Hi @Pook075 ,
Thanks for clarifying. Indeed, I'm on the verge of forcefully ending our living together for good, even though I know she will deteriorate and our relationship could then become inviable. But I haven't taken any steps in that direction yet.
And I do think that the electronic devices, if correctly constructed, would end up bettering the relationship. Women usually use their voice as a weapon, so this is a simple disarmament strategy. And with that weapon off the table, living together would become "survivable" for me, allowing me to live more of a normal life. And more relaxed, I'd be a better provider, father, husband, and caretaker.
Your spouse is mentally ill and to me, that deserves compassion. I've had more than my share of dysregulated screaming from my BPD ex wife and BPD daughter, but over time I've also learned that I had a part to play in those events as well. The way I reacted mattered and it set the tone for what came next.
Your experience must be very different than mine because of their and our differences.
She gets compassion from me for everything she faces, except when she is being abusive, and no empathy for her abuse either. And here I'm not misusing the word "abuse." The word "bullying" is even more appropriate, as used in my initial post.
For the first half of our relationship (1.5 years), I never ever reacted badly. Not that I didn't want to, but I had a lot of experience and maturity and have always had extreme self-control capabilities. While BPD has an overactive amygdala, an underactive hippocampus, and little prefrontal cortex activation, I have the very opposite of that. That means an underactive amygdala (no fear, no alarm system, little emotional response), a high capacity to distinguish the current context from previous ones (big overdeveloped hippocampus), and I keep planning my next moves before choosing them, as if I were in a chess game (reliance on prefrontal cortex).
Yet, at a given point, since I had asked her to leave and she refused, I began to counter. But not because I could not hold myself. I just wanted to add a sort of positive punishment, as in operant conditioning.
Did it make things worse? In the long run, I don't think so. It does scale up her anger at the moment, but in the long run it puts a limit on her abuse, and most importantly, it helps me a lot to survive. Thus, for myself, my reactions made things better. For her, my reactions are not helpful at all, but I think they leave no psychological damage.