Here are a couple of my older posts:
Yes, you're absolutely right! The next day my partner was back to normal and was basically like "I don't know what happened last night". Then I felt embarrassed for getting so worked up and even posting about it at all...
It's a cycle. PwBPD gets triggered, goes off the rails and then back to the prior "normal". Is it dissociation? Or is it Denial? I gave up trying to guess.
I've seen that in my ex, a transformation into another persona. I had come home one day toward the end and my then-spouse started telling me her day and something she said reminded her of something else, nothing about me at all, and suddenly her face morphed and she got sidetracked into rant mode. I think that's called dissociation.
My last time in family court in 2013 my lawyer played several phone calls where she disparaged me (magistrate's words in the decision) and played games with exchanges. One example was No you can't get him early just because you got off early for the holiday, then an hour later demanded I pick him up from her location whereas I had already driven to the official exchange location. Well, in court when quizzed if that was her she stated as though third party, for all 9 or 10 of them, "That's my voice but I don't remember it."
Dissociation is a an educated guess but despite being inclined to believe it isn't fully remembered I also point out that their actions, what they later do and don't do, give strong indication they are aware of what they have done at some level.
Dissociation is a an educated guess but despite being inclined to believe it isn't fully remembered I also point out that their actions, what they later do and don't do, give strong indication they are aware of what they have done at some level.
He recommended 5 years of therapy for both of us... .He gave us a warning that day, he said 'it is very possible and likely that as you go through therapy that it will cause you to divorce.'
My wife has not improved (personality disorders are a hard nut to crack...). I have become a much healthier person and recognize my defects and have changed much of them (work in process). As I became better... . our marriage got even worse. I filed for divorce 5.5 years later.
My wife has not improved (personality disorders are a hard nut to crack...). I have become a much healthier person and recognize my defects and have changed much of them (work in process). As I became better... . our marriage got even worse. I filed for divorce 5.5 years later.
One of our most prolific posters some 5-10 years ago was JoannaK. In a few of her posts she made an observation that meshes well with your comments. She wrote that if persons who work to attain some recovery then they would not be the same persons as before and there was a real possibility the relationship would not survive, one or both had changed that much.


