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 81 
 on: January 20, 2026, 01:37:28 PM  
Started by eightdays - Last post by Pook075
That's great to hear! 

I went a similar path; the divorce to my BPD ex took almost two years (mainly due to COVID backlogs with the courts) and I have moved on to find love again. 

I've been married for about 18 months and it's been so night and day different; there are a million little things that my wife does for me that never would have even crossed my BPD ex's mind.  I still catch myself at times thinking, "I can't believe she remembered that..."  For instance, she travelled for work today and searched to find a pizza franchise there that we had on a vacation when we were first dating.  So she hauled a pizza home from three hours away just to surprise me.

That's what happens in a loving relationship when you give everything to someone else and they give it right back.

One more thing I'll add- the skills I learned here over time absolutely, positively play a daily role in my current marriage.  While my wife isn't disordered or anything, I've learned to lean with empathy and consider her feelings before jumping into an argument over something dumb.  If she gets mad over something, I'll let her be mad...but still show her I care in little ways.  Then she comes to me a bit later laughing, apologizing, and all is well in the world.

I can't say when to move on after a BPD breakup, but I can say that you'll be pleasantly surprised when you find someone that loves you for you and it just works.  Sometimes it feels so easy I wonder if I'm missing something, but I think that's learning to let go of those past fears of anxiety.

 82 
 on: January 20, 2026, 11:53:13 AM  
Started by hiiumaa - Last post by hiiumaa
Hi UndertheBridge and ForeverDad,

Thank you both very much for your feedback!

@UndertheBridge
It's very interesting to read that your relationship seems to have followed a very similar pattern in these cycles of time. It's almost unbelievable how similar it is. May I ask if your partner at the time was in therapy?

@ForeverDad
Yes, I have doubts.
My nervous system keeps telling me very clearly that I am not safe with this man.
BUT I keep getting stuck in my thoughts and feelings during the good phases and tend to repress the bad times. And there is a voice inside me that says, "He is now consistently going to therapy. It just takes time for real change to happen. He already has certain insights – he just can't put them into practice when he's triggered..." I can't bring myself to leave. There are so many emotions that try to convince me that we love each other... That means – I don't even know if he'll come back this time. I'm just assuming he will because he always has. In the last month he sometimes said: "Thank you for challenging me. You are the first woman who does that. It is helpful for me." And then the hope come`s in play...

I've tried the skills over the years. At first, I tried a lot with validation, but to be honest, I gave up again. When he tips over, he tips over so massively that nothing reaches him anymore and it doesn't matter what I do or say. He freaks out. All I can do then is leave ( what makes him feels that I`m cold and not loving... Laugh out loud (click to insert in post) )

 83 
 on: January 20, 2026, 11:40:03 AM  
Started by hiiumaa - Last post by ForeverDad
I doubt this is what you want from a relationship, since obviously you're here seeking insight, Bullet: important point (click to insert in post) tools and skills.  So, considering you now see his pattern as well as his refusal thus far to change, how much are you willing to tolerate a relationship dynamic like this?  Are you undecided?  Finding it hard to decide which path to take?

 84 
 on: January 20, 2026, 11:32:52 AM  
Started by eightdays - Last post by campbembpd
It’s good to hear these stories of people on the other side of it. I probably will do an update post myself, but I’m just getting started with this whole process. Finally got my burner phone set up on boost Mobile last week so I’m gonna start contacting attorneys to interview.

I’m all over the place, but mostly super high anxiety of how this is going to go… My biggest concern is she’s going to make false accusations against me to friends, my employer, possibly police and/or just drag this out and make it very expensive for both of us. There’s been a lot of financial damage caused by my wife’s impulsive, spending and refusal to cut expenses so we ultimately have no savings, we have a significant amount of debt already in any legal fees are gonna either be more debt, taken out of IRA or borrowed from retirement accounts, family may be able to help a little bit, but it’s gonna be pretty nominal I think. And unfortunately, my wife’s mother is an enabler and will probably be willing to give my wife a lot of money.

Anyway, yeah I’m in the state you were before you started this process. I’m just afraid of what my wife might do. I mean I’ve seen what she can do.I have some hope that we can split this pretty much down the middle. We don’t have a ton of assets, mostly a couple of retirement accounts, and the house. We’ve been together for over 25 years so my expectation is we would just split everything pretty much down the middle and come up with a reasonable alimony payment and duration. We have an adult disabled child which we both have a joint guardianship over but no minor children.


If you don’t mind me asking, how did you find your attorney and were they knowledgeable of borderline/cluster B? How long did the process take for you from the time you started meeting with the lawyer and filed to now? When do you think everything will be finalized?

 I have read splitting by Bill Eddie, I’m just curious for some real life examples. 

 85 
 on: January 20, 2026, 11:07:22 AM  
Started by lisaea1523 - Last post by Pook075
I will share my own experience the first time I called the police. 

My experiences varied since I ultimately called several times over a ten year span from two different residences (in different cities).  Sometimes the police came out, the BPD played the victim, and they left without doing anything.

Guess what though, the abusive behavior stopped and that was the goal.  Other times it escalated after law enforcement left, and my BPD decided to leave as well (after screaming at me).  One time I decided to leave instead.  But again, mission accomplished.

Several other times, my BPD became enraged that the police or ambulance arrived and they got to see quite a show.  Those times, she was placed on an involuntary psych hold.  A few of those times there was admittance to a psych facility afterwards as well.

Did it "fix everything"?  No.  But this also built a paper trail while enforcing that abusing others in my home is not okay.  It became very clear that if you hit me, I'm dialing 9-1-1.  If you're screaming and breaking things, I'm calling 9-1-1.  If you threaten me, I'm calling 9-1-1.  And guess what....that stuff stopped completely.

There were still some fierce arguments at times, but I'm not talking about that.  I'm talking about the stuff that goes beyond the typical argument.

 86 
 on: January 20, 2026, 10:40:24 AM  
Started by lisaea1523 - Last post by ForeverDad
Documenting it is the fastest way to getting them the help they need...

In many cases, the disordered person completely changes when the police arrive.

I will share my own experience the first time I called the police.  Yes, involving the police and the legal system did raise the level of conflict to a new level, but we were already heading that direction anyway, my goal was to change the dynamic enough that I had some say in how the future progressed.

It was a Sunday morning and my then-spouse was freaking out quite angry with me.  She hated the perception of being late, even if we weren't late.  I was almost ready to leave, putting on our preschooler's shoes, when she stormed out and drove away.  I'm sure she expected us to follow and join her at the congregation but I didn't.

By then - this was 20 years ago - I had had obtained a digital voice recorder, quite primitive from today's perspective.  Even in the discombobulated state I was in due to her increasing rants and rages, in the previous months I had managed to get a few rants and rages recorded.

I now describe it as "I recorded myself so I could prove I wasn't the one behaving poorly.  If my partner happened to be aggressive and raging, well, that would be her worry, not mine."  (I add this since we here are so worried that recording the other person might get us arrested for violating privacy laws.  That can't happen if we're recording illegal or abusive behavior.  I've been here 20 years and the only time our members got into trouble and ordered not to record - not even a handful of cases - was when the conflict didn't stop and finally the court said not to record the children.  The court wanted to protect the children, it wasn't the privacy issue of whether to record.)

Back to my Sunday afternoon... When she returned she was in a foul mood.  When it got particularly bad, I turned on my recorder.  I even recorded my own emergency phone call.  She grabbed the phone and ended the call, threatening IWKY.  (That alone, blocking someone from calling for help, is against the law in many jurisdictions.  My court ignored it.)

Well, two officers arrived, one was in a canine unit.  I was holding our son in my arms in the front yard and I distracted him with the dog barking in the vehicle.  I assume the dispatcher didn't tell them who made the initial call since they spoke with my spouse first and even gave her a DV pamphlet.  (That's a consequence of assuming women are always the victim, thank you "Violence Against Women Act".  The fact is that aggression is not always owned by one gender.)

So one officer spoke to me and instructed me to hand our preschooler over to her and "step away".  He shrieked and clung tighter to me instead.  He saved me that day.  (My divorce lawyer, a former policeman, later told me it was policy that the parties were always separated on domestic dispute calls and he was surprised I wasn't carted off.)  The officer looked at me for a long moment, said "work it out" and they left.

Although she was still angry and red-faced, I'm sure she had calmed down enough to tell them how horrible I was.  Why didn't I use my recording right then?  Well, the speaker didn't work and I needed a computer to download the voice file.  Later in the week another officer did return and I played the audio.  I filed a report and she was arrested for Threat of DV.  Her case was eventually dismissed since she did not have a weapon in her hands but by then, though I was initially unprepared, I had filed for divorce.

In summary, I quote the two sentences above because (1) I did document the abuse, the recording being my 'witness', and (2) by the time the officers arrived my spouse was posing as an angry victim and able to deny that she was the perp and I didn't have immediate proof otherwise.

 87 
 on: January 20, 2026, 10:36:36 AM  
Started by jeanluc - Last post by jeanluc
Thank you for the kind and supportive words.

It is January 20th, 2026. Since September of 2022 there have been some happenings that fall in line with what would be expected given the scenario.

Reunification occurred and then was disrupted by the Oedipal Dyad as a means to escape responsibility. Avoid, deny, blame, the old circuits fire without regard for consequences that set upon us after the panic subsides. It was the same as before, but in a new area of sensitivity: sexual behavior. He is a teenager now. The drugs have prompted puberty earlier than it would have otherwise.

By setting the bar low, Mom "won". He was complicit in the downward investments. Neither can see the difference. No more sports. No hobbies. No activities outside. No social groups. It's just safer that way.

In addition to the PSB, there is more violence at school. The social worker suspects violence at home toward Mom. The violence has escalated from student to student, to staff member. There are mitigating circumstances, such as the staff worker was untrained and laid hands first (it was a no-holds school system), but they were elderly and female, so it is pretty bad. The current school is the last stop before delinquency and yet still the ability to avoid is honed and executed because the stakes have never been higher. They train him to not get caught. I asked about virtue, doing good when no one is looking, and they laughed. That is not our job, they say. I point out that it might be their only job, but that's just Plato. Don't bother with the cornerstones of Democracy or Western Civilization. We can do it better, they think.

The school has decided to enter him into their own residential program. We ask why and they move their lips and wave there hands saying meaningless things like we will meet "all of his needs", protecting Mom from losing what she has already lost. As far as I can tell, it is because they have a bed available. The half-dozen students inhabiting their 8th grade program while normally they have over 2 dozen and a waitlist a sign of mismanagement or obsolescence with the extensive IEPs available everywhere else. Never mind the fact that institutionalization is a serious risk factor for PSB. Never mind that the PSB intervention with the Child Advocacy Center (CAC) is at risk, not being complied with, and no real ownership of the issue. Just take advantage of the situation because nobody will ever question it. Things relating to children are secret. Shhh... for their protection. If only secret anything made good people.

I am so happy that we have courts of justice to protect parents from showing their children the model the courts expect of the children. If not for the court, my ex would have to deal with her relational baggage and grow up. Thank god she never has to do that. But now how do we show the child that this is not the way... ultimate power, according to the court, is found by being the victim of others. So why then are we surprised by what we find?

I find consolation mostly in the old stories. In Christianity, the greatest sacrifice is that of one's own son. I offer him, as Abraham before me with his own Isaac, his most precious and desired son and legacy. Sometimes the thing we want most is the thing we must be able to let go. I love you; I do not need you. The modern stories pervert love and it is easy to be swept into feelings-based thoughts on the matter. Love does not make you weak. Love does not make your family weak. This frees me from the trying to change what I cannot and focus on what I can. Be ready. Have space for him. Connect and relate. Tell him stories of virtue and sacrifice. Of aiming upward. Help him to find his values and start to see what it looks like. Of living with intention. And missing.

I have had to take work across the country. I have a new family. Besides this aspect, things are well and better each day. The move frees me from my ex's sphere of pathologic distortion. It is like a cloud lifted. Each day I see a little more clearly just how warped I had let things become internally.

No more. We are done with that. Her games do not lead to victory for anyone but the short-sighted Munchausen clan. That is no way to live.

I will never give up on the son we made together. He is family. We do not give up on family. He is my son and he will be okay. I will ask for things to change with dignity, properly, and let the outcome be what it will be.

JL

 88 
 on: January 20, 2026, 10:16:33 AM  
Started by hiiumaa - Last post by hiiumaa
Hi SuperDaddy,
Thank you for taking the time to read through everything and thank you very much for your feedback.

I will try to answer your questions.

Yes, he is male, 50 years old, I`m female, 45 years old.

Until recently, I loved him – as much as one can love someone from the bottom of one's heart. There were times when I thought that if he left me again, I would die, so much did my heart ache. (I am very aware that, given the dynamics of our relationship, trauma bonding is certainly also at play here. )

In late summer last year, he had another alcohol-induced breakdown and ended up lying in front of my front door one night. I only noticed because one of my dogs had an upset stomach at the time and had to go out constantly during the night. I practically stumbled over my partner in the dark.

Actually, for about 1.5 years now, I have had a rule that I immediately withdraw and do not want any contact with him (none at all – not even by text) until he lets me know that he is sober again. I communicated this clearly because he gave me the bruises one night when he was dead drunk and I dared to ask him to stop drinking. He completely freaked out, came to my bed every two minutes with the worst insults and tried to throw me out of bed.

I would have left, but I was visiting him and could only travel the 50 km home by train – however, trains do not run at night and I was afraid to travel alone through the city until the early hours of the morning.

Weeks later, I spoke to him about it and told him that I did not want any more contact with him when he had been drinking and that I would call the police.

But... now back to that night last year when he was lying drunk on my doorstep... That night he was freezing cold, wearing only a thin shirt, and I couldn't bring myself to send him away. I took him inside and told him to lie down in bed and sleep. That didn't work. First he showered me with love, and shortly afterwards he verbally attacked me again. I asked him to leave. He refused. Then I told him that I was going to take the dogs out into the garden for ten minutes and that I wanted him to be gone by the time I came back in, otherwise I would call the police. He didn't leave. I asked him one last time. He remained seated. I called the police. By the time they arrived, he had left. But something broke inside me that night.

I believe that what I feel deep in my heart is still love – I miss him now, too – but I'm worried that it might just be trauma bonding.

Regarding your question about mutual withdrawals:

I only ever withdraw after giving notice. I also clearly communicated this to him about 1.5 years ago, that I would immediately withdraw for a day in the event of any kind of violence (verbal or even physical) and that I would be willing to talk to him again once he had calmed down. I even communicated this to him in writing by email so that there would be no doubt afterwards that this boundary existed.

This means that as soon as he verbally attacks me, belittles me, insults me, etc., I tell him again in a friendly and matter-of-fact manner that I can see he is angry or hurt and that he now has another chance to calm down, then we can continue talking, but I will be out of contact until the next day if he continues to be malicious. In most cases, he then becomes even more malicious, and I do not respond for a day. If ‘normal’ messages come again after a day, I respond again. If the malicious messages continue, I do not respond.

As for his withdrawal, it always happens when he gets a ‘no’ from me or when he perceives that I am not being ‘caring’ enough. Then he becomes malicious, and when I distance myself and remind him that I will withdraw if he talks to me like that, he ends the relationship. I then receive 25 messages saying ‘it's over’.

In the past, he would start drinking immediately after ‘ending’ the relationship. Then he would contact me again via text message once he had reached a certain level and had apparently lost his inhibitions.

Regarding your question about the cycle:
Yes, you're right: he's been sober for about six to eight weeks – during that time, he's been kind to me, lovebombed me, and made an effort to be in close contact with me every day. Then comes a week or so when I can already sense that the crash is approaching. He is tired, irritable, and starts teasing me again. And then comes the crash: something triggers him. Either something external that is not going the way he would like it to, or something in our relationship. But I am the one who gets it – no matter what the trigger was.

The crash itself, involving alcohol, lasts between one and four weeks. During this time, he drinks every day and so intensively that he has blackouts in between and his entire daily routine is disrupted. He no longer washes, he no longer takes care of his job applications/administrative tasks, etc.

I should mention that he has been in therapy for 1.5 years. He has also spent five weeks in a rehabilitation clinic. He was sober for 10 months last year. However, the relapses returned. This often coincided with visits to his parents' house, where alcohol is consumed and he is unable to say no.

He is afraid that his father does not see him as a ‘real’ man. There, he drinks in a controlled manner, but as soon as he is back here (his parents live in another country), he relapses.

I assume that he often doesn't tell his psychotherapist and addiction doctor the truth, but only tells them about ‘minor’ relapses and otherwise leads them to believe that he has it under control.

I have considered visiting his therapist and telling him my perspective. But I don't know if that's a good idea.

When my partner withdraws, after ‘overdosing’, it can last for days or weeks. It has even lasted for three months before. Then he usually came back when he was drunk.

He was sober again from late summer last year until New Year's Eve. I was very happy and we had a good time together. But on New Year's Eve, he was with his parents and was dead drunk when he contacted me. I stuck to my boundaries and said: No contact in this state. When you're sober again and want to talk, we can do that.

He then came back from his parents' house sober (I could tell from the way he wrote), but he didn't say clearly, ‘I'm sober again and would like to talk to you,’ but instead sent me some photos and jokes. I didn't respond and eventually wrote that I needed to be sure he was sober first.

That was the reason for the current escalation. When I said this, I was again subjected to the worst accusations about everything I was doing wrong in the relationship. ‘Mistakes’ I made three years ago were brought up again, along with the usual accusations that I am not compassionate, that I am cold, that I am controlling, etc. And then the usual ‘over’. Since then – for ten days now – there has been radio silence. I know that I don't need to contact him. I've tried that in the past and he gave me the cold shoulder or devalued me again. There's no point. He has to come back on his own.

I'm sure he's sober now – I can tell from his Facebook activity. I suspect that he doesn't dare to contact me when he's sober and that, in his perception, I'm probably still the one who destroys the relationship ‘every time’.

Phew... that was so long again, but I couldn't manage to make it shorter. :-)

 89 
 on: January 20, 2026, 10:00:36 AM  
Started by hiiumaa - Last post by Under The Bridge
My question now is:[/b] does anyone else know that every conflict inevitably leads to the partner with BPD immediately declaring the relationship over? In the 3.5 years, it was ALWAYS ‘over’ after three months at the latest.

I had exactly the same thing in my 4-year BPD relationship, and your 'three month' timescale was almost identical too.  It was like she had an in-built calendar in her head that said 'It's been 3 months since I've broken up with him, it's time to do it again'. I can still recall the first year we dated; we began in January, she had her first meltdown in April, then the next in August, then the next at the Christmas.

It was only after a couple of years that I saw the pattern was more or less a timed occurence, though her reasons for each breakup were different, such has her having had a bad day at work, an argument with her mother, someone beating her at a game of pool, or any other reason to blame me.

Staff in the bar we went to would even joke 'Hey, things have been fine with you and L for a few months now, is she ditching you next month then?'  Her pattern was that obvious.

Scary how we can become so codependant that we actually accept this behaviour and treat it as 'just part of the relationship', even though it causes us massive stress and damage, which no true relationship should ever cause.

I ended it for good after her last meltdown was so horrific and heading towards getting physical, but I sometimes wonder how long I'd have continued to endure her 'normal regular' breakups as I was getting used to it by then.

Like SuperDaddy said, I'd be concerned about any violence being shown by your partner. There comes a time when you must give yourself first priority.

 90 
 on: January 20, 2026, 09:57:55 AM  
Started by PathFinder1 - Last post by Rowdy
Well it’s good that your husband recognises the problems he faces and is doing something about it. There is a lot going on there and can imagine a lot to work through and it isn’t all going to happen at once. With all that going on I don’t doubt for a minute he will have moments when he becomes dysregulated.
Is he seeing a therapist about any of his issues?

As for help for you, there are a couple of things from your post that stick out. You said that he enjoys clearing the snow from the pavement and looks forward to doing so, so I would ask what made you decide to do it without his help? I think that would be more the autism side of things that upset him about not getting the opportunity to do something he was looking forward to.
You also mention hanging around doing stuff in case he might actually talk to you about it, but then accuses you of ignoring him. Have you tried calmly asking him if he wants to talk about it or does this just trigger him? As from your post it sounds like you are aware he is sitting there ruminating about it so might be easier to make the first move so he feels ‘seen’


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