Hi Anonymous22,
I really empathize with your situation and can very much relate.
Having said that, I hope you won't be irritated by my suggestion. I personally would just always assume that your husband will not follow through with any agreements, and not even make them in the first place. I think that will create the least amount of stress and drama for you. If he helps out and follows through with plans, great. If not, you will not be relying on him and you won't have to rearrange things last minute. I know this is not a "normal" marriage partnership by a long shot, and it is unfair, but personally, I have found it to be the most practical and least frustrating way to live. I look at taking care of our children as a joy and a privilege, and I feel sorry for my husband that he is not mentally well enough to join me in this venture.
For me, what is the hardest is not so much relying on him to help out, as I don't rely on him at all, but having him not follow through with commitments that involve his attendance. He missed our son's third birthday, which is a big milestone in our culture, he has not shown up at family weddings, you get the idea. This is something I haven't found a solution for except to realize that I literally cannot rely on him for anything or to be there for any event. But I can't say I have not been very disappointed and embarrassed at times. BPD is truly an awful disorder....



Hello all, this is my first post. I wish I had found this community sooner! My adult daughter (diagnosed twice by two different docs) lives in a different city and we were together last week for a family trip. The last three trips have included massive blowouts/meltdowns and this was no exception. She wanted me to admit to spanking her regularly as a child (I did not). We were able to get past this and when I returned home I ordered a copy of The Essential Family Guide to BPD through our family Amazon account. For that she really lost it and has since told her siblings she's going no contact with me. I should also note that my youngest is graduating high school in a couple of weeks and believe this is a strong motivational factor for this extreme behavior. I am not sure how she'll actually follow through with this, but it's really stressing out my younger kid who is having to step in as something of a replacement for me in the relationship. Not to mention it's ruining what is supposed to be a happy occasion, which is usually the case for us with the older kid. Any advice is welcome. I've done my best to validate her feelings and leave the door open, also offered to do counseling together. The problem is she's never wrong and therapy never works (her belief, not mine).