I just want to clarify a couple things - there's a lot of context and I hope I haven't mis-explained things to people - there's a couple of details I haven't shared before because they're hard to explain. The suicide of my friend happened before I knew uBPDx. He wasn't reacting or trying to deflect attention from that.
The situation was, he had his own (genuine, severe) mental health issues and was bringing up suicide with me at least one and often multiple times per day for some months.
While I was willing to support him, over time, this became pretty exhausting, traumatic and taxing for me, and at some point I told him that I found it really hard to keep on hearing continuous suicidal ideation, especially given my experiences. i.e., I was still grieving the violent death of someone close to me who had suicided. uBPDx brushed this off, and continued to express his suicidal ideation to me on a regular basis, while not expressing it to others from whom he could have also asked for support.
The '________ing kill yourself!' was something I said upon learning that he had severely violated some values that we both nominally shared. Furthermore, the moral violation he had committed went directly to his supposed motivations for wanting to kill himself, and made him seem really hypocritical.
I'm sorry to be vague about it, it's quite a particular situation and hard to explain. I guess I'm just asking you to take on faith that in context, I was reacting to a huge moral violation and a betrayal, but also, that he was not in that moment goading me or attempting to elicit a response, and he was genuinely devastated by my reaction.
That said, there is a lot of insight and wisdom in your analyses.
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But you know what? I'm almost 100% certain he left out the salient details of his part in the argument when he relayed it to his friends... He turns YOU into the abuser, though in reality he's the abusive one.
CC43, I'm still not sure if I would define the relationship as a whole as abusive, and I do not think uBPDx was abusive in this interaction. That said, I think you are spot on in the thing about the salient details. I did not simply say 'kill yourself!' to him out of the blue. I said it after him spending months saying 'i'm gonna kill myself, i'm gonna kill myself...' to me regularly and at times in a very flippant way. Saying it a couple of times, or only in moments of genuine crisis, is one thing. But doing it again and again, after I had told him this was traumatic for me and he chose not to stop, is another. It felt really unfair for him to characterise it as a shocking, unheard of thing to say, when it had been fed into my ear for months.
Initially, I baulked at your characterisation of this as him 'goading' me, I don't think it was so deliberate, but I think what you say about
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He likes the intensity of feelings because they make him feel alive
has a ring of truth.
TellHill, I am really sorry to hear about how your BPDx used suicide threats as a mechanism of control, and I am glad you have come through with some resilience from that.
NotWendy and PeteWitsend and Me88, it's interesting you're all noticing the same thing re the impulse to triangulate. I believed, and still believe, that uBPDx had the right to talk to people around him and seek support after I acted in a toxic and harmful fashion - and while the circumstances make it more understandable, I do believe I acted in a toxic and harmful fashion.
But it's 'interesting' that, once again, the person he called first was the affair partner with whom he had destroyed his previous relationship. It's also 'interesting' that they spent a lot of time commiserating about the 'abusive' relationships they had experienced and how I was similar to her abusive ex-husband - the same one she had cheated on with uBPDx. I never heard the full details about what this person did which was abusive, but the affair partner had also characterised uBPDx's former partner (the one he cheated on with her) as 'horrible' to uBPDx, and uBPDx had repeated this to me.
This may well have been true - I don't know the facts. But uBPDx never seemed to consider that maybe the affair partner was not the most unbiased judge of the issue, and in hindsight it seems like there was some self justification going on by both parties. uBPDx also mentioned a few times that one of the things that went wrong with the previous relationship (the one where he cheated) was that his former partner's mother died, and his partner was depressed and didn't 'want' him.
Knowing what I know about him now, it seems plausible that his need for attention and inability to cope with her grief might have been issues as much as her being 'horrible'.
Finally, it's 'interesting' that once the affair partner realised the uBPDx was not going to break up with me, she immediately disappeared from his life after having been his 'rock' (his words) during the conflict with me....
Now that I write it out like that, oh man.
NotWendy, the story about the man on the bridge made me go '!!!'



