Well, just like probably a ton of us, I’m a long-time lurker and first-time poster here. This sub has really been my therapy over the last month, and I want to thank everyone for the insight and the sharing.
Here’s my story. I’m not sure I really have any questions, but I’m sure people will have opinions—and I welcome that.
I met my pwBPD about two years ago when she was training at work. I was stopped in my tracks: “Who is that?” I literally said out loud, “That’s the most beautiful girl I have ever seen in my life.”
She was an early-20s Desi girl who looked like she could have stepped right off the cover of a magazine. I was hooked immediately. I started showing interest, and within two months we went from talking at work to texting to late-night calls. I made my move, and soon we were attached at the hip.
I was in shock. I’m older and definitely not as attractive as this girl, but somehow I quickly became her favorite person. And as we all know, that’s one of the biggest highs in life you can ever feel.
The next three months were beyond a fairy tale. Life was good. I was happier than I can ever remember, and it was all because of this little BPD girl who made every day better than the one before. Of course, if you’re on this sub, you already know where this goes…
She was always open about her BPD—never once did she sugarcoat anything. At times she even warned me of what could come and gave me tips on what she would need to handle it. (And despite what everyone says, I absolutely should have listened.) But I was too happy to care. I had this amazing girl who seemed to love life with me as much as I loved life with her.
She had obviously been through some rough things: cuts all over her legs and wrists, a history of childhood sexual abuse. Absolutely brutal stuff no human should ever have to endure. And yet, there she was, head held high with a smile on her face. Honestly, it made me adore her even more for her strength. (I probably should have told her that.)
As the relationship grew, the honeymoon phase started to fade, and that old friend—BPD—started to show itself. At first it was small incidents, where her reaction to something would be absolutely off the charts. I started Googling BPD and figured, “I can handle this.”
News flash: I was an idiot.
What came next was a two- to three-month spiral that absolutely changed my life forever.
Once the spiral started, alcohol became the fuel for her splits. My next few months were spent in hell. She was never okay; everything was wrong. My nights were spent being cursed at, slapped, screamed at—sometimes until four or five in the morning.
I work two jobs, totaling about 55 hours a week, and there were weeks where I got only nine hours of sleep across five days. My health started to fail fast.
She made repeated attempts on her life: cutting her wrists, downing a bottle of pills in front of me (I had to force her to throw them up), drinking household cleaners. I had to involve the police, take her to the hospital—nothing seemed to break her free fall.
We even went on trips where she drank and threatened to jump out of hotel windows. I still have nightmares about those moments.
I was so lost. My friends and family could see I wasn’t okay and encouraged me to move on for my own sanity. But to me, my number one priority was getting her through this and keeping my promise to always be there for her. Her life felt more important than mine.
The strange thing was that the days after these episodes, she was super apologetic—embarrassed and devastated about what she had done. She agreed to stop drinking and begin treatment. Mentally, I was worse off than I had ever been, but seeing her at least try gave me hope for our future. She was my girl, and I decided I would carry whatever weight was needed.
The last year has been a rollercoaster of ups and downs. Work became unbearable with her—she would have meltdowns if I talked to a female friend, then want to go on trips with a bunch of guys. The hypocrisy drove me crazy: “It’s okay if I do it, because it’s different.”
She was finishing school, which she repeatedly tried to quit, but I convinced her to push through—and she did. I was beyond proud of her. She started getting job offers, and I thought the stress of not working together anymore would help our relationship.
But during this time, she told me “Just break up with me” at least ten times a day. It became her answer to everything. The verbal abuse escalated. She told me, “I wish you would die,” “Kill yourself.” She even once wished death on my dog. This became a near-daily occurrence.
I was exhausted. Tired. Weak. Sad. I developed chronic bronchitis, my health declined, and mentally I became a shell of a person.
The good days were still the best—but they became so rare. I still wanted her to thrive, to beat this, but she skipped meds, missed appointments, and seemed to refuse to help herself.
Eventually, she got a great job offer and moved back in with her parents after they bought a new house. I thought this would help her mental health. She started hanging out with new friends, and for a few weeks I felt like I had my girlfriend back. She was amazing again. I was never out of love, but now I really felt like we’d turned a corner.
Then, out of nowhere—around the same time as last year—she spiraled again. Her splits were constant, triggered by anything and everything. The rants returned: “I hope you die.”
She started sending me pictures of her blades, then photos of her bleeding wrists. I’d get constant calls: “You better fix this!” or “Now see what I do!” She threatened to sleep with coworkers. And still… my love for her never stopped. I scrambled to figure out ways to help her, but I didn’t know what I was doing. I hadn’t listened enough at the beginning. I didn’t have the tools.
About a month and a half ago, I nearly died. I choked in a Subway restaurant, started to lose consciousness, and even saw dead loved ones. My last thought as I clung to life was her face.
A stranger saved me. When I told her about it, she was horrified and told me how much she loved me and that she couldn’t be without me.
Later that night, she split and told me she wished I had died.
That broke me. I started rethinking everything, but my world still centered around her. The spiral continued, and now I wasn’t there to keep an eye on her. I was terrified she’d bleed out or overdose.
I figured that since everything about her mental health seemed to center around me, maybe I should step back. Maybe if I went away, she’d at least have some kind of mental “high” for a while. I knew she wouldn’t be alone long—guys chase her endlessly because she’s so gorgeous and charming.
I told her I needed space and started limiting contact.
It destroyed me. I was so trauma-bonded and codependent. I knew it carried a huge risk of her discarding me, but I needed her to “reset.”
After a few days, she started talking about going out with new friends. Her texts became less frequent, and I knew she was probably gone. I was dying inside.
Then one day she called. She told me how amazing her life was now, how great her new friends were, and that we should end things. (I thought it was already over,

.) Still, even that gave her a sense of control, and I was happy just to hear her voice full of life again.
We cried. We told each other how much we loved one another, how we’d never be the same. (I won’t be.) We said goodbye and even texted sweet things all night. I woke up to one final message, and that was that. I didn’t reply. I wanted to—but I didn’t want to get in her way.
For the first time in a long time, I started to think clearly. I researched BPD more deeply, got coaching, and really reflected on what I could have done better. I realized that to be with someone with BPD, you have to listen and learn.
I still had so much I wanted to say, so I wrote her a long message explaining my love for her and why I had to step back. She replied kindly, starting with, “It’s too late now, obviously,” but the rest was sweet. She made sure to tell me she’s the happiest she’s ever been, how amazing her new friends are, and how great life is—just three weeks after we last spoke.
Then came a flood of old photos, “I love you” and “I miss you” texts over the next two days. I asked to meet, and she agreed instantly. We hugged, we kissed—and I was over the moon.
As I was leaving, she mentioned her new friends were going on a trip the next day. She texted me a few times while away. When she got back, we reconnected, but she said, “I know what you’re trying to do,” and “I can’t do this because of my BPD.” Then she sent more photos of us, more “I love you” messages, then said goodbye again.
That’s when I decided to stop contacting her.
I figured there was already someone else (I’m on this sub enough to know,

). Maybe she’s just happier in her new life—going to bars, riding the high. Even though I know it will eventually crash, maybe it’s what she needs right now.
Two days later, she called me crying. She said she missed me, wanted to meet (I was at work), told me she loved me. She started texting after the call: how she couldn’t stop thinking about us, how sad she was. But then: “I don’t want to feel stuck.” and “I don’t know what I want.”
Her last text said how sad she felt. I didn’t respond.
I love this woman more than life—dumb or not. Everyone thinks she’s going to come back. I don’t. But I absolutely want her to, because despite the BPD, I love her more than anything.
I know it will get better.
But I sure miss my pwBPD—and probably always will.