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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.
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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. ...
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.


