I do not actually feel better right now. I am scared. This could get really really bad. I know what I need to do, but getting there safely is going to be a challenge.
My attitudes and patterns have changed the past few months as I started to figure things out. It is hard to say if she has noticed. One thing that was a change is that I started to allow myself to show anger when she interrupted me. She has been doing this for many years, and I have tried talking to her about it. But when I started to get angry about it the behavior changed. She interrupts me a whole lot less now. But it seems to be a subconscious response, and she has not said anything about it.
I know that my anger (or any anger) is tough for her to handle. It is unfortunate, but the few times I have gotten really angry at her are the times that there have been changes. But I do not want her to be different because of fear.
But for the most part I do try to play the game.I keep doing all the things I have always done to keep things calm. Sometimes I dislike that I am doing it, but my therapist reminded me that I am doing it to keep myself emotionally safe.
There are some books on this site about ways to do the split. I really need to get and read one of those to help me find a safe way to extract myself.
Thank you for your time and thoughts.
My attitudes and patterns have changed the past few months as I started to figure things out. It is hard to say if she has noticed. One thing that was a change is that I started to allow myself to show anger when she interrupted me. She has been doing this for many years, and I have tried talking to her about it. But when I started to get angry about it the behavior changed. She interrupts me a whole lot less now. But it seems to be a subconscious response, and she has not said anything about it.
I know that my anger (or any anger) is tough for her to handle. It is unfortunate, but the few times I have gotten really angry at her are the times that there have been changes. But I do not want her to be different because of fear.
But for the most part I do try to play the game.I keep doing all the things I have always done to keep things calm. Sometimes I dislike that I am doing it, but my therapist reminded me that I am doing it to keep myself emotionally safe.
There are some books on this site about ways to do the split. I really need to get and read one of those to help me find a safe way to extract myself.
Thank you for your time and thoughts.
I experienced something kinda similar, in that when I would lose my temper I noticed BPDxw would calm down.
I would immediately regret the loss of self-control, and think to myself that I had "sunk to her level." Perhaps that's why she would calm down? She felt a measure of control in that she had provoked an expected response from me? Paradoxically, when I'd stay calm, she'd get more unhinged.
I expected her to use my anger against me, like "How dare you talk to me like that!" kinda stuff, but no, she would just calm down.
It seemed like she grew up around that sort of behavior; her parents were always attacking eachother, cutting eachother down, and her mom would get very hysterical. There was apparently physical abuse as well, although she claimed it was only one occasion. I doubt it given that her dad had a drinking problem for a long time, and there was by her own account mutual infidelity throughout their marriage. Maybe that's the only sort of communication she understood?
A guy who knew both of us told me after we were divorced that she expected me to hit her. That was a line I never crossed, and would not cross, but as sick as it is to say, I think there was something to that as well. Some people who grew up with violence and extreme emotional conditions might get accustomed to them and find comfort in them.
Anyways, don't let fear of what could happen deter you from what you feel you need to do. Prepare for it, but don't let it control you.
It's your life, you only get one of them, and if you don't want to spend the rest of it with a disordered spouse, it's your right to say so, and do so. You don't need another reason, and you don't need to justify it to anyone.
All of us here who endured these miserable relationships have earned that right, and in my opinion are beyond judgment of anyone else, whether they're deciding to divorce a BPD-spouse, or go no-contact with a BPD family member.



tools and skills
even people with BPD were saying they could relate. I was telling my parents I went through stuff like that and they were just blown away haha