Pook075, I have a few follow up thoughts and questions.
I guess that in regard to my kids, one thing I really struggle with is feeling like I need to shield them from my husband. I know he says he loves them, and he acts really sweet and caring with them when not dysregulated, but the bottom line is that this isn't how I define love. Love means being there for someone, being unselfish, being reliable. So he can send them all the postcards in the world saying "I love you" and "I miss you", but I find it shocking that he is their dad and did not ask to see them for 4 months! I feel like I need to protect my kids from this kind of love, which is more like a transient feeling of attachment or warmth than real parental love.
I'm not saying my perspective is "right" and I understand that my husband has a serious mental illness, but that's how it feels on my end. And if I am honest, that's how his love feels for me. Like he has a warmth or attachment for me, but there is nothing there in terms of the true meaning of love. So while I feel like I can "handle it" (obviously I find it very sad, even though I can accept that this is the reality), I just feel so terrible for my kids that this is who their father is. I'm also very worried that he is going to ruin them somehow by constantly appearing and disappearing in their lives, so then I think maybe it would just be better if he didn't see them at all.
Hi Horselover! Thanks for replying and I'm glad we've given you some things to think about.
You are 100% right, these relationships are often not fair and it doesn't feel like true love at times. I'd do things for my ex all the time and when she was in the right mindset, she'd do things for me as well and show appreciation. Yet when she was depressed, all of that stopped and I felt like I was single living with a roommate. I felt so alone during those times.
I can also understand wanting to shelter the kids from future disappointment. It's a balancing act for sure, but remember that you don't know why dad didn't ask to see the kids. Part of it was probably shame- he felt terrible inside and had no idea how to come to terms with that. Part of it was probably instability- he couldn't figure out what he wanted or what he should do. He wants the marriage back, but how? He can't hold a job and he can't support his family. These kinds of thoughts eat at him and since there are no answers when you're allowing depression to defeat you, he doesn't see a path forward.
The way to defeat depression is to get up, to get moving on in life, to actively work through it until you're not depressed anymore. BPDs can really struggle to find this mindset though.
If I do proceed with a visit (and I most likely will, despite my feelings), as I can understand why there are also benefits to having a relationship with one's father, even if very imperfect, I hear your concerns (and Forever Dad) about having a planned visit scheduled. But then how do I go about this if we can't schedule it? I am totally out of touch with my husband at this point - I haven't talked to him in 4 months, as all communication, if you can call it that, has been through him sending me and the kids physical letters and me leaving him a couple voicemails about things that needed to be taken care of.
There has to be some level of communication- could you write him a letter back to sort of break the ice? In that letter, you could point out that you still care about him and that the kids miss him. You could also say that you'd like to find a way to resume communications, but you're not interested in arguing or blaming. You'd just like to do what's best for the kids in this situation if he's willing to talk.
In the first correspondence, you should keep it goal oriented and try your best to avoid blame. You know his issues, he knows his issues, so there's no reason to start with that. This keeps the pressure low and makes it easy to respond.
Now, about your suggestion for de-escalating things before I need to leave or hang up, I have never been able to do this. I really commend you for figuring out how to accomplish this with your ex and daughter. I'm not sure if it's because I'm just not as good at doing it as you are (which is entirely possible), or if my husband is a bit different than them. To me, it seems that he does not respond so much to me saying I do not want to hurt his feelings or any sort of efforts to calm him down once he is ramping up. What he does seem to want is for me to do whatever he is asking for. It's more about me following his request than validating his feelings or soothing him. And the problem is that when is starting to get dysregulated, his requests are often things that I can't do or really don't want to do (like for example, once he started losing it because we didn't have a couch at the time in our new place, and he needed us to buy one "RIGHT NOW"). There is one thing he does do when becoming dysregulated that is not a request - he suddenly starts saying he can't fulfill an obligation (ie let's say we were supposed to go out together as a family), and then starts screaming about how he can't do it (the obligation) and it's not his fault because we don't live together. In this case, I'm never sure how to respond, and I hang up the phone or leave. If you have any further thoughts, or suggestions, I would be interested to hear them!
I also wanted to add that my husband himself has told me that when he is dysregulated, there is nothing I can say or do that will stop him except apologize and say I'm wrong and basically do what he asks. It's almost like once he gets the feeling of pressure rising, he wants to lose it to release that pressure.
First off, none of this is intuitive. If I'm mad at you (or vise versa) maybe we say a few things we shouldn't, but eventually one of us realizes that we were both wrong and we apologize. Then we forget about it entirely and move on.
For BPD's, they start to become dysregulated and their emotions take over. Go back to our pretend argument for a second, but add in that someone you cared about passed away that day, your car won't start, there's no groceries in the house, kids are screaming for food, and you were fired from your job via text message. Then I come to you and say a few ugly things...that argument feels different, right?
That's more aligned with how your husband feels when he's dysregulated, it's like the entire world is collapsing on him and nobody could possibly understand the pain and frustration he's dealing with. So he says, "Do this, get that, go take care of this thing....". But does that solve the actual problem? No, not at all. The problem is mental illness and him having a mental breakdown, so getting him coffee or running an errand doesn't fix anything.
And if you focus on the requests, the stuff he says, then you never get to the actual root of the problem.
Again, this is highly counter-intuitive stuff...we don't just know how to see and react to mental illness. We learn it over time and we get it wrong more than we get it right. You can't focus on your husband's words when he's unstable. Instead, you must focus on his emotions and help him calm down enough to exit the disordered state.
I was interested in something you said at the end of your post, that my husband is looking for acceptance. And I can't accept him until he is better, and he can't get better until I accept him. I thought about this for a while, as I think this is an interesting point. I'm not so sure I would describe it so much as me not accepting him (I'm not denying that I don't accept him, but that's not the way I would have described it). It's more that I am literally afraid of him. It's like living with a fire that randomly bursts into flame, and it makes me feel so unstable - financially, physically, emotionally, mentally. He knows very well that I am afraid of him, and I'm sure this makes him feel even more ashamed. But how do I accept him "as is" if I am so mistrustful of him? It's not so much that I am judging him as a bad person (again, I'm not saying I'm not at all judgmental, but I don't think this is the primary issue), it's that I can't accept him as is because I am scared to be around the burning fire. So how can I accept him under these conditions, and how can he get better under these conditions?
I always go back and forth in my mind if there is just an inherent problem that can't be resolved - his needs and my needs are simply incompatible, so the relationship just can't work. BPD is so awful -it's like there is no way of winning.
To be honest, most BPD relationships fail for this very point...how do you trust someone that's not stable? If you let them back in your life, how long until they do the next thing that breaks your heart?
I don't think anyone here can answer this directly other than to say that he is your husband and because you have children, he will be involved in your life forever. I personally would set the bar low in terms of expectations- can we get to a place where we can have a calm phone conversation for 10 minutes?
At the same time though, I'd also keep in mind that BPDs recycle relationships. Eventually he will love-bomb you all over again and act like the best dad in the world. In the moment it will all be true because he's happy, life is perfect, and he has his family again. But the other stuff we've talked about here will come into play more than ever- can you make it last by communicating in a different way to help him remain stable? Can he get serious about therapy and recovery? There's so many "ifs" there.
For now though, I think baby steps is the perfect recipe. Find a way to communicate and work through problems in a healthy way. That's it. We can figure out what step two is once step one is complete.