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 81 
 on: June 08, 2026, 04:20:15 PM  
Started by JsMom - Last post by JsMom
I appreciate the encouragement and also the words of caution. Yes, my son has been and can be a bully at times. Before I spoke to my son I read many of the tools and skills in the library.  One was about what not to say such as the word BUT. We'll I used it. He said BUT! Now you're going to say BUT. He was dramatic and  I almost felt like laughing (I didn't) I did clap my hand over my mouth. It felt good to have that break from intensity. I coulda shoulda done things differently BUT I learned a lot. And I feel a strength from doing it. My old MO wasn't arguing,  it was freezing and being scared and placating.
I'll be starting a new thread about holding my boundary and the fears I have. Thank you both.

 82 
 on: June 08, 2026, 03:49:30 PM  
Started by hopefulbpdmom - Last post by hopefulbpdmom
My younger kid knows about BPD and is doing a good job of not getting triangulated into the middle of it all

 83 
 on: June 08, 2026, 03:47:07 PM  
Started by hopefulbpdmom - Last post by hopefulbpdmom
Thanks for the info and the support. She has blocked me on phone, email, WhatsApp, and even LinkedIn (Laugh out loud (click to insert in post)?). She told her siblings she would be doing so, not me. She also asked her stepbrother if she can stay with him when she comes for graduation. I feel so hurt, I feel grief, loss, anger. I also feel some relief if that's the right word. Relief that the terrible thing she's been threatening since last summer has finally happened. Relief that I'm getting something of a break. All I can do is build skills for when she reaches back out, which I fully believe she will do. Nobody else is going to be the endless supply of support and reinforcement that I have been, nor is anyone else going to be the target for her extreme aggression and anger. I suspect the best course is not to engage further as it may only exacerbate things. The only way to let her know that I understand and she can take all the time she needs is by letter.

 84 
 on: June 08, 2026, 03:17:09 PM  
Started by stevemcduck - Last post by Pook075
hi pook

the situation is this. she attacked me. I was bleeding and I left the house to get away and stupidly drive under the influence to get away. I went to the police station and was arrested. when I was released I was told she was also arrested. she was living in my house and they evicted her and I didn't press charges so she was released on bail. the usual terms are 3 month no contact her side only. I have not been told not to contact her at all so I am not in breach. 

her parents came to get her and she went back to her family home which is 400 miles from where we lived together.

I sent the video and acknowledged she may not be able to respond and if she ever wanted to hear from me again to change her WhatsApp profile picture so I knew. later that night she removed her profile picture. I sent a follow up text saying to put it back up when she was ready for a call. it was read but under stably not responded to and the picture remains removed.

Okay, so it was only a one-way restraining order.  I remembered most of what had happened; just not that part of it.

My circumstances of the break-up were very different, but I can remember that 2.5 months out, I still had a strong desire to reconcile and would have done almost anything to make it happen.  Looking back three years later though, I see plainly that it was not a healthy relationship and I was never prioritized except when it came to financial support.

I think it's very common to have doubts about how things turn out and wondering if another try would fix everything that was previously broken.  The decision is yours alone and a lot of that is out of your hands at the moment, but I will say that you might be seeing it with crystal clarity today.  I absolutely wasn't at the point you're at.  This is the "bettering" section though so that's what we will focus on.

Since you're reached out twice now (video + text), there's not much more you can do for the next few weeks.  Let the restraining order finish out and see if she contacts you.  The chances without any additional information (which you don't have) are about 50/50 either way, so nobody has a great guess here. All you can do is prepare for the possibility that she will reach out while also accepting that she might not.

You want to continue the relationship.  Okay.  What will be different this time around?  Start thinking that out now.  Obviously alcohol played a big part on your end and that's something you can control in the future.  I'm not blaming or judging here, mind you, but it makes sense to focus on the parts we can actually control. 

Likewise, let's say you do reconnect and eventually, she's in a sour mood.  How do you avoid ending up in the same place all over again?  You can't control her emotions or reactions, but you can work on the parts that you control.  Maybe it's speaking in a different way, maybe it's knowing when to walk away or avoid an argument to begin with.  Those are kinds of things that solely rely on you.  That's where your focus should be.

I genuinely hope it works out and you get the fairytale ending.  It happens from time to time.

 85 
 on: June 08, 2026, 01:51:19 PM  
Started by JsMom - Last post by CC43
He was hurt, angry, felt shame.... He let loose and let me know loudly what he thought about me. He didn't call me names which was great , he punched his fridge, thankfully not as hard as he wanted to ...He said all he ever wanted was my advice not to feel this way anymore. That he hated asking for money, that he'd pay his own therapy, that he couldn't afford to pay for therapy, that he 'would' ask me for money again and I'd just have to say no.That now ho has to feel bad about upsetting me, that he doesn't have it in him to go through these episodes with me. So much more, lots of accusing and blaming...

OK, I probably wouldn't have tried to start this conversation until an actual request for money came up, and I probably wouldn't have given a dollar figure limit, because my opinion is that your limit probably establishes a floor, not a ceiling, in his mind.  Nevertheless, I see some developments here.  On the plus side, you stayed in control--great job on your part.  Also on the plus side, his reaction was probably as predicted--feelings of shame, some blaming, some anger and hopelessness--all very BPD.  But on the minus side, though he avoided a complete meltdown and was able to end the conversation with a hug, he punched the fridge.  I don't like that at all.  I see that as a bully tactic--a thinly veiled threat of violence when he doesn't get what he wants!  Sure, you could say he was "dysregulated," but my opinion is that he made a CHOICE to punch the fridge, because he wanted to intimidate you, to bully you into getting what he wanted.  I'm sorry to say this, but it seems to me your son is a bully.

I'm not saying that as a criticism of your son, but rather as a note of caution for you.  I guess I see a little better what you're up against here.  I think you are going to have to maintain your boundary, no matter what he does.  Boundaries are essential for pwBPD and bullies too.  If he flies off the handle in your presence, for example by punching a hole in the wall, I think you need to leave immediately or call 911.  If you stay around when he's punching, then you're basically telling him it's OK to do that.  If he's so riled up that he's showing physical violence, then I think you're not having a conversation anymore. 

 86 
 on: June 08, 2026, 01:19:32 PM  
Started by wantmorepeace - Last post by CC43
Hi there,

It's sad that your sibling is acting out and being mean.  I could tell you that it has nothing to do with you, and everything to do with their stress, jealousy, inferiority complex and feeling aggrieved by the world.  To a pwBPD, it's "normal" to put other people down, in a vain attempt to feel in control or superior, or just to hurl their inner nastiness onto other people.  The pwBPD in my life would send nasty correspondence to relatives, to "punish" them and "teach them a lesson," when reality was, she was acting like a total brat, and the "punishment" and "teaching them a lesson" should have been coming her way!  (Note the delusional thinking pattern here.)

If a relationship with your sibling is too painful, you might consider going Low Contact and sending your sibling's emails and text messages directly to the spam folder.

Look, untreated pwBPD tend to generate drama everywhere they go.  They also tend to create no-win scenarios.  For example, they might get themselves kicked out of a living situation and demand that you house them indefinitely.  If you refuse, they'll accuse you of being selfish and irresponsible (see the projection there?).  But if you relent, they become an extremely difficult and entitled roommate, making your own homelife miserable.  So no matter what you do, it's a lose-lose situation for you.  And that is why boundaries are so important.  If your sibling is being mean to you, then you have every right to ignore her and not to respond.

I've often posted here to imagine the messages as Spam, because they are Spam!  If a spambot wrote you a message accusing you of being a horrible person and ruining the bot's life, you'd think, that's ridiculous and delete it without much further thought.  I'd say, try to do that with your sibling's messages.  You need to reclaim your mental bandwidth--and save it for YOUR life.  Let your sibling deal with their life, on their own.

 87 
 on: June 08, 2026, 10:30:59 AM  
Started by Innerpeace2026 - Last post by wantmorepeace
I so relate to this thread, although in my case it is a ubpd sibling.  I am very sorry for your pain, Innerpeace2026 (and struck by our similar choices in handles Smiling (click to insert in post)).  Having a break (through low contact) from the unrelenting blaming by my sibling has helped my guilt to subside.  It comes back at times, but increasingly when she reaches out to snipe at me, my guilt tweak is followed quickly by recognition of how nasty and uncalled for her behavior is and the guilt dissipates.

 88 
 on: June 08, 2026, 08:58:43 AM  
Started by broken mom2 - Last post by wantmorepeace
It made me so sad to read your post. I hope that with time you can come to exchange guilt for sadness and experience joy despite that sadness.

 89 
 on: June 08, 2026, 08:54:48 AM  
Started by wantmorepeace - Last post by wantmorepeace
After one pissy text from ubpd sibling, I felt good because it didn’t bother me. After another plus an email to me and my daughter,  I want to cry and that makes me want to cry even more because I was happy about not being bothered.  Not responding to them but I’ll share with this board how upset I am at having to deal with this stupid self- righteous nastiness and that I brought it into my daughters life too.

 90 
 on: June 08, 2026, 08:41:07 AM  
Started by Versant - Last post by PeteWitsend
...

We are packing things up. Predictably my wife feels entitled to take whatever she feels like - "You have chosen to break up the family, so I have every right and you just need to face the consequences of your own actions". We don't have much of anything of real worth, and I've moved most items of emotional value to my secret storage box in advance, so I should be fine just letting things move along. I know this, but still realize the injustice of it is making me angry. She feels so entitled and sees me as deserving no rights. Today I boiled over and argued with her about it, which obviously was unhelpful. Oh well, I'll just need to try and keep the goal in mind from now on. None of these trinkets really matter to me.

...

One of the items we have agreed I'll take is a large piece of framed art, one of the priciest things we own. I have started to wonder if I will hang it up in my new place, though, because I realize the memory I most closely associate with it is a nasty one. And a good reminder of how our problems are not just me not owning my own faults like she says. ...

Couple thoughts from me on the above part, based on my experience:

- Don't fight over stuff, but don't concede too much.  Think about what you'll need in your new place.  Buying all new furniture and household goods might be inevitable, but the more you can bring with you, the better off you'll be financially in the long run.  have some mental fortitude to at least make her horse-trade for things.  If fighting starts to get out of hand, concede, but don't let her see she's going to get whatever she wants.   

- If you decide you must give in on something, fine, but don't be nice thinking she'll appreciate it.  She won't.  There were quite a few things that were 100% mine that I left in the house thinking she'd recognize I left them for her and our daughter, and be nicer during the divorce.  Well, despite leaving her all the furniture, and taking only my desk, office chair, and a spare bed we weren't using, she (baselessly) accused me of "stealing from her" and "abandoning our family" because I "never wanted to be a dad" so... yeah.  They're going to treat you terribly regardless, so you might as well get the best deal for yourself (and your kids) as you can. 

- Despite leaving  all the furniture in the home (kitchen and dining tables and chairs, couch, TV, entertainment center, coffee table, all our bedroom furniture and all our kid's stuff, during our property settlement negotiations, she claimed everything I left was "junk" and fought me when I tried to value household goods and get a credit for a few thousand dollars in the overall settlement for what I left (and the mediator took her side on this). 

- pwBPD are pretty reckless with money and things, and so might just toss a lot of things you'd keep and value anyway if you leave them there. 

- I like what @notwendy suggested regarding the art, but you could also get the piece appraised, and assuming it's valuable enough & you or your kids don't have any emotional attachment to it, auction it off and replace it with new art that doesn't remind you of the past. 

When I moved out, I bought some photo collage frames and put pics in their of my family, and my daughter, etc. basically all of us together sans, BPDxw.  For years, I wasn't "allowed" to have pics of my family displayed in our home, because that "triggered" BPDxw, for whatever reason.  I remember it being pretty normal though as a kid to see other homes that had grandparents, aunts, uncles, and cousins in pictures... nothing weird about that. 

The frame should have a glass, but it's missing. The reason is that some years back my wife smashed it when she was mad at me. She left me to clean up "my mess" (reasoning being, of course, that because I've made her angry enough to do something like that, it's my fault and my mess to clean up) of glass shards from the floor before our pets would stumble in and hurt their paws. As she had hidden my glasses earlier, I couldn't reliably see if I had found all the glass or not. When I pleaded her to check so our pets wouldn't hurt themselves, she refused and suggested I should lick the floor to make sure.

This is psychotic.  You're going to be so much better off not having this person in your home in the future.  You still have to "co-parent" with her of course, and that will likely be a source of aggravation, but having your own home is a wonderful sanctuary, and the aggravation is orders of magnitude less than when you're married to them. 

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