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I think your user name is a realistic one- feeling scared is understandable. You are about to become a father, your GF has emotional needs, and this is a lot. I will share some points of perspective- as an adult daughter of a mother with BPD, and also a mother myself-and my children are adults now too.
That your GF is exhibiting more BPD behaviors since you moved in together and she's pregnant is not due to anything you did "wrong" or that you aren't being "good enough". It may also not be entirely hormones/pregnancy. It's a function of BPD which affects the closest relationships the most- so moving in together advanced the relationship in this direction. Hormones and pregnancy can affect mood and how someone feels but how much this is BPD and how much is the pregnancy, one won't know at the moment. On your part- know that you haven't "failed" to be a good BF because of this.
The baby analogy is similar, on an emotional level, however, your GF is not a baby. She's an adult, albeit one with BPD that makes it difficult to manage emotions. Learning to self soothe, to manage emotions, is an ongoing childhood task. BPD makes that more difficult but soon you will have an actual baby. That baby, at first, will be completely dependent on parents for everything, including soothing them when they are upset. The baby can not be left alone at all, and needs 24/7 care, but adults do not. Childhood is an 18 year or so transition between these two stages.
One early task this baby will have is learning to go to sleep. We rock babies to sleep, but eventually, the advice is to rock them at bedtime but put them in their crib slightly drowsy, not fully asleep, and let them learn to soothe themselves to sleep even if they fuss for a few moments. (if they are screaming, distressed, that's a different situation). Babies wake up several times a night to feed at first, which is normal baby care, and a temporary time of sleep disruption for parents, but if the baby become always dependent on parents to get to sleep, and can't soothe themselves- then the parents are woken with crying way past that stage. The baby is fine- this won't hurt the baby- the older baby/toddler can sleep whenever they want. It's the parents, who will have sleep deprivation- and they have to be awake to function during the day.
I am pointing this out because, while this is a developmental skill that a baby needs to learn, it's the caregiver, the parent who also needs the baby to have this skill, because if the baby doesn't have it- they are the ones paying the "physical" cost of losing sleep, past the time when the baby needs to be fed at night.
Another emotional regulation skill is to learn to manage emotions when not getting what they want. Toddlers don't have this yet, but they still rely on parents to make decisions for them. A toddler may ask for cookies for dinner, and the parent will say no- because that is not a nutritious dinner. The toddler will tantrum. They will cry, kick on the floor, and possibly say "you are a bad Daddy".
Which is the best "good Dad" decision? Give the toddler the cookie, the toddler calms down, decides you are a nice Dad. Then learns that this behavior works to get them cookies for dinner, and keeps on tantruming.
Or- the Dad knows he's a good Dad, no matter what the toddler says, and says no, dinner is meat and vegetables, and lets the toddler tantrum and learn that this behavior doesn't work. Eventually the toddler outgrows the behavior.
What makes a good parent? Acting in the child's best interest, not according to the child's feelings. If the child directed their care - parents would be up all night, meals would consist of ice cream and cookies, and the house would be filled with toys and messy. Good parents provide age appropriate boundaries, and decide in the best interest for the child, even if the child tantrums.
Every human needs boundaries. One of the main ones is knowing - what is "me" what isn't "me". We determine who we are. For instance, you know you are a human, a male, how tall you are, and things about you, like your favorite foods, sports team, and your ethics. If we look to other people to decide who we are- then we don't have a solid sense of self boundary.
If you look to your GF feelings to decide your "goodness" then this will change according to her feelings. If your child, as a toddler, says you are a bad Dad because you don't let them have cookies for dinner- you know that isn't true, just because they said it during a tantrum.
For a pwBPD- their feelings feel like facts. They also tend to project their feelings, have black and white thinking. It may not be possible for you to be consistently a "good BF" in their thinking, and if you look to their feelings to decide your goodness, it may not be consistently attainable.
You need to have this boundary of what determines your "goodness". It's not perfection. You are human and humans aren't perfect all the time. Being available to your GF at all times to help her calm down isn't realistic. You need to work your job, you need sleep and time to yourself to take care of you. You are not a bad BF for taking care of your basic human needs.
One aspect of being a good father is to provide for your baby. The baby can't earn a living and babies need diapers, health care, housing, and more- these cost money. Your job is a necessity. You are not a bad BF for having a boundary to not be available while you are at work. Pook is correct in that you can't try to reason with your GF when she's in the middle of her emotional distress, but when she's calmer, later, you can say "I need to focus on my job during the day. I will check my phone at lunch, but otherwise I can not be available". This is not unreasonable. What if you were a surgeon or a pilot- would you stop the operation or plane to answer the phone? People need to focus on their jobs.
You aren't a bad BF- you are human and with a lot on your plate. Soon, you will have a baby, in addition to your GF who will need you, and so, it's necessary to have boundaries for your own well being and also for the sake of the child who will truly be dependent on you. We don't tell posters to stay or leave. I will say that each decision is a challenging one. One isn't the "better person" if they stay or leave- each makes the best decision possible in their circumstances.
They say on a plane "put your oxygen mask on first". The parent needs to be OK in order to take care of the baby or anyone else. The baby needs you to be an emotionally intact and functional father. You also can decide what you need to do to preserve your own emotional health. You are the one to decide which is the situation in which you can do that.
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