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 81 
 on: May 19, 2026, 12:45:23 AM  
Started by hotchip - Last post by hotchip
Excerpt
To say a pwBPD is "unwell" in the same way gives an unwarranted pass to their calculating behavior. .. And also prevents those victimized by them from standing up for themselves and enforcing healthy boundaries to distance themselves from it and keep their own sanity.

Hmm. PeteWitsend, right now I don't see it that way. For me, seeing uBPDx as unwell is actually helping me to protect myself. I might hate him, I might feel sad about the Dr Jekyll version of him, but ultimately, there is no point bargaining with a disorder. If he's sick, that's very sad for him, but putting distance between myself and the sickness is the right thing to do.

To use an imperfect analogy, you wouldn't get on a cruise ship knowing there was a deadly viral outbreak on board (unless you were a doctor, had appropriate protective gear, etc). Whether the people who have contracted the illness are to blame or totally faultless, is beside the point. You won't help and you'll make things worse for yourself.

Excerpt
I'm currently living in the Philippines (because my wife is here) and the average household income is $8/day.

Pook, my country of origin is in the same region as the Philippines. It is a different environment where there is much less expectation that external or professional services will intervene to help someone in personal or mental health crisis. Partly because the resources are simply not there for most people, and partly because people's conception of self is much more interdependent and less individualistic than the West.

Apart from the manipulative dynamics, I think this may also have made it harder for me to just detach from uBPDx's many problems and toxic actions. A sense of obligation that made less sense in a modern, Western context where he actually could seek other services and wasn't going to end up on the street if I asked him to leave (and in the end, he showed no such qualms about telling me to leave, so).

Excerpt
I have another idea about your feeling of attachment to him. It was romantic but also unconsciously felt familiar and obligatory- due to your experience with your mother.

Excerpt
There's also boundaries and a sense of self that got blurred in families with a disordered person. So perhaps if you say that your ex was abusive in ways- you may feel a sense of this being wrong about you. If you were to think he was not a good person, would that feel wrong to you, or as if you were doing something wrong by saying it (whether he is or isn't) due to your connection to him.

NotWendy, you've got it again.

I still feel angry with uBPDx, obviously, but I also feel embarrassed for him. I want him to be 'good', act well, hold his head up, face and fix the things he's done. As if this will prove that I, too, am 'good'. After the boundaries between us were blurred for so long in the relationship, with his repeated assertions that everything he did (whether bad or good) was because 'you made me that way' - I have internalised the idea I am responsible for, well, everything. It's a fantasy of redemption and control.

The migration process and isolation which ensued tended to exacerbate pre-existing mental illness tendencies in my mother. I think uBPDx was certainly unwell and behaved badly in his country of origin, but I suspect it became worse after he emigrated. Maybe something about these dynamics triggered a deep familiarity in me.

For a long time, I had a strong sense of loyalty to my mother. No, she wasn't 'bad'. She was just too special for others to understand. Or the good in her was so very good that it made up for everything else.



 82 
 on: May 18, 2026, 08:42:22 PM  
Started by AlwaysAnxious - Last post by CC43
Hi,

I lived through a phase of suicidal threats and gestures, some blatant, some thinly veiled ("My life is over / It's hopeless / I don't want to be here anymore"), some projected ("You should be euthanized").  I called it the "nuclear" phase.  Alas, my pwBPD attempted suicide multiple times.  What stopped this behavior?  I think what stopped it was her realization that if she continued to make suicidal threats and gestures which landed her in the hospital, she would be involuntarily committed long-term, and she'd lose her freedoms.  Her doctors and her dad told her as much ("This is serious, if you do this again, you'll lose your freedom").

I think if I were in your shoes, my reaction might depend on the intensity of her mood.  If she's riled up, I might ask, "Are you thinking about committing suicide right now?"  If she responded that she was, I'd dial 911 or take her to the emergency room myself.  If she's reasonably calm, I might ask, "Do you want me to dial 911 and get some help for you?"  If she declined the offer, I think I'd feel better that she wasn't really in distress.  Both of these approaches take her seriously and validate her feelings. 

 83 
 on: May 18, 2026, 08:15:30 PM  
Started by AlwaysAnxious - Last post by CC43

the other thing, is when she leaves my car, it's generally between 10 and midnight. She's usually not dressed for the weather and we're in a cold(er) climate.  I need to be really clear here - I get that she left the car and so she needs to reap the consequences, but how do I put my worry aside when my petite daughter is walking alone through the streets at midnight.

Hi there,

I think you might start to assume the best rather than the worst of your daughter.  If she wants to walk home, let her walk home, even if it takes two hours (i.e. 5 miles) and it's cold.  If I were in your shoes, I'd say something like, "OK, have a good night, I'm turning in."  You put aside your worry because if your daughter gets cold, she could warm up in a store/building/gas station.  She could take a bus home.  She could call for an Uber.  She could knock on the door of someone's home and ask for a blanket as she waits for a ride.  If she gets into trouble, she could say, "Hey Siri, call 911."  If it's a dangerous city, she would be carrying mug money and/or mace.  My guess is she doesn't have to, because the city isn't that dangerous; if it were dangerous, she'd take some precautionary measures.  In other words, your stock response should be "OK," in a neutral to slightly upbeat tone.  No advice, no warnings, no threats, no rescues, because your daughter knows what she's doing, and she's a big girl.

If your daughter starts demanding that you pick her up, you could say, "No.  I respected your choice to walk.  I'm going to bed.  Good night."

 84 
 on: May 18, 2026, 05:34:03 PM  
Started by Schmem_25 - Last post by Schmem_25
I like this approach. I plan to stay focused on my brother and other family that day. I appreciate all the perspectives Smiling (click to insert in post)

 85 
 on: May 18, 2026, 05:24:06 PM  
Started by Canadian017 - Last post by Canadian017
I got the DNA results just like 2 weeks ago. I wasn’t even mad or overly shocked when I saw it. It kind of explained her weird behaviours more than if I was the father. It was a moment of relief and grief knowing that child is not mine, I am mourning the fact I was ready to be a father and love a child that isn’t even mine but also glad the child is not mine because I’d be tethered to someone like her for life.

I understand that, I agree & can see that. I know she is ill and I don’t believe she is a bad person. I don’t hate her, even after what happened.

I have been doing all that, I will try my best to put myself out there and heal, thank you:)

Yes that makes sense, in a weird way it brings comfort you saying she isn’t bad just ill. I take it a little less personally.
I just don’t understand how she can throw away all the effort I put in like that but applying logic to someone who doesn’t think with it makes no sense.

That makes sense, I’m sorry this happened to you as well. Thank you for taking the time to reply and all the best for you also.



 86 
 on: May 18, 2026, 04:54:58 PM  
Started by Canadian017 - Last post by Pook075
How do I heal and or move on from this? Any advice or input appreciated. I just feel a blatant “what the actual **** just happened”


Hello and welcome to the family.  I'm so sorry you're going through this and it definitely stings for awhile.  How long ago did this happen?  By that I mean when you received the DNA results.

Your ex is mentally ill and makes bad decisions because of it.  I'm not trying to defend her, but she probably figured that you might be the father and rolled the dice.  She probably broke up with you after feeling more and more confident that you weren't the father.  Who knows.  It comes from disordered thinking though.  BPDs really get eaten up by guilt and shame, they don't know how to let go of it or move past it, so it just lingers and continually changes their thinking, their words, actions, etc.

Let's talk about you- how do you move on?  Well, you're already doing it.  At first, that could mean one day at a time because the pain cuts deep, it's an ugly betrayal.  Like Pete said though, I'm sure she was saying the same things to the other guy too.  This wasn't about you at all, it was about having no idea what to do when she really messed up several people's lives because of her actions.

My advice?  Stay busy at work and get a gym membership.  Get back into old hobbies or find new ones.  Hang out with friends and family more, people that care about you.  One day at a time, one week at a time, until it's no longer this huge thing in your mind.  Everyone here healed at different speeds; for me, it was about 6 months before I began to feel normal again.  But it also took that long to realize how messed up things really were in the relationship, so my mind had new things to analyze.

So take our advice- she didn't do this to you specifically.  It would have happened with any guy she was dating at the time.  She did it because she's mentally ill and she couldn't think her way through it because she was too emotional, too unbalanced.  Even the, "You're harassing her" comment...that's true in a way.  You said you sent one text, but that text was probably on her mind 24/7 for months and weighed on her like a ton of bricks.  For you, it was a text.  For her, it was torture because her mind can't let go of trauma (even when it's self-created) and she saw no way forward without losing a lot of respect from everyone around her.

At around the 1 year mark, I finally realized that my ex was sick and that's why she cheated on me.  It's not a great answer, but its the best my mind was going to find.  So try to save yourself extended heartbreak and listen to what we're saying- she did what she did because she's mentally ill.  There's no other reason and she's probably not a bad person.  She's just sick.  



 87 
 on: May 18, 2026, 04:48:05 PM  
Started by Canadian017 - Last post by Canadian017
Honestly we got together and at first she was so sweet, kind, caring.

I put a lot of effort into her and we just clicked overnight, it felt so natural / real.

That lasted like 4-6 months where I was genuinely over the moon. I kept hoping she would go back but she didn’t.
I have a really bad knee from 3 knee surgeries from the military and I don’t date often, there’s a lot I honestly can’t do and don’t put myself out there for a lot of people. That’s the main reason.. I used to move on so fast and I just think I’m more reserved now.

I agree I dodged a bullet. I hope I can find someone healthy one day.. I am going to see a therapist.

 88 
 on: May 18, 2026, 04:36:45 PM  
Started by AlwaysAnxious - Last post by Pook075
1. I only don't "do it" (commit suicide), because I don't want to hurt you, dad and my sibling - but since you don't care about me, then I won't care and I'll just go ahead though you won't see it coming.  (she knows I'll call 911 if she says it's imminent)

2. I hope you can live with yourself on the morning you wake up, and I don't, knowing it's your fault.  (This one cuts me so deep...I don't know how to react)

My BPD daughter said similar things and they were very hard.  Eventually, if she made any kind of threat like that I dialed 9-1-1 and said that she was a threat to herself or others.  When paramedics arrived, I would repeat that phrase over and over again, "She's a threat to herself or others."  Sometimes I'd add, "I don't feel safe with her being in the home right now, not with the way she's acting and the stuff she's saying."

Sometimes, they'd take her away for hours, days, or weeks.  Sometimes, they'd leave while filing a report.  But I did it anyway, every time, when her mood switched to highly disordered and she was screaming, crying, or whichever way the wind blew that day.  If she was truly unhinged, I dialed 9-1-1 every single time...even if paramedics had left 3 minutes earlier.

What quickly happened is that my daughter stopped those types of threats completely, because she wasn't getting what she wanted.  Whether she was truly suicidal or she just wanted to manipulate/hurt me, I really didn't care...I dialed 9-1-1.  And that took that particular weapon out of her arsenal after the 3rd or 4th involuntary hold.

Note that I didn't say, "She's suicidal."  That means she can say, "No I'm not."  Case closed, nothing happens.  By saying, "My kid is a threat to herself or others," now you're making it a mental health emergency that affects your wellbeing and everyone in the home as well.  They have no choice but to take her for an ambulance ride and a psych evaluation. 

She'd often be home the next day, but again, it's not completely about that.  It's about ending those types of threats so they're not weaponized against your family.

 89 
 on: May 18, 2026, 04:25:17 PM  
Started by AlwaysAnxious - Last post by Pook075
Thank you both for the replies. 

To fill in some blanks - boundaries are still an issue though, I've come a long way from when I started this journey, in this forum with this supportive group.  I needed the tough love approach you both gave as advice in this for sure.

Also to clarify - the other thing, is when she leaves my car, it's generally between 10 and midnight. She's usually not dressed for the weather and we're in a cold(er) climate.  I need to be really clear here - I get that she left the car and so she needs to reap the consequences, but how do I put my worry aside when my petite daughter is walking alone through the streets at midnight. (I feel how dumb this question is but it's what I feel at the time).

Even still - I took your words to heart and tightened my boundaries a bit - but her words and pain still stings and I'm truly all she has right now.  I don't know how to set boundaries any further and still not leave her feeling abandoned.

 With affection (click to insert in post)

That's the thing- you're not trying to abandon.  Instead, you're saying that you enjoy helping her, but there has to be a basic level of respect there.  BPDs struggle with social interactions with those they're close to, so she absolutely must learn right from wrong.  Throwing a temper tantrum and blaming dad (while he's helping her) is wrong.  You can say that in a firm but loving way.

I would tell my BPD daughter, "Look, I want to take you for ice cream (or whatever it is that she wants in that moment), but you're making the choices here.  You can be nice and we'll do what you want to do, or you can be mean and I'll go do something else.  The choice is 100% yours and I'll let you choose."

Can you see what I did there?  It's not my choice to tell your kid to walk home in the cold.  It's her choice to walk home in the cold and maybe if she does it enough times, she might think, "Maybe I shouldn't go off on dad right now since it's really cold outside."

The same went for living with me- clean up after yourself and be kind.  Follow the two rules and you can stay forever.  If you don't like the rules, then I wish you luck wherever you decide to live.  I was never ugly about it though; I just made it clear that she was choosing the outcomes because my boundaries wouldn't change.

The more you reinforce that, the fact that she's choosing, the easier it gets in time.  I would say all the time, "I love you and I want you to stay."  But then I'd let her make her own choices and I'd force her to live with them.

It might sound mean, but it's a kindness in these circumstances.

 90 
 on: May 18, 2026, 04:09:10 PM  
Started by Canadian017 - Last post by PeteWitsend
...

How do I heal and or move on from this? Any advice or input appreciated. I just feel a blatant “what the actual **** just happened”


Not to be flippant, but you just dodged a bullet.  Much worse outcomes for you were possible here.  Pop a bottle of champagne and celebrate that a little.

Beyond that, consider how you ended up with her, and why you tolerated her behavior for as long as you did, although it sounds like you recognized something was off about her and ended it reasonable soon.  If she was BPD (I assume that's why you're here) there was probably a lot about her behavior that you didn't like. 

I'd also suggest you don't take any of this personally; it wasn't your fault & you didn't do anything wrong.  You just had the misfortune of running into a pwBPD.  They're out there, and it happens.  Chalk it up to life experience & a lesson learned, and move on.  If it helps you avoid another bad relationship someday, consider it wasn't a total loss.

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