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 81 
 on: May 27, 2026, 10:07:32 AM  
Started by PearlsBefore - Last post by Notwendy
From my own experience, I would say my father enabled and justified my disordered mother's behaviour quite a bit. He wanted to keep the peace and placate her. (People in the culture they are from and of their generation basically don't divorce). One of his sayings was, 'she's just like that'.

She was 'just like that' when she bloodied my face, or instructed me to kill myself, or threatened to murder-suicide me, or....

I was estranged from my father for some years as a result. I did see him as a collaborator. I think having this as my model of what a relationship should look like has had a very bad effect on my assessment of relationships in adult life.

That's just one story.

hotchip- Abuse (which can be of several kinds), especially child abuse, is my bottom line. However, for my father and yours, their marriage was theirs. Each of us acted according to what we believed was the ethical thing to do, but it was a case of conflicting values. Estrangement is hurtful no matter who makes the choice. In some cases, and I believe yours is one of them, it's necessary- to not allow someone to physically harm you or pretend it's ok.  It's your father's choice to have allowed this to happen and it's your choice to not comply with that.

In my situation, the family rule was to appease and comply with BPD mother and to stay silent about it no matter what. But when I believed doing so would be potentially harmful to others, including myself,  I would not do that. For my parents, this was unacceptable. That was their choice to make.

 82 
 on: May 27, 2026, 09:47:24 AM  
Started by PearlsBefore - Last post by Notwendy
I agree. The situations I see here that seem to have the most personal suffering is sometimes a conflict of ethics, not someone being right or wrong.

Most people on this board aren't posting about breaking up their marriages or cutting contact with family members because of minor issues. Most are highly committed to their relationships. Dilemmas are along the line of "how can I have a relationship with my parents without it upsetting my BPD spouse" and there's no choice that doesn't have difficult consequences. Either the spouse will be upset or there's the pain of severing ties with parents, or siblings, friends, family members, in order to keep from upsetting the pwBPD.

These are not "normal" choices. I don't think it's common or even acceptable, in the absence of serious issues, to insist that a spouse not have contact with members of their family of origin. However, these are some of the choices people face on these boards and each choice has difficult consequences. 







 83 
 on: May 27, 2026, 09:46:34 AM  
Started by PearlsBefore - Last post by hotchip
From my own experience, I would say my father enabled and justified my disordered mother's behaviour quite a bit. He wanted to keep the peace and placate her. (People in the culture they are from and of their generation basically don't divorce). One of his sayings was, 'she's just like that'.

She was 'just like that' when she bloodied my face, or instructed me to kill myself, or threatened to murder-suicide me, or....

I was estranged from my father for some years as a result. I did see him as a collaborator. I think having this as my model of what a relationship should look like has had a very bad effect on my assessment of relationships in adult life.

That's just one story.

 84 
 on: May 27, 2026, 09:09:00 AM  
Started by PearlsBefore - Last post by Pook075
On the family board, adult children struggle with the idea of going NC with a disordered parent even in the event of extreme abuse. It is a last resort when other attempts have failed. Yet on the parent board are numerous grieving mothers in law whose adult children have cut them off, seemingly for no fault on their part. I'm not judging right or wrong here but noting that there are hurtful consequences to choices like this.

It's a great point and it's a complete contradiction- who's right or wrong?  That's why I don't think we can "judge it" that way since it depends so much on perspective.

Also consider that some here complaining about being cut off, or those doing the cutting off, may have BPD traits that led them to do so.  Again, how do we judge who's just and who's not?  I don't think we can in any meaningful way.

Instead, I think we can only meet people where they're at, provide peer support, and help them cope with a troubling time...even if they ultimately caused it on their own.  Even if they're "dead wrong" in how they got to this place.

How do we do that?  By providing hope, by discussing healthier communication tactics, by encouraging things like empathy and forgiveness.  Then of course, helping others focus on self-care during their struggles and finding more productive ways to deal with grief and heartache.

Those things are benefits regardless of who's "right" or "wrong", healthy or mentally ill.  Ultimately, it's learning to let go of the hurt while finding methods to avoid the same path all over again in the future.

 85 
 on: May 27, 2026, 08:29:21 AM  
Started by AaZz - Last post by AaZz
I’m wondering if anyone can identify.
Every so often (Once a year? Year and a half?) my wife will drop all her bpd traits.  It’s like she becomes a different person - her eyes are different, her voice is different, her speech patterns are different, she’s smiley and chatty and pleasant.  It’s like she’s broken out of a bubble and can see reality. I’ve tried to find language to describe it, and the closest thing that feels right is to say she seems “lucid.”  Sometimes these phases last a week, sometimes a couple of months.  99% of the time it corresponds with some kind of of med update or change - doesn’t matter which med or what kind of alteration.  But although the length of clarity varies, it always ends.
You would think these times would be great.  Enjoy them while they last!  She’s engaging, actually shows an interest in me and my thoughts.  But for me it’s the total opposite..  I am so unsettled, it’s unnerving, I don’t feel safe, I don’t know how to act.  I hate these phases.  In part I think I’ve learned how to navigate her disregulation, how to validate without wanting my side to be heard, how to handle projection, offense, triangulation, fear/obligation/guilt, to protect boundaries.  So when all of those things are gone, I have no idea how to act.  Who am I?  How do we engage now?
Also, I know these times never last.  I don’t want to start engaging like I would with a normal person and then get broadsided when things randomly snap back.
And anything I say during these times  will be remembered once she’s back in the bubble.  She might honestly and sincerely be interested in my thoughts and feelings, coax them out, even handle my response perfectly fine.  But then 3 weeks later if she’s back to being disregulated, she will remember the things I said 2 weeks earlier, but now through the lens of offense which I had felt safe from.  It’s like saying something perfectly fine to Sméagol, but if you do, Gollum is going to find out later.
All of this is feels horrible to live through.  Especially because she IS caring and concerned during these times of lucidity/clarity.  Her eyes are off herself.  Why are you so quiet? Why are you not talking? Why do you seem so down?  I am no more quiet or down than normal - she is just noticing for the first time. 
I don’t want to be protective during the rough patches and super up during the good times.  I desire stability, consistency, even/steady.  Whether she’s at a 2 or a 10, I want to hang out at a 7.5.  Which *feels* lousy when she’s at a 10 and I’m trying to maintain my 7.5.
I almost feel released the next time she snaps and projects on me.
Is this common? Rare? Super unhealthy? Anyone have advice on how to navigate the “good” times?

 86 
 on: May 27, 2026, 06:59:00 AM  
Started by PearlsBefore - Last post by Notwendy
I walked that "honor your parents" line to the best I could, but when it seemed to require allowing what I considered to be emotional abuse to me or my children, that was a limit. I didn't expect my father to leave my mother, and he didn't. I know he did what he felt he needed to do.

However it invoved emotional hurt to other family members. It's not about anything in the past or judging them right or wrong. It's the dilemma of when choosing to appease them involves us collaborating with doing something that violates our own ethics- wherever we put that line.

I'm trying to avoid specific details, but when the family "rule" is to remain silent and comply, and doing so is against our own values- how does one make that choice?

To put this to an extreme example- if your wife insisted you rob a bank and you wanted to keep the peace and stand by her, would you do it? This is not something that happened but it's an example of where does one draw the line and refuse, even if it causes an extreme reaction.

On the family board, adult children struggle with the idea of going NC with a disordered parent even in the event of extreme abuse. It is a last resort when other attempts have failed. Yet on the parent board are numerous grieving mothers in law whose adult children have cut them off, seemingly for no fault on their part. I'm not judging right or wrong here but noting that there are hurtful consequences to choices like this.

 87 
 on: May 27, 2026, 06:33:46 AM  
Started by PearlsBefore - Last post by Pook075
This issue- giving up values- were a dynamic that affected the relationships in the family. It may have appeased BPD mother in the moment, but it caused real damage to relationships. Appeasing my mother in order to maintain the peace also had a high personal cost for my father- and maybe he was willing to do that for her but when it impacted his relationships with his own family and children- how far is too far?

I know your moral code has a religious grounding so I will use that for the examples of right and wrong. It is right to "leave your parents" and "cling to your spouse" but that doesn't mean cutting contact with them entirely or causing them the pain of not seeing their grandchildren,  just because your wife demands it and they haven't done anything to deserve that. It doesn't delete "Honor your parents".

I'm not singling out anyone or reporting exactly on things my father did,  but here on this board are many examples of grieving mother in laws, grandmothers who have lost contact with their adult child because that person is trying to hold the family together and appease their BPD spouse.


If we're talking biblical, 1st Corinthians 13 describes how to love.  It starts with love is patient, love is kind and goes on to say love is not self-seeking, it keeps no record of wrongs, etc.

You might think, "But that's not how my mom loved us.  She was wrong!"  I agree completely.  But the definition on how to love doesn't take into account how we're treated, it's how we're supposed to love others regardless of how we're treated.  That doesn't mean to blindly accept abuse either...but we still lovingly step back or hold our tongues when needed (or try to at least...which I failed to do hundreds of times).

In other words, it's not about right and wrong.  Your dad did his best with the cards he was dealt.  In the end, he loved your mother more than he hated her illness and that's what guided him.  Was he wrong?  Well yes, because it was impossible for him to be right- either you or your mom was going to be upset with him.  I'm sure that he did the best he could in an impossible circumstance.

The 'leave your parents and cling to your spouse' is referring to a Biblical marriage where two become one under God.  That certainly doesn't describe every marriage in the world today because God is left out of the equation.  Even in the secular world though, it's seen as good practice to value your spouse over other relationships to have a long, happy marriage.  But once you mix in mental illness, it becomes infinitely more complicated.  That brings me back to 1st Corinthians 13 on how we're called to love...which is why I stayed.  My wife being "wrong" didn't justify me walking away in my mind.

Any family being torn apart is tragic, and I believe that's why the Bible is against divorce except in a few narrow circumstances (adultery, unbeliever walking away, abusive relationships).  Even in those cases though, the believer is supposed to try to reconcile before walking away.  In your specific situation, maybe it would have led to a better outcome since your dad would be more involved with your life and the grandkids lives.  That's our guess- we really don't know for sure.  But I can say for certain that your dad stayed to support your mom- not to hurt you or the grandkids.

I agree with you in terms of staying in a bad marriage just to stay- it's not healthy for anyone.  And I do think most marriages with BPD involved would reach that Biblical threshold of "abuse in the home" at some point.  Yet when you love someone and you've been codependent on them for years or decades, walking away is so incredibly difficult. 

Because of my faith, I never even considered it an option and honestly, I'd still be married to my ex today if she didn't walk away (while committing adultery, so my marriage literally met all three biblical criteria).  Sometimes, I still struggle with that, even though I'm remarried and have a fantastic life with an amazing woman who truly loves me for me.

One last Biblical verse you mentioned- honor thy mother and thy father.  That's hard when mom is mentally ill; I realize now that mine was too.  At times she was impossible to be around and would explode at the smallest things, but I still did my best to honor her and love her.  Did I get it right all the time?   Absolutely not.  But I did the best that I could and I definitely loved my mom. 

However, my mom thought the world of her grandkids and never tried to cause that rift (other than a few weeks here and there).  They were her entire world, especially my oldest who had BPD.  I was adopted, by the way, my mom couldn't have kids.  So to have BPD or mental illness in each generation around me was purely coincidence.  Or like a Freudian psychiatrist would say, I married my mother.  I don't know.

 88 
 on: May 27, 2026, 06:26:03 AM  
Started by Lifelongissue - Last post by Notwendy
The thought of my kids being dragged into this cycle was the final straw. I cut her off completely for years.

But then the flying monkeys started. My own mother in tears about it, saying when she was gone I would be their only family, I couldn't turn my back on them. So I opened the door again. This time more guarded, more careful, more arms length for the sake of my parents.

For a few years this seemed to work. Minimal contract. Civil almost friendly at family occasions. Then the nasty messages started up again. I pulled away again, not announced, just pulled away. My adult children recognised what was happening and chose to pull away themselves. One broke contact altogether, one maintains a text relationship, but is guarded. This seemed to work another year or so.

The flying monkeys have just returned. That's what has prompted me to join this forum. I am running out of ways to cope. My mother is upset that the kids don't contact their auntie. She believes my partner and I are controlling them into no contact. They are old enough to be part of the conversation now in their 20s so we have given them full disclosure.

Where do I go from here? I can't cut my mother out of my life, but the distress this is causing her is unbearable. I am also not about to try and persuade my kids to speak to her when they don't want to. I don't want them dragged into this cycle of harm.


I think one of the difficulties with a pwBPD is that they are connected to other people in the family. So having boundaries with them can involve other people with whom we still want a close relationship with.

My father was a protector and enabler to my BPD mother. I never considered going NC with my mother. However, in college, I sought out counseling and the counselor brought up the topic of me doing that with BPD mother- because of the emotional effects on me of the relationship. So I tried it and it lasted one week, because any relationship with my father also included her and I wanted a relationship with him. My mother's FOO and some family friends also were "flying monkeys" to her.

I knew that the family expectation was compliance with BPD mother and I went along with this for the most part, and for many years, until going along with her wishes began to involve my adolescent children. In my family dynamics, I am not the golden child. My "value" to the family was based on my being useful to her, to do things for her- household tasks, emotional caretaking. She didn't look to my kids for that when they were younger but when they reached adolescence, I observed her enlisting my children into this role too. That was a bottom line for me. It isn't my children's jobs to be her emotional caretaker.

I didn't cut contact between her and my children but was protective during that contact. By that time, the kids also had a sense of discomfort around her. These were their natural boundaries. I wanted to respect that too. They had learned to treat her respectfully but I let them decide on how much contact they wanted with her. They were also old enough to understand mental illness and we discussed that. One of my kids didn't want contact with her at all, due to some experiences with her, another could handle some contact with her.

Young children have no choice when it comes to relationships with adults in the family. They are dependent on them. For older children, a relationship becomes more similar to one between two adults. If a child has a sense that someone is not a safe person for them to be close to- that is a protective boundary. We want to preserve this sense for them, so that they don't get into relationships with disordered people. If we force them to ignore it and force the relationship, we invalidate it.

Your children have no obligation to have a relationship with your sister. If there is contact in the context of a family event- like a wedding, or if they are all there together on a holiday with your parents- they can be expected to behave cordially. That's just being decent. But they aren't obligated to have contact with her otherwise if they don't want to.

Flying monkeys make having boundaries difficult. It's a part of the entire dynamics. Unfortunately, my having boundaries with BPD mother came with a cost. This is family dynamics- at first the effort is to get the person back into their previous role. If the person doesn't do that, they risk being "expelled" "exiled" from the unit.

My choice for a middle ground was lower contact  "LC". It may involve less contact but it also is the content of that contact. If we spoke, I kept the conversation light and cordial, and did not discuss personal or emotional information.

For me, this was a quieter, less dramatic choice to maintain personal boundaries while still having contact. How other family members responded to that was their choice. I remained cordial to the best of my abilities. My priority was to protect my children and not have them be partipants in this dynamic.

My best advice is to continue to stand up for what is important to you- your children, while remaining cordial to the FM in your family. If your mother brings up the topic of contact with your sister, politely state that you love her but this isn't something to discuss. Talking won't solve this for her. Remain calm and cordial but stand your ground. Unfortunately- they will react to this- but this is their choice to make. You can only control how you behave and how you treat other people.

It's hard to see your mother in distress, but also- to sacrifice your children's emotional well being to make her feel better is unreasonable. I never wanted to be in this position- but that was the result of this kind of dynamic.



 89 
 on: May 27, 2026, 05:15:56 AM  
Started by PearlsBefore - Last post by Notwendy
FWIW, I have a good friend who is a psychiatrist, and he mentioned to me that there is a correlation between attractiveness and behavioral issues, or mental issues.  I don't recall if he specifically said "behavioral disorder" but it might have been something like that. 

It's become a meme online about "hot" women being also crazy, but apparently there's some truth to it. 

I am really curious as to whether it's a chicken or the egg thing: does lots of easy male attention bring out the worst in a woman?  Would the same thing happen with attractive men, who get too much female attention?  Or is there some other correlation here?  It seems like personality & physical appearance would be separate issues for a person, but over time, your self image definitely gets affected or warped by how others relate to you. 

I agree with CC43- I don't think being attractive causes mental illness or behavioral problems. I think if someone has BPD- being attractive is a way they get attention and their needs met.

If we look at genetic possibilty- we then ask how would these qualities "hot and crazy" prevail over time? I'm not using "crazy" to be derogatory towards someone with BPD or to women- using it in context of the meme. Just some ideas- I don't know for sure.

Evolution favors attractiveness. It's seen in many forms of life- there's a design to promote reproduction. Humans are more complex than this but there still is a favoring of attractiveness in people. So why isn't everyone attractive by now? Because other traits are favored too. For males, being a strong protector, hunter for food was also favored, independent of appearance. The gene pool is varied. Maybe- thinking back to before civilization, if a woman was disordered, they may not be protected as much by the tribe if they weren't pretty, but they'd keep the pretty one. Maybe if a woman was less attractive but a better nurturer, not disordered, they'd keep her too.

Humans have the distinction of having the ability to override instincts but we aren't wired differently from our ancient ancestors. Some of what makes up attraction is unconscious and instinctual. There's a woman who makes videos and she's a matchmaker for her own religion/culture but her comments about her matches have a wider application and she's got some interesting things to say. She discusses the most common preferences in her videos (while maintaining confidentiality for her applicants)   The choice to marry within a religion/culture is a big one but that's her only match pool so that one is taken care of. A requirement for her applicants is that they be honest about what they want. .

For the men, appearance is a main choice. They want younger than they are, and pretty. For the women, they want appearance but also being taller than they are, and a good provider. Not gold diggers- many have their own professions but someone who can provide security- this is more like wanting security and safety than materialistic. Sometimes it's a choice for the men too- that the woman is employed but they may also list that she'd be willing to cut back on work and raise the children.

She's honest about potentials for matching. A less attractive woman or less attractive man has more chances for a match if they have other qualities and preferences and are willing to be more flexible about them. For the men- if they are older, shorter, less attractive, having financial security increases their chances. For the women, they will have better chances with a less attractive man.

It may sound superficial to consider factors like looks but when it comes to attraction, these still are a part of what we call "chemistry". The preferences are different for men and women. Looks are high on the list for men. Looks are also high on the list for women, but so are other factors- height, and security. Maybe taller men were better protectors of the tribes in pre-civilized days? Also the ability to hunt for food would favor being taller and stronger?

Maybe this is why, a person who is disordered and attractive prevailed over time- as being attractive was a protective factor?

As to BPD/NPD- I don't think it's stable.  I think someone with NPD may get into a relationship with a BPD but then, once there's a split, it would end. Someone who doesn't have this combination might seem boring to them?

 90 
 on: May 27, 2026, 03:55:12 AM  
Started by MindfulBreath - Last post by MindfulBreath
The last time I posted here was back in August - I had initiated a separation after my husband spoiled a major milestone for me. He accepted his diagnosis, got into therapy (finally consistently after at least 3 prior abandoned attempts), and mostly respected my boundaries. However, it should have been a sign to me when he moved back into our master bedroom while I was traveling (about 3 months later), without asking for my consent first.

He was on his best behavior, working hard, employing his DBT skills, remaining calm (while I realized that I was still carrying resentment and was snappier than I am proud of), and... I should have known... focusing all his attention on an upcoming lavish vacation that we would take together for almost 6 weeks. During the vacation, he was mostly great. I attribute this to the fact that he got to live what is essentially his dream life (driving high-end cars, smoking good quality cannabis every day, spending money like it was water, not worrying about work, and exploring new and interesting places with me - a way we've often connected in the past).

The moment we returned home, to the foreign country where we live, it all went to _____ again. I knew that it would. I knew that even with years of intensive therapy with the right therapist and a true commitment to change, pwBPD will still have splits and the idealization/devaluation phase. I wanted to see if the tools I had built up for preserving my own mental health during our separation were strong enough to survive until the split was over - relatively unscathed.

My tools were not enough. Because what I also hadn't realized was that he'd been slowly gaining legal and financial control over my life, pushing me into making decisions I normally woulnd't make or subversively not allowing me to pursue something I am really excited about because it takes my attention away from him. I have found this last bit to be the nail in the coffin for me. You can call me a million horrible names, and I can walk away or put on my noise canceling heaphones. But once you sabotage my business (in a way that's even sabotaging your own because you are so afraid of seeing me so excited), a red line has been crossed.

He made it about the fact that I took the separation - that I "bailed on the marriage" by taking the separation to try and finally break the cycle. It became clear to me that the only way this relationship will work is if I apologize profusely for taking the break (which I needed to try and heal from years of protracted emotional and verbal abuse) and give up my boundaries. To give up the last of my power.

So I've decided it's finally time to leave. And I really, really could use your advice.

We are two foreigners living in a foreign country. We got married in my home country, but don't reside there, and we never registered our marriage in our country of residence (where it turns out you need to get divorced). It turns out that I can say I intend to reside in Washington State (I could - I was born there and have friends there), and if I can get him to sign the papers where we fill out that we've come to an equal and fair agreement about how to divide our assets, I can submit online and the judge will grant the divorce after a 90-day cooling off period (luckily for me - he's not much of a researcher, so I doubt he'd even look into the cooling off period). I believe he would leave all of my US accounts alone - which would be in his best interest, or else he'll have to take on the credit card debt as well.

The other issue is that, in order for me to legally work in this country, I had to give up the shares in his company and become his employee. ALL of our assets here - most of which I paid for, except the office he built for himself - are owned under the company (because of the complicated foreign ownership rules in this country).

I've been told by multiple experts that I have no leg to stand on - I will just have to come to some sort of good faith agreement with him where he won't cancel my working visa (if he does, I fortunately have other options) and where he'll ideally buy me out of our house and the land that I bought (and potentially the future proceeds he'll get from subleasing it or selling it)... and I need to figure out a way how to do this without him simply saying no. It would be nice if he also paid me some additional money, given that I spent ALL of my money on supporting us (and the wedding) for the first four years of our relationship, but I'm not holding my breath. The one thing I have going in my favor is that he has a huge ego around his "principles" and "fairness" - so if I can somehow make a case that makes it seem like the fair thing to do, that it would make him look good to other people, he might go for it.

Does anyone know about any mediators who work internationally and aren't tied to the legal system? Maybe more like a coach or a therapist?

But my biggest concern and downright fear is finally having the difficult conversation to tell him it's over for real this time. I've read about and heard too many stories where a BPD partner was never violent... until they heard it was over.

So I'm plotting my escape. We live on a tiny island without cars, and I have WAY too much stuff. Plus we have cats - and you have to go through a complicated admin process moving them around in this country. I am planning to move to a much bigger island (which he hates), and, in fact, I've already found a place that I can move into on July 15. In the meantime, I am out of the house on a work trip. When I return, I will have 2 weeks to finish my work assignment... and then two weeks to somehow tell him and also safely pack up my stuff. My stuff isn't just stuff - it's stuff for my livelihood, family heirlooms, and my over-the-top collection of clothing that I wish I wasn't so attached to.

So how do I do this to minimize the risk of violence, pleading, rage, following me from room to room (we don't have locks)? He will notice when I start packing, but I can't imagine spending two weeks in the house with him once the process starts. I have asked some friends if they'd be willing to come "help" - but really be witnesses. They've agreed.

But also, I need to tell him because I need him to agree to the asset split (if he actually will give me anything) and agree to the divorce.

It's such a mess. Even though I understand how complex and time-consuming it can be in other countries, I desperately wish we lived in the US, where at least there are things like lawyers who can negotiate on your behalf or restraining orders or common law property states or numbers you can call if you're afraid for your life. There aren't even police stationed on the island where we live.

Any words of wisdom would be much appreciated - especially about the order of events in which I should safely do this with the best outcome.

Thank you!

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