- When we first got to know each other, within days, he randomly messaged 'I want to kill myself' then brushed it off.
- He later expressed more explicit suicidality, but also expressed that he didn't want to be a burden to me.
- Within weeks, he was in a state of extreme distress and expressed (I believe genuine) suicidality resulting in me essentially becoming his full time carer for a month. I took on this role voluntarily and even 'happily' (not happily, but I wanted to help someone I loved) and was not pressured by him.
- At the time, he blamed a friend for his mental state, saying it was 'partly because of him I feel this way' and that his friend made him feel 'guilty for being alive'
- After this, he was somewhat 'better', however, still expressed suicidality regularly. When I told him this was hard/ traumatising for me he said 'ngl, this makes it harder for me to tell you if i'm going to hurt myself'. He didn't acknowledge any of the impacts on me at all, and nor did he offer to do anything to try and make it easier.
- He also said quite a few times that his suicidal ideation made him a better person than other people, or revealed that he had stronger values than other people (and one other person in particular). Later, it was revealed he had actually violated these values quite a lot, and that was the context where I yelled '________ing kill yourself!'
- After I said the toxic and harmful thing, he went to his friends including affair partner to characterise me as horrible.
- Once, when we were in McDonalds and I wanted to stay where it was warm and he wanted to go outside, he flippantly suggested that the noise inside made him want to kill himself. I told him that it was really ________ed up to threaten self harm like this, and he acknowledged this and apologised.
- There was the 3.5 hour spiral incident I've described where he berated me for not reacting enough to his threats of self harm.
- He never saw a counsellor, Googled mental health resources or did anything for his mental health apart from going to occasional meditation sessions after I insisted.
- At the end of the relationship, he told me I make him feel 'guilty for existing'. I pointed out that he had said this about his friend who supposedly made him feel 'guilty for being alive'. He responded by looking at me with hate and saying, 'are you trying to make me feel bad for wanting to kill myself'.
What seems to emerge is a pattern where uBPDx repeatedly expressed suicidal ideation as a way of eliciting a particular response (attention, care, drama, portraying himself as 'better' than other people) or position within a relationship. When that response was withdrawn or was in danger of being withdrawn, he took steps to prevent this from happening, including trying to induce or exacerbate feelings of fear I might have regarding his suicidality. He never took any steps to care for his own mental health or to alleviate the impact his actions were having on me.
It seems like he used suicidal ideation as a way of getting certain benefits, responses or even power over others (me)... is that a fair way of characterising it given the facts I have shared?
At the same time, I don't know if it was particularly calculated.
Excerpt
With BPDs, they say and do things in the moment to gain sympathy however they can. Why? Because they're crushed in spirit and can't stand their emotional state.
Pook, you've got it.
I'm pretty shaken because this is such manipulative, controlling yet also desperate behaviour.


