Home page of BPDFamily.com, online relationship supportMember registration here
January 24, 2026, 07:49:55 AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Board Admins: Kells76, Once Removed
Senior Ambassadors: SinisterComplex
  Help!   Boards   Please Donate Login to Post New?--Click here to register  
bing
Pages: 1 ... 9 [10]
 91 
 on: January 20, 2026, 09:57:55 AM  
Started by PathFinder1 - Last post by Rowdy
Well it’s good that your husband recognises the problems he faces and is doing something about it. There is a lot going on there and can imagine a lot to work through and it isn’t all going to happen at once. With all that going on I don’t doubt for a minute he will have moments when he becomes dysregulated.
Is he seeing a therapist about any of his issues?

As for help for you, there are a couple of things from your post that stick out. You said that he enjoys clearing the snow from the pavement and looks forward to doing so, so I would ask what made you decide to do it without his help? I think that would be more the autism side of things that upset him about not getting the opportunity to do something he was looking forward to.
You also mention hanging around doing stuff in case he might actually talk to you about it, but then accuses you of ignoring him. Have you tried calmly asking him if he wants to talk about it or does this just trigger him? As from your post it sounds like you are aware he is sitting there ruminating about it so might be easier to make the first move so he feels ‘seen’


 92 
 on: January 20, 2026, 09:40:55 AM  
Started by lisaea1523 - Last post by GaGrl
It could be a great help to call your local domestic abuse hotline. Emotional abuse is abuse, and he is emotionally abusing those children. They are afraid of him, and they are being traumatized.

The well-trained people on the domestic abuse hotline can help with clarifying what your options are, the best way to separate him from the household safely, housing options, etc.

I urge you to talk to them.

 93 
 on: January 20, 2026, 09:01:25 AM  
Started by PathFinder1 - Last post by PathFinder1
Hi Super Daddy - Sometimes at me, then I realize that I'm the focal point for a bunch of other crap. He has had professional help but not in a long time. At this point, I'm only trying to help me, and how to respond/not respond in a way that doesn't fan the flames. Back to AlAnon? Somewhere on this board i read and saved this "their intense and annihilating anger comes from believing that others don't care about them, are not listening to them, or are not meeting their core needs."   I know this sounds odd.    But this is a mental disorder where we can't assume that what's ~normal~ (whatever normal is) and ordinary for us works for them.   We process life and life events vastly differently."

 94 
 on: January 20, 2026, 08:46:51 AM  
Started by lisaea1523 - Last post by lisaea1523

I know this isn't easy advice to hear.  But I think it's the advice that you know in your heart is true and you want to hear others say it.  So that's what I'm doing- there are zero other options here.  You are responsible for you and the kids.  He must leave.

I appreciate your direct and supportive feedback , you're a great example of balancing direct communication and validating the difficult emotions- disappointment, fear, sadness

 95 
 on: January 20, 2026, 08:30:44 AM  
Started by lisaea1523 - Last post by lisaea1523
You need to see an attorney for some legal advice.  Can you get a referral for one in your area?

I have an excellent attorney that has helped me with my previous divorce, custody which was a worse more dangerous situation than this one. I am very familiar with the process and how to prepare and gather evidence.

You need to come up with a discreet way to document and record his abusive conduct.  Voice recorder maybe? Or hit the voice memo function on your phone whenever you're with him?  Practice doing this so it becomes easy and habitual.  Almost needless to say, emphasis on the word "discreet": when pwBPD realize they're being recorded, it escalates the problem. 

I have recorded some of his verbal abuse and have it saved in a secure folder on my phone. He saw some of the recordings- his response was more hurt and distrust than anger. He seems very ashamed about these behaviors and doesn't want anyone else to know. :-(

 96 
 on: January 20, 2026, 08:11:44 AM  
Started by ChoosingPeace - Last post by Pook075
Hello and welcome to the family! 

My BPD daughter is 26 and I'm largely on the other side of things after she took therapy seriously a few years ago.  She still has bad days (or weeks, sometimes months) but it's a lot different now than it was for many, many years.

I'm only sharing this to show that there is hope and the NC is only for right now.  A year from now, who knows what might change.  Yet today, you are in control of your life and that's the life you can make better.  I think you're doing exactly the right thing for where you're at right now.

 97 
 on: January 20, 2026, 08:02:34 AM  
Started by hiiumaa - Last post by SuperDaddy
Hi hiiumaa ,

I read your entire long post, and I got worried about you because you commented about bruises. It's also worrisome when you wrote, "vandalising my flat, throwing things, pushing pets away."

The problem I see in those interactions is the lack of consequences. It seems like the only consequence is you withdrawing temporarily, but your partner is kind of used to that already. And from what I understood, your partner also does the withdrawal for very long periods?

Can you describe better what exactly those withdrawals mean? Is it a no-contact period? I think the full withdrawal should ideally be very short, only for the current day. Then you should maintain limited contact until your partner starts to treat you well.

When you said your partner does "alcohol consumption to the point of unconsciousness (sometimes for up to four weeks)," I'm assuming you meant a cycle of drinking and becoming unconscious for a few hours, then drinking again. This is something that must be treated, so please check this other post of mine.

In regard to consequences, I think you should warn your partner that you will call the police if they get physical with you. But you should choose a very good moment to say that. Ideally, that should be said in a lovely way. I don't know the genders, but in case you are female and your partner is male, this notification will have a strong effect.

Also, the natural withdrawal is not a boundary unless it is clearly described beforehand. For instance, you could say, "I'll not be with you while you are drinking, so I'll walk away when you start drinking, and I'll not allow you to bring alcohol to my place. And I'll only return 24 hours later or after the alcohol effect seems to be gone." But if you allow your partner to get drunk in your place, that will be a problem because to follow through with this boundary, you may need to sleep elsewhere.

By the way, do you love your partner? The existence of love is fundamental for the relationship to work. In my current relationship, we do love and admire each other a lot, so we have gas to go through the challenges.

My previous partner also had BPD, and we lived together for 7 years. However, what made me choose her was not real deep love but rather because she was the "path of least resistance." So my basic reaction to her aggressiveness was to withdraw only.

When I met her, I was in contact with a few girls from the internet, but she was the nearest one, living 300 km from me. She didn't care that I still lived with my 1st partner and didn't care to take a long-distance bus trip to see me. I even told her I was more interested in another girl, and she got angry at this but didn't get away from me at all. While other girls would expect us to get to know each other gradually, this would take a long-distance bus trip to see me and then sleep with me in a hotel (because I still lived with my 1st partner). Even today, she still keeps trying to get closer.

But why was I choosing the easiest path? Because I had trouble staying single due to childhood emotional neglect, and I needed a quick fix. Staying single was unbearable for me. I was living with my 1st wife still, but we were just sharing the same home and had already signed a paper recognizing our separation.

A few years later, I got rid of my pain with self-help books. So after the relationship ended, I could be single for more than 2 years without any problem. So when I found my current partner, I was not in a rush; I was fine with waiting to find someone I really liked. I was unlucky that my current partner also has BPD, but I was lucky in other aspects because she is so attractive and funny, treats her stepkids so well, and does care about me. For instance, if I get a mild fever, then she becomes desperate. And we both always care if the other partner is eating well.


 

 98 
 on: January 20, 2026, 07:54:37 AM  
Started by ChoosingPeace - Last post by BPDstinks
Hi and welcome!  I agree (though, I am NC by my (daughter) pwBPD's choice) it is wonderful to have people who UNDERSTAND; my husband does not even understand this nasty beast of a disease!

 99 
 on: January 20, 2026, 06:43:41 AM  
Started by ScarletOlive - Last post by Strawberry29
My understanding was that the OP was waiting for an apology from her brother, before reconnecting, rather than wanting to apologise herself (not sure about what!).

I have been several times in the same situation with my brother. The way I solved it has been pretty similar to what Notwendy is suggesting. I am personally ok with no apology, as long as there is desire to change and address the things I want to change and thre is respect for my limits. I do not need him to say "I am sorry, it's all my fault", I just need him to behave better and not abuse me.

A couple of months ago instead, I got an email with apologies out of the blue... But it was a weird email, apologising but in his own way... Two minutes later he was asking for money (which he does not need, and no idea why he asked), and when I refused he lashed out and was the usual shenanigans. I still have his "heartfelt" apology written if I want to go and have a read, but it serves no purpose. What I wanted was for him not to go back to do the same things over and over again if I did not do what he wanted.

 100 
 on: January 20, 2026, 05:16:19 AM  
Started by hiiumaa - Last post by hiiumaa
Hello everyone,

I would like to tell you about my 3.5-year relationship with my partner, who was diagnosed with BPD/NPD about 2 years ago and quarterly drinking as a comorbidity, and ask you what you think. He: m53, me: w45

We met three and a half years ago when he lived only 10 minutes away from where I lived. A few weeks after we met, he lost his job and, in a rash decision, moved 50 kilometres away.

 From then on, we had a long-distance relationship for two years. I travelled by train to visit him on weekends and at least once a week during the week. For almost the entire two years, he refused to come here because he might meet people from his ‘former’ life. This was very difficult for me because I had a 10-year-old son from a previous relationship, whom my partner was also afraid of because my son rejected him at first.


For about three and a half years, I was in a close, emotionally intense relationship with my partner. The relationship was characterised by a strong bond and a high level of personal commitment on my part, but at the same time by recurring dysfunctional patterns on his part, which became more pronounced rather than resolved over time.

 I tried for a long time to bring stability into his life through reliability, care, understanding, organisation, and emotional presence. At the same time, I developed increasingly clear boundaries over the course of the relationship after realising that my previous behaviour had strong co-dependent traits and was increasingly damaging to myself. ---

Central relationship and escalation pattern (cyclical):
Over the years, a recurring pattern emerged, often at similar intervals:

 1. Phase of relative stability/idealisation. He appears motivated, euphoric, sometimes manic. Extreme level of activity: excessive training, many projects at the same time, language course, driving licence, career fantasies.  Highly exaggerated fantasies about the future and himself (carrier, wealth, large house, special significance). I am needed as an important reference person, sometimes idealised.

Breakdown/dysregulation:
 Reality, boundaries or frustrations (e.g. my boundaries, external obstacles) cause these fantasies to collapse. When drunk, he often describes feelings of failure, shame and inner emptiness to me retrospectively for such phases. Increasing irritability, withdrawal, fatigue, listlessness.
Externalisation & devaluation: Responsibility is shifted to the outside world, especially to me. Accusations: that I am cold, controlling, not empathetic, not loving, not connected, not loyal enough. My boundaries or my withdrawal (as self-protection) are presented as the actual cause of the crisis.

Escalation / breaking off contact:
Massive emotional attacks, sometimes also physical transgressions. Frequent break-ups (‘it's over’, ‘we have nothing’, ‘we are drifting apart’).  This is often followed by silence for days or weeks.  In the past, this was usually followed by a return – but recently, there has been increasing hardening of attitudes.

Alcohol as an amplifier Alcohol plays a central, destabilising role:
repeated heavy alcohol consumption in stressful situations. When intoxicated: aggressive accusations, insults (‘pea brain’, ‘slut’),  excessive contact, night-time phone calls, revisiting old conflicts, physical assaults on me (bruises), blackouts, unconsciousness, suicidal thoughts, extreme swings between self-aggrandisement and self-deprecation (‘I am an insect’). 
Even when sober, there were escalations (vandalising my flat, throwing things, pushing pets away).

Afterwards, he did not take responsibility, but instead relativised or reversed the blame (‘You were evil,’ ‘I wanted to prevent your meltdown’). ---

Responsibility & care – asymmetrical:
He expects comprehensive care from me, especially when he is ill. When I was ill or weakened myself (migraine, gastrointestinal problems), he reacted with disparagement, coldness and withdrawal. My ‘not being immediately available’ was regularly interpreted as a withdrawal of love or proof of a lack of connection. ---

Emotional abuse dynamics:
Subtle and overt forms of emotional abuse were evident:
Gaslighting: Questioning my perception despite chat evidence.
Blame reversal: His boundary violations are redefined as my ‘anger problem.’
Mixed messages: Closeness and devaluation at the same time.
Implicit punishment: Silence, blocking, breaking off contact when boundaries are set. Division: I am either idealised or ‘painted black’ depending on my inner state.

These dynamics led to the following for me:

Severe inner tension, fear of reactions, physical stress symptoms, increasing self-censorship, withdrawal as a form of self-protection.

--- For a better understanding: His family of origin & regression:
Highly ambivalent relationship with his parents, father highly narcissistic, mother co-dependent and still uses my partner for her own emotional regulation, he tries to protect her. Idealisation of his mother coupled with anger and dependence. Repeated role assignment towards me (‘You're like my mum’), only to then suddenly say: ‘You're never as loyal as my mother. Nobody loves me like my mother.’ Expectation of unconditional empathy and loyalty. In family contexts, strong regression, increased risk of alcohol abuse, hardly any ability to set boundaries.

Fantasies & breakdowns:
Excessive fantasies serve as a means of regulating self-esteem.  When they do not come to fruition, the result is not ‘normal frustration’ but an existential collapse, in 99.9% of cases followed by alcohol consumption to the point of unconsciousness (sometimes for up to four weeks). The collapse of the fantasy feels like a loss of identity to him.  During these phases, the risk of alcohol abuse, devaluation and loss of contact increases massively. ---

My role & development:

In the early years, strongly co-dependent behaviour:

Constant availability (even at night), ongoing emotional regulation, organisation of authorities, doctors, paperwork, financial support, long journeys (50 km, sometimes 2 hours each way). Nevertheless, it was never enough. A single ‘no’ or delayed help was enough to cause an escalation. Later, a conscious development towards clarity, boundaries and self-protection.  It was precisely this development that was increasingly perceived as a threat. ---

 Current situation (as of 10 days since contact was broken off): 
Last contact broken off after escalation around New Year's Eve (alcohol, boundary violation). Silence since then.  At the same time, activity on his part on Facebook – also a pattern in such situations:

Selfies, a staged ‘perfect world’, portraying herself as single,  previous transgressions with other women online. Facebook acts as a stage for self-esteem regulation and defence against shame.  Her silence towards me seems like dissociation + self-protection, not like a mature decision.

It's such a long story... I hope this overview has given you a rough idea of how the relationship works.

Since this pattern is cyclical, when things are going well, the relationship is ‘over’ from his point of view after three months. Because that's when he inevitably has another breakdown and takes his frustration out on me. Always. Even if the trigger was, for example, an unsuccessful job application. Or contact with his father, etc.

My question now is:
does anyone else know that every conflict inevitably leads to the partner with BPD immediately declaring the relationship over? In the 3.5 years, it was ALWAYS ‘over’ after three months at the latest.

In addition, I increasingly have the impression that my distancing and self-protection are causing him to feel more and more ashamed and making it increasingly difficult for him to get close to me again.

A quick note: he has been in therapy on and off for 1.5 years. He does not accept the BPD/NPD diagnosis. He believes he has post-traumatic bitterness disorder. That's not a bad thing in itself, but I don't know if it will really help in the long run.

I would be very grateful for your thoughts on this and thank you in advance for your time and for reading.

P.S. He has been living nearby again for several months now – we are only a 10-minute drive apart.


Pages: 1 ... 9 [10]
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2006-2020, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!