After studying a lot about BPD and living with her for ten years, I feel like I can clearly see what is going to happen. She is already looking for someone to date. I suppose she is trying to find a new “favorite person” to fill the emptiness inside her. And then the cycle will repeat again.
When I see that, less than a month after everything happened, the mother of my two daughters is already looking for someone to date online, it breaks my heart and makes me wonder what I was doing for the past ten years.
As time passes, everything will probably unfold exactly as I expect. But the waiting feels painfully long. It feels like watching a movie when you already know the ending. In two months, three months, maybe by September, everything will likely happen the way I imagined.
It is extremely painful, but it is also strange how closely everything seems to follow the same pattern as so many BPD stories I have read. Sometimes she feels almost like a demon to me.
I know I need to take this pain as a lesson and start a new life, but this early stage is unbearably painful.
I'm not sure what you are waiting to see happen with her- but I hope you can refocus on your emotional recovery and future. She's going to do what she does- and there's no control over that.
Your hurt feelings are valid- and what has happened feels hurtful. As others have said- I strongly recommend counseling to help you process this and for your own emotional support. This is a lot to go through. What were you doing for the past 10 years? Trying to build a family like many people. You weren't wrong. You were doing the best you could with what you knew at the time. You didn't know the whole picture and most people wouldn't have known. Posters here have gone through a similar learning in some relationship with someone with BPD, either romantic partner or relative and is sharing what we learned, not what we already knew.
You've seen that "demon" side of her as you describe it for her inner emotional turmoil, but truly- that side of her plagues her the most, but unless she eventually decides on truly working in therapy, long term, it's her struggles. However, it does impact all her relationships in one way or another. Your children will have their own experiences with her- and eventually have to manage this relationship for themselves when they are adults. This is why investing in yourself and rebuilding your emotional and financial stability is going to be a benefit to both you and them. You can not "fix" your ex but you can do this for yourself.
The term "favorite person" might be misunderstood as something positive. It can feel good in the moment to be the favorite person but that person then also becomes the one most vulnerable to the disorder in the relationship. Looking for a new FP so soon is her way of projecting her own emotional distress on to a new person as an external solution to what is her own internal issues. No external solution can do that- because it isn't the source of her feelings in the first place. What may be appear to be a romantic relationship is her own way of trying to meet her emotional needs in this way. It's not that this person is "better" than you, or getting the best of her, it's that she is trying to fill an emotional need.
What FD is proposing is that- with your ex's focus on this new person- she's less focused on other things. Now is an opportunity to focus on your goal of reestablishing parental rights, because it's less of an interest for her now. With just the few things you have posted about your wife thinking of severing parental rights, sending your child to boarding school, and my own BPD mother whose function as a parent was affected by her BPD, I wonder if it may be that your ex can not function as a parent and might lose interest in it and she may not be capable of parenting. This is an opportunity for you to pursue your parenting rights.
Even if it's a financial stretch for you, a consultation with an attorney is worth the expense. Even if a full retainer isn't possible- a one time consultation can inform you of your rights and what path to take to clear your record of this on incident and attain parental rights. Maybe the attorney knows of some kind of payment plan or can refer you to some resources for legal aid. Knowing what to do can help you feel more in control of this.


