...
Something inside me has me hesitating. I don’t actually wanna do it. Part of me wonders if I don’t really actually wanna cut ties because I’m still in love with the fantasy that was that relationship and this is the final goodbye. Don’t get me wrong. I am not getting back into this relationship. I just find myself wistfully missing my own ignorance. Another part of me wonders if I just feel guilty like this is all the way down to just emails. Why can’t I just do this for her? I suppose I still feel a sense of obligation and guilt. She is still suffering and texted these emails and her suffering is about me and my contact and isn’t there some way that I could answer or respond that would make her feel better? I realize that is delusional.
...
Letting go of someone isn't easy, and ( as I understand it) that's even harder for a pwBPD, given how they crave attention and contact, and have a need to use that contact with others to fill the void in themselves. They'd rather have negative contact with someone than no contact with anyone, and will go as far as to picking pointless fights to get what they want, rather than just live in peace.
So I think that can explain some of why she's sending you these extended manifestos.
I would wager that if she had someone else, she would be contacting you a lot less; has nothing to do with whether she's suffering or not.
That being said, the best advice I received was "
ignore the editorial": quickly scan the email, and decide if there is anything objective to respond to, and if so, do that. Ignore the rest, or dismiss it with a polite "received. thanks for reaching out."
So for example, you get something like:
"When are you picking up so-and-so? I'm so tired of you being late all the time. It's clear you just can't respect other people's time because you're so selfish, and never think about other people. And BLA BLA BLA..."
Now you might get triggered by this... after all, it's not true! You're rarely late, and you always considered her feelings! Maybe even to a fault! But you should know that there's no way to convince someone of that, when they're throwing out baseless allegations in the first place. They're not interested in resolving anything, they just want your time, and if they can only get that by provoking an argument, so be it. So only one part of that deserves a response: the pick up time. you respond:
"Thanks for your email; I'll be there at 6."
This is consistent with Bill Eddy's "B-I-F-F" Method of responding to high conflict people: Keep your response
Brief,
Informative,
Friendly, and
Firm. That takes the wind out of their sails, i.e. doesn't give them anything they can argue with further.
"
Thanks for your message. As you know our separation agreement states I have the kids this weekend beginning when school gets out. I will pick them up then."
They can try to spin that further, but there's no need for you to keep responding! You provided all the information needed. If or when these messages end up in court, one party is going to come across as argumentative and difficult, and it won't be you.