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I agree with the gist of what Pook and Notwendy are saying. If you enable your spouse by doing things for her that she could and should do for herself, you could be getting in the way of her learning about the real world and getting some therapy. In the short term, you might feel that you're not harming yourself that much, but what about the long term? Is bending over backwards and over-functioning for your spouse sustainable? What sort of example are you setting for your kids, in a world where you shoulder all the responsibilities and your spouse doesn't contribute anything of substance, and she's having an affair on the side as well? What are the kids learing about consequences, about adult relationships? Will they take after you, or maybe after their disordered mother?
Apologies if this sounds blunt, but it sounds to me like your wife is less functional than a five-year-old. Anyway, that's exactly what I thought about the pwBPD in my life when she wasn't getting therapy. Many five-year-olds are able to get up in the morning, get dressed, attend school, wash their hands, eat meals at the table with family, pick up their toys, say please and thank you, and go to bed at bedtime. My guess is that your pwBPD was able to do that at one point. To me it's not acceptable that she has regressed so much.
Look, if mom sleeps the day away and doesn't deal with any adverse consequences, the kids will start to wonder why they can't sleep the day away too and get out of things they don't want to do, such as go to school. I've seen exactly this sort of dysfunctional behavior impact children, in a scenario not dissimilar to what you describe. What happened? Ultimately, the courts intervened with an actual consequence. Since the disordered parent was napping during most of visitation and was unable to provide his kids with meals, the courts reduced visitation time and also mandated that visitation be supervised by a competent adult (i.e. Grandma).
I understand how challenging enablement and enmeshment can be. I sat by and watched a full-grown adult abdicate adult responsibilities, living rent- and obligation-free in my own home, sleeping the day away, all the while acting out, treating others like crap and refusing to get therapy, because in her mind, everyone else was the problem. Apparently she was too "ill" to work, do chores, be courteous, eat meals with the family, etc., and yet she was always well enough to drive on her own, travel and buy herself things she wanted with her dad's money. Her dad delayed retirement and kept working so that she didn't have to work herself. You might think, that's OK, because by letting her do whatever she wanted, she was at least safe and alive. But that wasn't sustainable, fair or healthy for the other members of the family, and it certainly wasn't good for her, either. The "real world" wouldn't let her get away with that sort of behavior.
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