Hi Movieman-
I absolutely believe you’re on the right track here. I also read your other post and have to say that I am so so sorry for the emotional distress and torture your wife is putting you through. You do NOT deserve to be abused in this manner. Not at all.
And please don’t call yourself a narcissist. Nothing in your writing indicates you have any of the hard narcissistic traits. I’ve been in two LT relationships, totaling 26.5 years with BPD/NPD men (confirmed), so yep, sadly I have experience there.
It takes so much focused work to heal from childhood sexual and other abuse. I understand firsthand. I am a woman, now 68, and I can tell you that the visions and feelings periodically haunt me to this day. Healing is a lifelong journey and you cannot give up on yourself or allow ANYONE to block your path, including the person you marry. And your chosen person should be THE person who keeps that healing path clear for you, who walks it with you.
You have obviously learned to give love freely and with all of your heart, but if you find that she is breaking your trust, that love will falter…and she will lose you. She is the one who needs to be cautious here. Her careless name-calling is just reckless, in my opinion…especially with her knowing what you’ve been through. And you ARE correct, I think. It’s a power play. A “narcissistic” power play to keep you down and set you back. She’s the one showing those traits, not you. I’m kind of angry right now, especially at the mentioning in your other post where she was indicating using your kids in a threat against you.. Sorry.
She is not all powerful. No one is. Anyone can read psychology books and then parrot what they read and point fingers so they don’t have to look at themselves or reflect on their own behavior. Does she or Has she ever reflected on her own behavior?
Something I’ve noticed that has puzzled me over the years - how some people do this separation of BPD from the “person”. I was never able to reconcile that separation because their behaviors were so woven into everyday life - so much tippy toeing around to be sure the explosions didn’t happen. Maybe it’s different with disordered men?So many things were so erratic and unpredictable at times. I don’t know…I lived in a state of anticipation for so many years.
In the end I learned I could not love someone to wellness. It was so sad.
I’m sorry for so many words. But please, I know your inclination is to blame yourself. Not this time. No.
Warmly,
Gemsforeyes


