The other day, I was responding to a new member here and his story really resonated with me. He was in a terrible place mentally and the relationship was extreme dysfunction with BPD rages. It pushed him over the edge and the poster pretty much had a mental breakdown. And as I was typing out some advice to him, a memory from 20+ years ago returned to me.
I had been married just over a year at this point, and we had a new baby at home. My BPD wife and I were beginning to fight often and at times I'd get so upset, I'd have panic attacks. I was in my 20's so I didn't know what was happening, I thought it was breathing problems or something since we lived in an older cabin. But they progressively became worse and worse.
One afternoon, we were arguing over cleaning up the house and I felt my breathing quicken. Before long, my breath started to speed up and it felt like I had just sprinted 100 yards. The more I tried to control my breathing, the worse it became, and I asked my BPD wife to help me (or at least stop screaming at me).
She insisted that there was nothing wrong with me though, that I was faking it to get sympathy. Meanwhile, my breathing is going faster and faster, I'm starting to hyperventilate, and this had never happened before. I thought I was dying and since my wife wouldn't help, I stood up to grab the cordless phone to call my mom...who happened to live next store to us. As I stood though, I went straight down to the floor...I was too weak to stand.
This made my wife super angry and her screaming went to a new level. I told her to give me the phone so I could call my mom for help, and that opened an entire new rant on me being a "momma's boy". And through all of this, my breathing is getting faster and faster, I couldn't calm down, and my cheeks were going numb. I was literally terrified and I'm still getting screamed at.
This goes on for several more minutes, me gasping for air and my BPD wife screaming. I guess she finally realized that I wasn't okay though because she opened the front door and yelled, "<Mom's name>, there's something wrong with your son." My parents came flying over and as they entered the house, my wife is telling them all the things I did wrong. And I can only imagine what it took for my mom not to go after her...she's not a patient woman.
By now, I'm taking 5-6 shallow breaths per second and my head felt like it had been hit with a sledgehammer. My entire head and neck were numb and I'm crying, I thought death was just seconds away. My mom is trying to calm me down but I'm trying to tell her what my wife was saying, what she was accusing me of. Then I passed out from lack of oxygen.
I woke up sometime later and I was okay, but the headache was legendary for several days. That day I told my wife that she was leaving, that I was done, and I genuinely meant it. I did reach out weeks later though and fought to reconcile, which we eventually did.
How could I just "forget" something like this though? When my wife and I finally did separate and divorce a few years ago (after 23 years of marriage), she kept bringing up when I threw her out that first year we were married. But somehow, the facts never even occurred to me until I was replying to that post a few days ago (and of course, they never occurred to her either since it was all my fault) .
I've heard that some people block out memories from trauma...is that what this is? Is it common?


