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 81 
 on: November 28, 2025, 10:54:29 AM  
Started by Uddermudder123 - Last post by CC43
P.S.

As for why your daughter-in-law has isolated your stepson from his family, the simple reason is that there is no logical reason for doing this.  With BPD, usually the rationale is emotional and convoluted.  She might have decided you are "toxic," because you dared to try to give her son a gift that would upstage her.  She might be jealous of the once close relationship her husband had with his dad.  She might resent any of her husband's attention being spent on anyone else except her; she wants him all for herself.  She might be overwhelmed with motherhood and be jealous of attention her own baby is "stealing" from her.  She might just feel tired all the time, and when she's cranky, she takes it out on her husband.  She might be feeling out of control, and she thinks a way to reclaim control is to control her husband 100% of the time.  Deep down she's extremely insecure and needy; she feels aggrieved, threatened and criticized all the time.

Whatever the reason, it won't make much sense from a purely logical perspective.  With BPD, things tend to be black or white, all bad or all good, all or nothing, all take and no give--in short, there's no compromise.  If you try to reason with her, she just sees that as disrespecting her.  If you provide your perspective, that's rude.  If you talk about your needs (I haven't seen my grandson for over a year . . . ), you're ignoring HER needs. 

 82 
 on: November 28, 2025, 10:38:19 AM  
Started by Uddermudder123 - Last post by CC43
Hi there,

I know this must be really hard for you and your husband, who want more than anything to resume contact.  I think you have a pretty good read on the situation, that your daughter-in-law's BPD behavior is isolating your stepson from his entire family.  My opinion is that you can believe your stepson when he tells you he's sorry for cutting you out, that he loves you and would like to resume contact.  I actually think it's a good sign that your son felt confident enough to reach out again.  But my strong suspicion is that his wife found out about his latest outreach and punished him dearly.  I bet he thought that standing you up was preferable to further punishment and retribution from his wife.  It wouldn't be surprising to me if her BPD behaviors have escalated so much that your stepson believes that placating her (and doing whatever she says) is the only way he can survive right now.  She might have taken over his phone or computer, too.  She could be insisting on monitoring all his correspondence, and she could threaten all sorts of things if your son doesn't obey her.

I'm truly sorry for the pain this has caused you.  My guess is that your son is choosing to prioritize keeping his family together, even if it means he's hurting you to do it.  Just knowing that he's hurting you (and not fulfilling his commitments) probably makes him feel even worse.  I guess if I were in your shoes, I might respond with a text such as, "I'm sorry we weren't able to meet, but we understand you're busy with your young family right now.  We're always here if you need us."  In other words, I'd avoid emotional content, as well as anything that implies criticism, neediness or obligation, so as not to make your son feel any worse than he already does.  Trust me, living with someone with untreated BPD makes him feel guilty enough already.

 83 
 on: November 28, 2025, 08:43:32 AM  
Started by LinaK - Last post by LinaK
BPD family

https://bpdfamily.com/message_board/index.php?topic=221634.0#:~:text=It's%20not%20based%20on%20our,more%20of%20a%20physical%20escape.

Pw: Serenity25!

My partner of 12 years with UNTREATED BPD, alcoholic and chemical addict, sex addict, spending addict has abandoned me 2 months ago.

I’m s truggling emotionally deeply. I go to therapy, practice yoga, run my business, take care of my daughter, trying to rebuilt friendships I abandoned. I cry and overthink events that led to abandonment.

We have been together for 12 years
He has been in AA and treatment for anxiety and depression and was able to be sober (no alcohol)  for 5 years (2017-2021) and he started smoking marijuana for pain management in 2021 which turns into full blown marijuana addiction quickly. He denied it being an addition.
 
I have experienced a 12 year long love bombing. We both avoided dealing and with his issues altogether, only occasionally touching on them.  He decided that he is free from it all and stopped going to therapy during the time when he was doing well professionally. He stopped going to AA meeting and decided they were a scam and a cults.

During his sober years his sex addiction slowed down but  and spending addiction spiked. He started back on marijuana after receiving steroid treatment for neck pain and later  planne spinal surgery to address his pain in the neck and arms, and later after 2 knew surgeries resulted from motorcycle accidents.

He had 1 hospitalization for mental breakdown in 2017 and I believe we avoided talking about it. He asked me to ale him to psychiatric emergency in 2019 but was not admitted.

I grew up with bipolar mother and I thought of mental illness as any other one - personal business of the person suffering and saw my role as loving and supporting partner, just like my father was to my mother. It was not discussed in our family or with me. I left my parent home at 19 and we became estranged.

I developed codependency in relationship my partner. I didn’t  have fears of abandonment and had absolute trust in  security of our relationship.

He worshiped me, I was the woman of his dreams love of his life. He had hard time when my emotions would  turn dark - when I cried from work stress, realization that our finches are out of control, just k talked about difficulties life. He experiences it as a personal attack and would withdraw. Sometimes he would listen but would grow very tired very quickly. We talked about his drama with work, friends, search for personal and identity, search for professional identity  most of the time.

 Two times we discussed finances it became uncomfortable and we had to stop - his reaction to normal question were extremely emotional, he felt under attack.
I slowly stopped asking questions and just let him be.

I didn’t realize he was a sex addict. I was excited to be with someone who has high libido after my first loveless marriage.

But eventually it became a source of contact frustration for him. Never satisfied with quantity of sex, masturbating till his penis was deformed, getting colon infection he almost died from which I attribute to his use of toys for anal self stimulation. The doctor at the emergency room who treated him for colon infection specifically asked me if there was a possibility he engages in homosexual activity. I said no and then I found sizable plastic dildos, not small normal butt plugs under his side of the bed.

He had massive porn addiction. He would angry when my daughter was home after I left for work because he couldn’t have time alone to himself to masturbate. He would have tantrums if he couldn’t climax. He started taking viagra as a daily supplement to make sure he is always ready even thought he didn’t have erection problems.

I swept it all under a rug. I avoided looking the problem in the eye. I understand I became confused about the difference between having an open mind, being sexually very active, being able to deal with ambiguity and not having boundaries. I played along - I loved being adored, being wanted. I loved the excitment. There wa lots of fun beautiful sides to our life - I felt that it had a happy life with some issues, like who doesn’t have them.

The end started in spring of this year
He was laid off from his job in April.
We opened a small restaurant together in May - we have been working on it together for a while after his and mine main jobs.

We opened the restaurant within a month.
He was the only employee as planned for the first 4-5 months with very limited hours.

Things immediately started deteriorating. He use excessive use of marijuana  because a problem at work. He became impulsive at a work. Could not be consistent and it affected us immediately in business. This time I was more demanding in terms of professional boundaries - asking to stop smoking at work, showing up on schedule, having production list (all standard), start working on training manual or let me do it and review together.

He resisted everything. He complained  that I turned into a boss, not his wife. Demanded separation of these functions. Complained that he gets no respect, not treated with dignity. I turned to a male friend for moral support - he is in recovery for 20 years and familier with AA. My partner was furious jealous, suspected that I was cheating, demanded I stoped talking to my friend.

I started stepping back knowing that things are off. Asked him to go to AA, asked him to call the therapist he fired years ago. He first agree to cut down of marijuana but within days started drinking. Relapsed After 7 years of sobriety (no alcohol, but weed only). Immediate got sick from drinking. And after 2 weeks he fled. I saw it on restaurant cameras - he finished his shift and walked out with a suitcase and a guitar.

I received an email after two days where he told me he decided to end the relationship and a list of admin issues (coned, Verizon, etc.) I begged and begged and sent me a second email telling me that though he loves me the chaos of the relationship made it clear we can’t fix it together. And that he will not discuss possibility of the future until establish extended period or recovery.
Both emails were written by Gemini (google AI). He blocked me after that and has not communicated.

He did unblock- I sent a few texts regarding him getting his possessions. He read them, picked up his possession while I wasn’t there. Silent treatment.

I have found out within days after he left that he moved in with another woman. I saw he credit card statement and he is on a massive spending sprees A Reataurants, shopping.

I’m exhibiting all classic signs of a person who developed codependency and now going through withdrawal from abandonment. I’m crying daily and obsessively thinking about him.

I’m only now starting to learn about what happened to me. How I was able to tolerate it all without raising questions. And how to now deal with new reality and recover and find happiness and trust again.

I’m learning to use serenity prayer to stop the compulsive obsessive thinking. I know there is a road ahead. I don’t have hope yet that my broken self can rebuild.
I’m 47. I have a good health. I’m fit , and overall always thought of myself as a functional, stable person. But now I’m questioning it all.

 84 
 on: November 28, 2025, 08:41:36 AM  
Started by Uddermudder123 - Last post by Uddermudder123
It has been awhile since I last posted.  But after a little more than a year of not hearing anything and being totally cut off, my husband finally received a message from his son stating that he was sorry he hadn't reached out, that he missed and loved him and did my husband want to meet to talk. 

Quick summary - my step son and his wife (who has BPD), cut my husband and myself off due to a disagreement over a birthday gift for our then 1 year old grandson.  A toy car that my step son's wife decided the day before the birthday party and after knowing in advance that my husband was going to get it for their son, that toy car was not age appropriate and didn't want us to bring it to the party.  She had my step son deliver that news to my husband via text ending with that we had to respect his wife's decision.  My husband attempted to reason with him, to no avail.  My husband, who is not a fan of conflict - tends to back away from it and just accept things for the way they are - was not just disappointed in the delivery, but also hurt that his son delivered it the way he did, and was a bit angry as well considering they both knew in advance that he was getting this toy car for his only grandson and was looking forward to presenting it to him.  We went out and got a new gift for him of course.  Went to the party and was met with coldness from both my step son and his wife as well as my step son's mother.  That kind of threw us off - like, huh?  My husband spoke to my step son's mother and her husband and just let them know of what happened and he did express his disappointment/hurt/confusion.  Following the party, my step son ghosted my husband for weeks - this is not like him, he spoke to my husband if not every day at least 4-5 times a week.  My husband reached out to ask what was going on, and to please let him know so that if there was an issue they could work it out.  My step son responded aggressively  (which is not like him at all) accusing him of talking behind his back and saying some very hurtful things - things that he knew would cut/break my husband's heart, to which my husband may not have responded in the best way (he was taken aback by the attack and just reacted).  He later apologized for his reaction and asked to get together to talk this out - with no response.  Complete cut off.  My husband continued to reach out here and there to tell him that he loved him and missed him and was here for him.  No response.  Last Christmas we both reached out to extend an olive branch because of the holidays, and we missed our grandson.  My step son's wife responded - no, shutting it down.

Fast forward to this past September, per above, out of the blue my husband received a message from his son. Of course my husband responded that yes he'd love to meet with him to talk and that he loved and missed him too.  They decided on meeting a few days later.  On the day that they were to meet, my husband reached out to confirm the time and place.  No answer.  He kept checking the messages - no response.  My poor husband - the look on his face, just complete sadness. My heart hurts just remembering that day.  He was so looking forward to a reconciliation.  Not speaking or seeing his son, with whom he had such a close relationship before, has been very difficult for him.  We think that he may have reached out because his wife and him may have had a fight and he felt safe enough to finally reach out to his father.  But something must have happened for him to then not respond to his dad again.

Also, a caveat to this - my husband lost his youngest son just two years prior to a drug overdose.  So the loss of his oldest son of his own accord, has been devasting to my husband. Thankfully his oldest daughter stays close to him and is pretty protective of him right now due to this.  His youngest daughter - well, she's 19 and she's in her own world doing her own thing.  His son has also cut off the oldest daughter as well - without any provocation - just out of the blue cut off any/all communication, blocked us all on social media, etc.  It's just been flabbergasting. Especially because this isn't the step son that I know at all. 

His wife has completely isolated him from our side of the family.  And we have no idea why.  My husband has even reached out to my step son's mother to ask her if he is ok and if she has any insight - her responses to him were very short and clipped.  That isn't like her either - I know her to be a very kind and caring person and we used to all got along well. My husband came away from that conversation, asking what the hell is going on?

We are going into our second Christmas season without any contact with my step son and our grandson.  We missed our grandson's 2nd birthday - we have been completely cut off from him which is beyond sad.  We don't know what he looks like now.  We missed seeing him walking and talking, etc...

I know we aren't the only ones going through this - and we are going on and living our lives but there is a deep sense of loss every day.  And no sense as to when or if there will ever reconciliation.  I fear that the longer this goes on, the harder it will be to come back from it.  I fear that if anything were to happen to my husband (god forbid!), my step son would never forgive himself (if he is anything like the step son I knew before all of this happened). 




 85 
 on: November 28, 2025, 06:18:08 AM  
Started by Strawberry29 - Last post by Strawberry29
One common theme among people affected by BPD relatives, is that once you learn about these things you cannot stop seeing dysfunctional relationships in places where you once did not realise there were issues, even if perhaps BPD is not part of the situation. Two recent events made me realise this clearly in my wife's family, and I will talk about it in a while, but first a bit of an intro on her family.

When I met my wife, I thought (as usual) that hers was a little loving family. I later learnt this was not exactly the case, but initially thought this was only because of her father. He is what I would call a highly successful and smart person witht the emotional stability and independence of a 5 year old. I actually have a very good relationship with him, but I now understand, after knowing him for a while and hearing my wife's stories, that he is controlling, has OCD, has sudden rage outbursts (that can last a couple of days) where he becomes extremely abusive, and he relies on his wife for pretty much everything. My wife had to witness as a child things she should have never been put through, and for this she has now realised she is a bit resentful towards her parents, as they never did much about it, and never explained her anything, apart from saying that her dad sometimes had problems "because of his mother".
The sister is also a very successful person, very nice and you can easily go along well with her. But more recently has started having problematic behaviours towards my wife. Around the time we were having our first child, she started complaining that we were not going to have our child close to them, that we should have delivered the baby in their city to share the thing with them etc etc. She also complains every time my wife does not write to her for 2 or 3 days, or does not call her once a fortnight etc etc. When we found out our youngest child was autistic, my wife said it to her when she felt it was the right time, around 4 or 5 months after being certaina bout it. She received subtle accusations that she should have said it before, and that we should have asked for her help because she could have done this and that. My wife used to get easily sent into guilt trips, I had to do a lot of work making her realise that we are adult independent people that make our own choices, and that if she loves us and wants to hear us more often, she just has to call us/visit us and stop complaining about what we should do according to her. If she wants to help us, she should just say "I can help this and that way if you want" and stop at it.
Finally, the mom I did not even think could have any big issue, although arguably she was a bit of an enabler with the dad, and was also quite controlling with her daughters, for example sending a text every morning and calling them if they did not reply by, say, 11.

Now, I don't know, as a non-professional, the diagnosis for her father, and possibly rest of the family, but last month something happened that made me realise how this mental health things all resembles each other in "drama". Two things happened: my wife's GM was hospitalised, and my mom got a cancer diagnosis. Both things turned out not to be too bad, GM was discharged after a couple of weeks and my mom's cancer is very much curable and with a good prognosis. But of course, initially these were very difficult news to deal with. And the reaction from my BPD brother and my wife's family was very similar.

My brother started texting that I was an awful person (blaming) because our mom was supposed to come and visit us the day after she got the diagnosis, and that I should have consulted him first before inviting her over (controlling behaviour), because that's how family should work (note he hadn't taxted me for months after not getting what he wanted from our father's will, and he had me blocked pretty much everywhere but on the email).  Of course, this made no sense at all, our mom is an adult that decided to come and visit us, and that decided to cancel after getting the diagnosis.

My MIL opened instead a family group, starting it by saying "I hope I have taught you that in these times of emergency the whole family has to come together and decide what is best to do, not independently" which was a dig at the fact that we are dealing privately with our son's situation. The whole group was then a summary of all the things that were wrong in those relations, with the dad blaming the mom for the reason that led to the hospitalisation, the sister continuously saying things like "mom this is not your decision on how to cure GM, but our decision altogether" (which to me makes no sense, one person is responsible and can ask for help.. If they don't feel like they can take the responsibility they can leave it to someone else... But not charging somebody with a repsonsibility they never subscribed to... ). It all felt like a group to send my wife into a guilt trip and make her do the things they thought she should have done (controlling behaviour). The actual practical aspects of the group were obscure, because the GM was in the doctors hands and the mom was writing the texts separately anyway to give news, outside fo the group.

In all of this, my wife and I had once again to deal with a difficult situation emotionally without being helped by our families (what family really should be in their best acception) but rather being blamed and accused of just being adults living their own messy and difficult life. Thank god we have each other and have learnt to better deal with these things thanks to this group and books (me) and a therapist (her). We have also learnt that no matter what the actual diagnosis is, there are things in common between these mental health issues and that the way to address them is the same, more or less. But most importantly of all, we have learnt that, yes, my brother and MIL had difficult moments, and we all can be stressed in difficult moments, but this is no justification for abusive behaviour. We also had the same difficult moments, and we have a right to face it without additional struggles.


 86 
 on: November 28, 2025, 01:41:27 AM  
Started by thankful person - Last post by thankful person
Just thought also, knowing what children are like with their night habits… this may not have been a one off! So if she does the exact same thing tonight… do I do the exact same thing and still not go out of my way to tell my wife?

 87 
 on: November 28, 2025, 12:52:35 AM  
Started by Tripler - Last post by Tripler
Starting off by saying that I love my pwBPD and do not want them to go. There is a matter of issues that I was working on fixing but pwBPD is threatening divorce and started moving out the other week. I recognize I am not perfect, but I am also not what they're trying to make me out to be. They are splitting on me and have gone to the point of contacting my distant family about it, let alone our close friends. I am lost on what to do because I'm normally the person that calms them down when they do this to our friends, but I don't know how to proceed when I'm inside the storm.

Help and guidance is much needed

 88 
 on: November 27, 2025, 10:44:05 PM  
Started by thankful person - Last post by thankful person
I think I am going to have to deal with something in a couple of hours so probably before I get any more feedback, but I’ll do my best! So D4 has only spent a couple more nights back in her own bed after a long stint in Mummy’s bed which is actually our marital bed but the single spare bed is currently fine by me! The first night back in her bed, D4 woke up scared and I heard her crying and went to her and took her back to mummy’s bed which is the “correct” procedure in our house. Last night, D4 woke in the night and came in to the spare room to see me. She didn’t seem scared, but she knows Mummy would want her to go to her and not me. I asked D4 if she wanted to go to Mummy’s bed and she said no. I took her back to her own bed and tucked her back in and left her to go back to sleep. I did not wake my wife. I did not even text my wife. So I will have “done wrong” in her eyes. If D4 does not mention any of this then Mummy may not find out any of this happened, though dbpdw is a light sleeper and she would normally text me, “what’s going on!” If she heard anything. But I wonder if D4 will tell Mummy about it… to get me in trouble? Create some drama? D4 is a bright little rebel full of love, nothing like D6 who is also full of love but more serious and always wanting to follow the rules and please everyone. I love that D4 came to me in the night and I think I did a “normal” thing which was to ask if she wanted to go to mummy’s bed (as that’s the norm for her), give her a cuddle and take her back to her own bed without disturbing mummy. But I guess in a “normal” marriage this info would get passed to the other parent tomorrow morning whereas I intend to “forget” unless D4 mentions it or Mummy somehow knows it happened. I’d appreciate anyone’s thoughts, thank you!

 89 
 on: November 27, 2025, 08:10:45 PM  
Started by MaxJesus - Last post by MaxJesus
So I’ve been talking to a girl long-distance for about three months. She has BPD and lives across the state. We met at a bar when I was traveling, had an amazing night, stayed in touch, and things kept getting better. She used to call me every night, was super affectionate, and eventually I drove out to see her for a few days. The visit went really well.

After I came back home, I noticed she wasn’t initiating calls as much. She’d still answer and stay on the phone for a long time, still warm and affectionate, just not starting things like she used to.

Then she had a health issue come up, and I tried to be as supportive as possible. Out of nowhere she went completely silent but after a few days liked a few of my social media post. After about a week I reached out with a calm, supportive message, she replied warmly, apologized, asked how I’d been, but didn’t really explain the silence beyond being busy, I  didn’t push it.

We texted for a few days. Then I got busy with friends one day and didn’t reply as quickly. The next day she went quiet again, saying she’d just been in bed all day, and eventually it turned back into total silence. It’s been several days now.

I’m confused about how to handle this.
I’m not sure if:
   1.   I should reach out again
   2.   I should give her more space
   3.   Or if this is her way of ending things without saying it.

For anyone who’s dated someone with BPD or who has BPD themselves,  what’s the right move here? I want to respect her space but I also don’t want to enable unhealthy patterns.

Any advice is appreciated.

 90 
 on: November 27, 2025, 08:09:18 PM  
Started by MaxJesus - Last post by MaxJesus
So I’ve been talking to a girl long-distance for about three months. She has BPD and across the state. We met at a bar when I was traveling, had an amazing night, stayed in touch, and things kept getting better. She used to call me every night, was super affectionate, and eventually I drove out to see her for a few days. The visit went really well.

After I came back home, I noticed she wasn’t initiating calls as much. She’d still answer and stay on the phone for a long time, still warm and affectionate, just not starting things like she used to.

Then she had a health issue come up, and I tried to be as supportive as possible. Out of nowhere she went completely silent but after a few days liked a few of my social media post. After about a week I reached out with a calm, supportive message, she replied warmly, apologized, asked how I’d been, but didn’t really explain the silence beyond being busy, I  didn’t push it.

We texted for a few days. Then I got busy with friends one day and didn’t reply as quickly. The next day she went quiet again, saying she’d just been in bed all day, and eventually it turned back into total silence. It’s been several days now.

I’m confused about how to handle this.
I’m not sure if:
   1.   I should reach out again
   2.   I should give her more space
   3.   Or if this is her way of ending things without saying it.

For anyone who’s dated someone with BPD or who has BPD themselves,  what’s the right move here? I want to respect her space but I also don’t want to enable unhealthy patterns.

Any advice is appreciated.

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