Hi there,
I think that to someone with BPD, many things in life feel like trauma. And when faced with "trauma," their reactions seem generally extreme, over-the-top and impulsive--they seem not to consider the longer-term consequences. An example might be that a conversation about shared living expenses feels to them like exploitation, a break-up, betrayal, not caring, totally unfair. Another example might be that perceived slowness in responding to a text might be considered rude, inattention, unloving--even if there's a plausible justification (you were very busy, driving or asleep at the time). A pwBPD tends to go overboard with reactions; his response is not a proprotionate one. He might get raging mad and threaten to break up with you, to try to get you to do his bidding. He might stonewall you. He might just yell at you until you relent and give him what he demands. I think that deep down, he knows he's behaving poorly, which induces a deep shame. So what does he do? In his mind he distorts fact patterns, and creates a new version of events where YOU are blamed for whatever happened, so that he can feel better about himself and his behavior.
I guess I'm trying to say that his version of events can be highly distorted and self-serving, usually to blame-shift and avoid feelings of shame. I think that lying isn't uncommon with BPD. But with BPD, they can feel "justified" in twisting the truth, because their pain is too intense for them to handle. It's almost like they look to the world to explain their pain, and they narrow in on perceived grievances while ignoring everything else that happened if it doesn't fit the traumatic victim narrative. I think this is the black-and-white lens through which they interpret the world--they just don't see the whole picture, and they don't relate the entire story reliably, either. I think that since they believe the narrative (typically a victim or blame-shifting narrative), they think they are justified, and it's not lying. And here's the other thing--I think when deep down they know they're lying, they retreat in avoidance. Avoidance is easier than taking responsibilility. Over time, he may try to re-connect with you and pretend like nothing happened, hoping that you'll forget about the lie(s). Sound familiar? That's typical BPD in my experience. I could ask the forum the question if the pwBPD in their life ever apologizes. I think I know what the answer will be in most cases.


