Hi there,
There have been times in my relationships with pwBPD and BPD traits when, no matter how much validation and attempts at understanding I've tried, it just doesn't work. Sometimes I think that validation can't work, because the pwBPD feeds off of the emotional energy and takes the validation as a confirmation of guilt, as well as an invitation to escalate. Rather than calm them down, sometimes validation riles them up. And sometimes the twisted narrative seems to become more and more convoluted at each successive telling. In other words, in some instances, validation makes things worse, not better. In fact my theory is that the farther back the grievance goes, and the more repetitive it is, the worse validation works. She's not trying to resolve a current problem or incident, she's creating a narrative of abuse/trauma/victimhood. She's not trying to find a way forward, she's actually digging herself deeper into a pit of negativity. She doesn't want a two-way dialogue, she wants an audience and a punching bag.
It seems to me that your spouse is engaging with online videos to seek external validation of the abuse and trauma she's feeling. But rather than feeling better, she's riled up. Then she insists you share in that experience, and second the motion so to speak.
I admit I've called out the *ull sometimes. I don't usually go into a long lecture or "let them have it," but I call it out. "That's a lie and you know it." "I've heard enough (of these baseless accusations)." "Admitting to a lie won't make you feel any better." "Nothing I say can make you feel better (so I'm not discussing this further)." "I'm not watching any videos made by AI." "You are not a psychiatrist, you can't diagnose me." "I'm nice to you, I don't deserve this." "I refuse to take part in your blamefest." "Your attitude is too negative, I'm not letting it ruin my day." "If I am the horrible person you claim me to be, then why are you even here?" "You want to move, how am I stopping you?" "You make all sorts of demands, but when was the last time you did something for me?" "This isn't a discussion, this is a rant. You want me to be a punching bag, and I'm not having it." And sometimes, a simple and firm "NO." They say NO to me all the time, I think I've earned the right to say NO sometimes.
Nine times out of ten, they are shocked into silence. I think they were so used to validation that the pushback was unexpected, and therefore effective. Then I usually proceed to give them a "time out," and later try to change the aura into something neutral or positive.



