88 | ||
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It's a continual victim mentality that the world is against them and causing them harm. The same disordered thinking also leads to thinking the worst people in the world will always be there for them no matter what. This all makes me wonder how much is 'real' or not. They triangulate by making things up, exaggerating omitting facts and from what I've experienced they're usually pretty smart too. Plus they can act normal as well. Part of me feels like their actions, at least a lot of them are on purpose to serve their victim mentality, and other times when they split maybe those actions aren't as controlled, until after where they have to rewrite the narrative. For instance my ex screaming insults at me for hours, then I finally start crying or say something rude and she magically pulls out her phone to record me, break into instant tears and say she's scared. She knows what happened and how she's trying to frame things. I guess my example is more manipulation. |
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16
Children, Parents, or Relatives with BPD / Son, Daughter or Son/Daughter In-law with BPD / Re: Adult daughter with BPD refuses to let me see my granddaughter
on: January 06, 2026, 02:46:10 PM
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| Started by Mocha412 - Last post by Sad Grandma | ||
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I am also going through grandparent alienation. My 34 year old daughter seems to go through bouts where she uses the grandchildren as a weapon to punish me and her stepdad. I think she believes her own excuses for pulling them away. But then when she really needs something, it all ends and we go back to normal for a while. The kids are only 2 and 4 and it must be so confusing for them...they absolutely love coming to our place. I am worried about what she says to them about us during her bouts. I also worry that one of these days, she will pull them away permanently. I also read "Walking on Eggshells". But I have no choice but to walk on eggshells if I want to see the grandkids. I have accepted that she will manipulate me to some extent while the kids are little, but my husband has a lot less tolerance for it. He seems to think if we let her get away with the controlling behavior, it will only get worse. But I think there is zero chance that my daughter's BPD will improve and we just have to deal with it until the grandkids are old enough to see us on their own. It is really hard.
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17
Children, Parents, or Relatives with BPD / Son, Daughter or Son/Daughter In-law with BPD / Grandchildren used as a Weapon
on: January 06, 2026, 02:18:27 PM
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| Started by Sad Grandma - Last post by Sad Grandma | ||
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My 34 year old daughter with BPD has cut me and my husband off babysitting our grandchildren 3 times now because of perceived wrongs that she thinks we have perpetrated on her. The kids absolutely love their time with us and we love to be with them. They are only 4 and 2. Anyone else experience this?
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18
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Bettering a Relationship or Reversing a Breakup / Re: Separated from wife/Need Advice
on: January 06, 2026, 02:17:15 PM
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| Started by Friends1 - Last post by SuperDaddy | ||
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Hi @Friends1 ,
I'm sorry that I could not reply with as much warmth as other posters. I have read again your original post. This reminds me of some of the reactions a friend of mine had with her partner. It got to a point that once he tied her down using a rope, he would add medication to her food without her consent. Those were mistakes, but he is not at all a bad person. After many years, their relationship has ended because she has left him for another man, and now he is crying. This girl has DID, and I have talked to many of her different identities. We were very close, but I don't know what's going on now. I'm sharing this for you to think about different possible outcomes. If you just want to remove her violence from the equation, then perhaps you must try to identify all of the circumstances that did allow the violence to occur and remove them. Was it accommodation? The first step to make a safe plan is to figure this out. |
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Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Conflicted About Continuing, Divorcing/Custody, Co-parenting / Re: Another vacation ruined - so surprised! (Sarcasm)
on: January 06, 2026, 01:44:51 PM
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| Started by campbembpd - Last post by campbembpd | ||
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Does your wife's family confront her about this behavior at all? It sounds like they're enablers. Have they expressed any sympathy or concerns to you? I've read accounts of both times of families here: those that side with and enable the pwBPD, and those that actually warn the non-disordered partner away from their son or daughter, or try to at least. It was interesting to see the dynamic when I met BPDxw's parents & extended family. They didn't speak English, so I had to judge from body language and tone, but it seemed like other than her mom, who spoiled her a lot and I surmise contributed to her laziness and sense of entitlement, NONE of them tolerated BPDxw's tantrums or gave in to her. As I understand it, during her childhood, BPDxw's mom alternated between completely abandoning her to chase after her dad, but then spoiling her when they were around to compensate for the lack of parenting. I've read that this abandonment/spoiling combination is really the absolute worst when it comes to bad parenting and child rearing (that's consistent with what I experienced). Anyways, other than her mom, no one in her family seemed to tolerate her behavior, or give in to it. I noticed when we were there, the only people that got any grief from BPDxw were her mom and I, i.e. the two people who tolerated/enabled(?) her emotional B.S. And of course, she eventually left her country to come to the U.S., so I feel like that's the M.O. of the pwBPD: churn through relationships until you can find situations you can control and monopolize the attention; if not, you blow things up and move on - including leaving your own country - until you find better enablers/doormats. They do enable to a degree. At the end of the day they see my wife's behaviors and are concerned. Her sister has done a lot of therapy work and seems to understand much more then her mom that her sister's behavior is out of control. But her sister drinks a lot too. They get into it when they're together and her sister ends up trying to logic with my wife when they're both drunk and my wife is clearly dysregulated. Mom just wants 'peace' and to move on from incidents like these on vacation, brush them under the rug. She's witnessed some terrible terrible behaviors from my wife but still doesn't seem to grasp my wife has serious mental health issues. Mom does recognize she has issues and will make some crazy claims that I'm being abusive, etc then will call me to find out what's really going on when my wife is in the middle of an episode and is blowing her up on the phone (they live far away). Mom is concerned about the amount my wife drinks but doesn't say anything, not really. Then mom will listen to my wife (who is very convincing) that we just need to get back to couples counseling so she becomes a flying monkey asking why I'm refusing to go back to couples therapy. Mom will say things like it takes 2 to argue. She's in denial there's a serious mental illness but the way her mom talks sometimes is she hints maybe we can't work it out maybe we end up divorced. Sadly I think sometimes her mom is convinced that maybe all these issues will just poof and go away if we do divorce. |
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Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Conflicted About Continuing, Divorcing/Custody, Co-parenting / Re: Another vacation ruined - so surprised! (Sarcasm)
on: January 06, 2026, 01:33:48 PM
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| Started by campbembpd - Last post by campbembpd | ||
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As far as concerns about a potential divorce fight & that unpleasantness, I'm sure you've probably read some threads here around divorce advice, but absolutely DO NOT let preparations for it linger until the last minute. If the pwBPD starts to sense their partner is checking out, they tend to escalate things - i.e. the "extinction burst" - to try to get them back in line. If you're starting to see divorce as a possibility, then it's better to have your ducks-in-a-row and ready to go if/when police get called or there's some other sort of blow up. Have an attorney picked out, ideally one you've met with and who understands your situation. Have some emergency funds stashed away, and have a plan for where you'd go - with or without your kids as may be necessary - if you have to leave the house for a spell and file for divorce. And of course, keep all this to yourself; do not leave any evidence of your preparations lying around. Absolutely! preparations are in progress and being extremely careful to not leave any trace (private browser for places like here - files and documents are in password protected cloud locations she can't access). Just met with my CPA today to get some advice. This years taxes will be a mess (found out wife not only isn't setting aside taxes for her consulting/business income but has a W2 job that she's not having any taxes withheld from! so IRS will be owed a large chunk... but will file an extension and deal with some of that down the road when divorce is filed later this year. Have an appointment with a guardianship lawyer next week (to discuss guardianship issue of our adult disabled child) then have a few calls I'm making to family law attorneys this month. Been preparing for a while in terms of documentation and contemporaneous journaling, text messages and audio/video evidence that I'm indexing for legal review. Hoping to quietly prepare thoughtfully, carefully and with ample time ahead so we are ready to move, make settlement offers and get this ended ASAP once I pull the trigger. And yes, I expect she may have blowouts and want to have legal consult hopefully before that happens. If I have to call the police for DV issues I want to be prepared to move quickly if a TRO is possible and/or divorce filing soon after so although I would like extended time to prepare I want to be able to pivot and move quickly should the need arise. In the meantime my activities and behavior will be as normal as possible. I don't hate her, I feel sad for her. I hate this is happening and wish it could have been different. I mean don't we all wish that of our BPD partners? |
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