Hi mitochondrium ,
I read quiet some of your posts and it seems to me that right now you are determined to “proove” to yourself and to us that boundaries are impossible when living together.
I'm just seeking the truth, nothing else. Because it's time for me to take big decisions. I don't care if people disagree, but I'll be interested in good arguments, regardless of what direction they point.
I strongly dissagree, I think you need boundaries even more when living together, there is nowhere to run away in this case…
Yes, boundaries are needed even more when living together, and that's why I started this thread. My goal is to find out how to make the boundaries effective (e.g. how to enforce them).
My current opinion is that the BPD partner that is in your space (lives with you) will make your life a hell regardless of how many tools you know, unless you can enforce boundaries. For a woman, it is straightforward to do it. All you have to do is to call the police, or perhaps only threaten to do it. However, for a man, this is not an option. Some women have the naive thought that domestic violence laws serve for both sexes, but that isn't true at all. Well, at least not here in Brazil.
Many different police officers have already come to my door. They came because neighbors were impressed with my wife's screams. A number of times they asked her if she wanted them to "take me to jail red-handed," and she said no. They don't need her to provide any proof. If a woman says that she feels threatened or that she feels a victim of psychological violence, that's enough for them. A few times I was able to show them the video footage of her outbursts, and sometimes they talked to us trying to understand what was going on. In all of those cases, they rapidly switched to my side but were still "at service for her," not for me. Once a police officer pulled me 10 meters away from her just to explain to me that I had to leave her; otherwise, she would get me in trouble, because the law was all on her side. I have heard this kind of warning from many different police officers. The DV laws here only protect women's rights. We have women's laws.
Anyway, my wife isn't giving me bruises or stabbing me, so I don't have any proof that I could use in law enforcement for serious injury. A woman breaking stuff and throwing stuff at the husband or at his door is considered normal. I don't have footage of her promising to kill me, but I'm pretty sure they would not take it seriously either.
Some people here have done cross-research that finds out more men are being killed in their intimate relationships than women. But who cares? Here a man's life has little value.
I think that it is common for pwBPD to go around the house shouting at their partner trying to prove their point in a circular argument with lots of accusations etc…
After paying close attention to your post, I got to the conclusion that you have a misconception about your own success. You think that the tools did it, but what I see is that threatening to call the police was the actual step that began to revert his behavior. I don't mean that the tools aren't useful, but they aren't enough.
You assumed that I'm JADEing, but that's not the case. Even because she always raises her voice when she is angry, and I HATE it, so I leave the room and avoid any sort of talking, but still she keeps rambling around for hours, all by herself.
Before entering this relationship, I had already read most of the top books on BPD, on relationships, etc., and I already had 7 years of experience with a BPD wife. So I know pretty well what the books recommend. The point is that none of the books tells you how to make living together work.
My previous wife did persecute me around the house, and I had already read all the books that could possibly help me with that.
My current wife does not persecute me by walking around the house because she has a specific walk phobia. So she remains in the same spot most of the time, but her shouts can be heard all over the house and by the neighbors as well. I can hear it from the elevator in the hall.
For the first year of my current relationship, I had it under control. Her shouting didn't last for long. My love for her made me able to handle all the conflicts she brought up. But then after labor, her aggressiveness got much worse. So living together became no longer worth it for me. As I stepped away, she got even more abusive. When it gets to this point and you keep being abused, your capacity to help your partner with their struggles plummets.
For instance, you said that my response was a problem and suggested a different one:
My original response: "No, I have already given you the power bank just now, so you can put it in the bag"
Your suggestion: "I cannot right now, I am bussy with something else right now, could you do it yourself?"
What made her angry:
She had been screaming and offending me the entire day, and she was still in the "entitled mode." So she was expecting me to help her out, because she wanted to feel taken care of, as if she had not done anything wrong that day. But she felt rejected when I said no. Having an anxiety crisis before leaving home is a very common issue, even if it was not for therapy. Part of that is because she has panic disorder. And I'm very good at helping her out with that, but at that moment I didn't want to be her caregiver at all. I was not busy at all. I just refused to treat her the way she wanted.