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December 08, 2025, 06:03:53 PM
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Board Admins: Kells76, Once Removed Senior Ambassadors: SinisterComplex |
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81
Children, Parents, or Relatives with BPD / Son, Daughter or Son/Daughter In-law with BPD / Re: Does anyone else question their perceptions
on: December 05, 2025, 06:10:03 AM
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| Started by JsMom - Last post by Diamond60 | ||
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I can totally relate to how you feel. My son is almost 27 and I feel like I’ve been on the same rollercoaster as you described (and CC43–they really described the situation with my son so accurately!). I do feel like the Family Connections course has helped me resisting jumping in to fix things and to learn to keep things short and simple, especially during a meltdown when I tended to try to “get in his head” emotionally which just made things worse. Now I try to just validate and wait until he asks for my opinion/advice/help instead of jumping in. But it is hard and goes against that maternal instincts…
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82
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Detaching and Learning after a Failed Relationship / Re: Is it really the end
on: December 05, 2025, 04:58:49 AM
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| Started by cats4justice - Last post by Under The Bridge | ||
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You're in the right place to find others who have been through what you're going through now. I read through your post and noted the many 'standard' behaviours of someone with BPD - it really is amazing how symptoms run to a script which always repeats.
You said she was 'misdiagnosed', which I take to mean that she's had professional diagnosis? People with BPD often refuse to believe they even have a problem and maintain it's all their partner's fault; another standard symptom of the illness. You say you are in therapy at the moment but is she? Without it she is unlikely to improve and maybe not even then. It's very important that you don't blame yourself for her actions because even if you were 100% faultless and a perfect human being, she would still act the same way because they see - and imagine - things their own way, which in their mind is always correct. It's very easy to slip into self-blame and we've all done it to one extent or another but she is the one with a serious, debilitating illness, not you. You can give and take equally in a relationship and that's how it should be, but it's not good to simply endure an abusive relationship at the expense of your own physical and mental health. If she's not in therapy at the moment, do you think she would do it and more importantly, stick with it? |
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83
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Detaching and Learning after a Failed Relationship / Re: Is it really the end
on: December 05, 2025, 03:47:26 AM
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| Started by cats4justice - Last post by Rowdy | ||
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Hello and welcome.
I am quite new to this site, and my situation is different to yours as I have separated from my wife and didn’t know about BPD while in the relationship as she is undiagnosed, but your story sounds quite familiar. I am sure there will be someone along with better advice on ways to try and manage your relationship, but in the meantime, to answer your question then yes, most people here are struggling, or have struggled with the problems that you are facing in your relationship. If you look through some of the threads on here, you can click on a posters user name which will take you to their personal page and at the bottom of their page click on users recent posts, in most cases if you go back and read their first post they will have written an explanation as to why they are here. In most cases you will probably find yourself shaking your head in amazement at how similar we have all been treated. You are not alone. |
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84
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Detaching and Learning after a Failed Relationship / Is it really the end
on: December 04, 2025, 11:25:33 PM
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| Started by cats4justice - Last post by cats4justice | ||
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Hello -
This is my first post and I am a little nervous about sharing openly about my relationship and the trouble I have been having for over a decade. I share little with my friends and family, only letting them know that we are working through things. I have been struggling with a partner that exhibits all the BPD traits and has been "misdiagnosed" (her words) with it several times throughout her life. There are severe bouts of anger followed by self-hating remorse followed by blame for how I could have prevented it. I have been in therapy for 7 years trying to find a path to either better myself to manage the outbursts, or to get out of this relationship. However, I find myself drawn back to it time after time. She breaks up with me faithfully every month, leaving me crushed and withdrawn. She breaks up, then comes back in tears saying she didn't mean it, or glosses it over as if it never happened. She has sent me photos of other people that she finds attractive, threatens to be with other people because I have questioned our relationship, and lets me know that she has options. The outbursts are harsh and seem out of the blue. A wrong word or interaction. I am careful of what I say and do. I have isolated myself at times and rebelled at times, tried to change how she sees me, all hoping for a different result. She has anxiety and depression, and my heart aches for what she is going through. I just don't know if I can handle her taking that out on me. I have my own flaws and bring a lot of my own issues with me, so please don't think it is one sided, it is not. There are things about me, my family, and my life that would be hard for anyone to manage, and is definitely not helpful for someone struggling with mental illness. I am a pleaser and will bend myself to fit her wants in an unhealthy way, but through therapy I have stopped that behavior. It has not been well received. I am deeply hurt by her actions and feel like there is no understanding of the damage that has been done. I have not been able to forget it. I feel like it lives in my bones, and even when my heart is saying be with her because she cannot help her actions, my body and mind won't allow it. I feel that I both cannot live without her, and I cannot live with her. My family and my children have said I am a different person when I am with her - careful, always watching, tentative, and unhappy. They have begun to limit their exposure to the two of us together, and my kids have said they won't visit if she is there. This last break up I didn't wallow and I made plans for the month of December without her for the very first time. I feel very guilty about it and also want to share experiences with my family. I feel stuck. It is unhealthy for both of us to stay, and yet hard to let go. Anyone else struggling? |
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85
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Bettering a Relationship or Reversing a Breakup / Re: New here — navigating my husband’s new BPD diagnosis
on: December 04, 2025, 03:37:59 PM
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| Started by driftedmind - Last post by mitochondrium | ||
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Hi driftedmind and welcome! how did it go with your husband getting the diagnosis? The last part of your message really reminded me of myself 3 years ago. (you said: I’m hoping he’s able to accept the diagnosis and get the help he needs. I love him deeply, and I recognize the pain and trauma he carries. But I also don’t want to lose myself in the process. I want a family someday, one that’s stable and loving, and I want my husband to be someone who feels proud of himself and capable of real happiness. I’m hopeful for him, but I’m also terrified of what our future might look like depending on how he responds tomorrow.) Back then I found out partly from my research partly from our psychologist that my partner probably has BPD. My life was very bad, there were accusations all the time, reactivity, bad controll of emotions, he even broke some things, he was shouting often etc. The worst of all, before I knew about the diagnosis I felt that I was doing something or everything wrong - he was very succesfull in his projection and I felt guilty for our relationship not working and I even felt guilty I did not manage to walk on eggshells good enough all the time which was mixed with anger that he expected me to do so. Allready then I did notice that intimate communication is hard with him in comparison to my ex boyfriend or a good friend, but I was wrongly putting it on me. I came to this forum at that time and seeked advice and people told me things will probably never be normall with him, told me their stories, I remember a young mother warning me how a relationship with such a father is and how she alienated herself from her partner to take good care of their child, I read the forum etc. I decided to give him a chance, he was going to individual therapy (CBT), later on he started to go to psychiatrist and got antidepresants, later on ADHD meds were added. All of it helped signifficantly and life with him now is berable altogether. There are good times when he is well controlled, we have nice days, but ofcorse no miracle happened, bpd is still there, just not so intenselly. I also have learned to communicate differently and when I manage to do so, it can help a lot, if he is not totally dysregulted. Honestly this different kind of communication still takes a lot of my energy especially when I am a bit tired or preoucupied with other things - which is common during a bussy week. At that time around 3 years ago we were thinking about kids, I decided to wait to see if he will get any better and then we started around 6 months later, when there was some change. Tbh, I would recomend longer wait, especially after a threat to split up, he could manage and was motivated to show 6 months of change. But we were older, 33 at that time. I was worried my fertility is not perfect and later on I found out I was right - we still do not have a child. If I look at it altogether now, I think if we get a child, I will certainly have more responsibilities than him, I will also have to somehow explain to a child that their father is sometimes having psychological problems etc. I expect there will be activities that I will have to teach the child alone and also be responsible that the father does not scare them emotionally at least not so much. I know my partner will not be able to offer stability all the time, I am sure some raging will happen. I am also sure he will try his best and I hope it will be good enough. But it is clear to me that totally normal life will not be posssible, if it will be to tixic I might need to divirce him. I came to realise that bpd can be treated, but not cured. According to psychologist and also from what I see, my partner is not even fully develped BPD, “just” traits, he never attempted suicide (although soft threats 2 times), no self harm, no cheating, no physical violence, has a good steady job and is very succesfull there, has no problems with coworkers, has some steady friends, who dont see him as reactive (I think) and is not getting in arguments with them like ever. However, at home he is a different person, he can get offended by minimal things that are not even offensive (classical bpd style things), accusive also, rage can happen, then shout down happens, he often wants me to apologise for things I did not do and confess I did something I did not do - like a lot of people said in a thread „Accountability and blaming“, same can happen to me still. What is the hardest for me is that real intimate communication and connection is not really there, sometimes I can get some, but it can come back like boomerang when he is dysregulated, at those times it is also impossible to get support from him, and also I cannot really know when he will dysregulate at the smalles thing. That ofcorse brought me to not sharing as much as I would if those issues were not there, which makes me feel lonely sometimes. There is also still issue with tasks or plans that we make. Something minor that happen can dysregulates him so much, he will then just not do it and sometimes his whole day stands still afterwards. Hollidays can have very stressfull days from what I just described and ofcorse when we are together 24/7, we communicate more and more arrguments arise from something he understood or interpreted wrong. Just so wrong. But no way he would listen to me, telling him what I meant, he has to be right about my thoughts or stg. like that. You might ask why I stayed. I love him and I wanted to give him a chance and then infertility happened and right now for me it is (probably) impossible to find another partner soon enough to have a child. And I still think I can bring a child in an ok enough family with treatment he is getting and my stability and efforts. But when I am sad and a lot of this drama happen one after another, I cannot help but wish I was 28 again and had the knowledge and understanding of bpd that I have now. I am sure I would have run out of this for a more suitable relationship with better communication and towards calmer less stressful life where I would not be looking after everything I say. You are young now, you have the knowledge of at least that bpd exists and your housband has it, you dont have children yet. Do good research - this site is great for it. Read the succesful stories and ask yourself how succesful they really are. Read less succesful ones. Read stories with children involved. Remember you cannot save ther partner from his mental illnes, even if he takes treatment there will be ups and downs, even if he acknowledges diagnosis now, that can still change in the future. After having all the data, make informed deccision that is best for you and only you. Good luck! |
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86
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Bettering a Relationship or Reversing a Breakup / Re: Dbpdw wanting our kids to walk on eggshells…
on: December 04, 2025, 03:30:58 PM
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| Started by thankful person - Last post by thankful person | ||
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Thank you all for the encouragement. Anonymous 22, that is an interesting perspective. I think it goes deeper than that as in my wife never identified with any role before becoming a mother. She was always jealous of me playing the piano, creating, reading, writing… because she had no hobbies. Also she had always been jealous of my work despite the fact that she had a few jobs before having kids but struggled to maintain them. I think one reason she reacted positively was because she had had a good day at college. (This doesn’t mean she won’t screech and scream about this exact occasion at a later time… she will have stored it up as ammunition to use if needed). But my wife going to college has been very good for her, to get out of the house and spend time with other people. Her first term has been incredibly successful despite the fact that I’ve helped her lots and lost work over this too due to having to prioritise her needs because I want and need to support her. Her story is inspirational and maybe only now I’m actually impressed because she has been offered a place at uni next year conditional on passing the course. I mean, she’s had a poor education, no qualifications, recently diagnosed moderate/severe dyslexia, clearly has mental health problems, plus four kids under 7, one still breast feeding, two still co-sleeping and they will not let her study not for a moment even once they’re asleep. I’ll give her that… she’s doing well, and also clearly identifies with the paramedic role she is chasing. I really want that for her. I guess that will also be validation of her needing to feel needed.
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87
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Bettering a Relationship or Reversing a Breakup / Re: Dbpdw wanting our kids to walk on eggshells…
on: December 04, 2025, 03:23:15 PM
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| Started by thankful person - Last post by ForeverDad | ||
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I believe that that is the BPD, the extreme control in whatever they can control, because she wants the kids to need her so they don't abandon her. There are so many aspects to the Borderline disorder, and neediness and control rank right up near the top. If she went with her perceptions, she might admit she "needs" the kids. A normal perspective would be to reverse it, the children need their parents. |
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88
Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Detaching and Learning after a Failed Relationship / Re: What Do You Do With All The Gifts?
on: December 04, 2025, 02:22:36 PM
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| Started by codeawsome - Last post by Me88 | ||
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That's a great way to put it. I often thought it was like being with someone who has that medical condition where they can't hold a memory for long and have to constantly re-learn everything. The sheer illogicality of BPD was the biggest problem; nothing ran 'normally' as you'd expect it to - ie if you're nice to them then they're bound to be nice back to you. If I could turn the clock back I'd still meet her... but knowing what I know now I woudn't have kept chasing her for four years; her first BPD outburst after a few weeks would have been the last. Funnily enough, I still have a feeling that I will meet her again in person though.. and when I get feelings like that they often come true. I still have a mental picture of her aged 32, when I last saw her. She'll be 70 next year! predictably unpredictable. zero logic. I wouldn't meet mine again, but that's because it started so bad; she was engaged, was flirting with me, her fiance found it, I understood and dropped her. I didn't know she was engaged. But a couple months later she came back saying she left him. We literally started dating immediately, she hadn't even moved out yet. I made sure she did. Sex immediately, literally. Shouldn't have been blinded but I was single for a year before meeting her. And looking back, literally NOTHING would have regulated her. Those goal posts moved so fast they could win a gold medal. I pray I never see mine again. |
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Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Detaching and Learning after a Failed Relationship / Re: What Do You Do With All The Gifts?
on: December 04, 2025, 02:13:41 PM
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| Started by codeawsome - Last post by Under The Bridge | ||
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From what I experienced, the slate is always cleaned at every turn. That's a great way to put it. I often thought it was like being with someone who has that medical condition where they can't hold a memory for long and have to constantly re-learn everything. The sheer illogicality of BPD was the biggest problem; nothing ran 'normally' as you'd expect it to - ie if you're nice to them then they're bound to be nice back to you. If I could turn the clock back I'd still meet her... but knowing what I know now I woudn't have kept chasing her for four years; her first BPD outburst after a few weeks would have been the last. Funnily enough, I still have a feeling that I will meet her again in person though.. and when I get feelings like that they often come true. I still have a mental picture of her aged 32, when I last saw her. She'll be 70 next year! |
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Relationship Partner with BPD (Straight and LGBT+) / Romantic Relationship | Bettering a Relationship or Reversing a Breakup / Re: Dbpdw wanting our kids to walk on eggshells…
on: December 04, 2025, 12:35:41 PM
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| Started by thankful person - Last post by Anonymous22 | ||
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Great job! I have a little bit of a different opinion as to what is going on. Your wife has identified as being a mom for several years now. That is what she identifies as, a mom. Being the one who works outside the house, you identify with your profession, educator. When a coworker has a question, they come to you; when a client of yours has a need, they come to you, etc. It would be strange if one of your clients went to some one of a different profession as you to ask a question that should be directed at you...ie. if one of your clients asked the mail carrier to teach them how to play a song on the piano. IMHO, this is how your wife is feeling. In her opinion, she is the one who knows best about the children, because she is Mom. I don't think that she doesn't think that you are their mom or is controlling the "mom" role, I just don't think that she aligns the same responsibilities to you that she does with herself, because of what she identifies herself as. This may not be the correct thing to do, but at a lesser level than your wife, I think that this happens often when one parent works outside the home and the other stays home with the kids. I do think that she has taken some of this over the top, like when the kids are not allowed to look at pictures without her, etc, but I believe that that is the BPD, the extreme control in whatever they can control, because she wants the kids to need her so they don't abandon her. With her starting school, her emotions over this could be over the top, as she is not always around for your kid's every move any longer, so she could be trying to push this on the kids more, but that's a total guess! I have found that with my uBPDh, if there is something like this I have decided to just do what I feel is normal, if he freaks out, I walk away and bring the kids to our room to read a book or something distracting. If he comes in while I am distracting he kids and tries to start in with them around, I say this will NOT be done around the kids and then ask them if they want to go get ice cream. The more that I do said thing, the more that it becomes "normal", for the most part! Though, I will say that my uBPDh can not deal with me leaving the house to work and even though I have done so since we met, he has always freaked out every time I leave for work in the morning...it makes for great weeks let me tell you!
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