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Hey everyone,
It’s been a while since I’ve posted here.
I told my uBPDw that I was divorcing her about 9–10 weeks ago. Just so you don’t have to go back and read the history: we’ve been married for 25 years. The last ten or so things started to progressively get worse, especially the last eight. Extreme emotional volatility, epic rages, screaming, telling me she hates me. More threats than I can count — threats of divorce, threats to destroy me personally and professionally, threats to call the police and claim I was abusing her. She told me she wanted me dead but at least she’d get the money. She’s also been physically violent — including wrestling and choking me trying to get my phone. Threatened to destroy property, and destroyed property. Most of it has been directed at me, but my daughter (almost 20) also got a fair amount of it directly. And of course all of this happened in front of the kids. I've mentioned him before - my son is almost 22 and has an intellectual disability, which creates a whole other layer since we are currently joint guardians of him.
It took me years of therapy, reading, and educating myself on BPD and NPD to get to this point, and a lot of support here as well. Mostly held back for so long because of fear. When I was in it I often thought to myself "if it's this bad now and she's supposed to love me and want to stay in a relationship, how bad will it be once I end our relationship?" And now that I’m here, that fear is still a daily battle. A lot of rumination and disaster vision.
Initially, she seemed to take it well. No explosions. I was honest with her upfront — I just want this to be cooperative and cordial, split everything down the middle, and have equal shared arrangements for our son. The fact is, I’ve been covering nearly all of our living expenses. She pays a couple of personal bills, the power bill, and vehicle insurance. That’s it. And she makes good money — it’s not a matter of ability.
There was a lot of denial at first. She said she was just going to win me back. She did a complete 180 — suddenly helpful around the house, pleasant with the kids, transferring money into the joint account. She stopped drinking immediately, which I honestly believe was strategic, since her worst episodes have always involved alcohol. I think she 100% knew she couldn't control herself if she drank and the police would have been called on her quickly.
The “perfect wife and mother” phase slowly faded once she realized I wasn’t going to reconcile. The other complication: we’re still cohabitating. She's still not drinking that I'm aware of but uses marijuana daily.
Before I told her about the divorce, I felt like Julia Roberts in Sleeping with the Enemy. I did a lot of preparation — moved completely out of the master bedroom, set up the spare room with a security door that locks, installed a couple of cameras - all in a day when she was at work.
In the last 3–4 weeks, things have gotten harder. The smear campaign started almost immediately after I told her, even while she was being outwardly “kind.” Behind the scenes she was on the phone constantly, sometimes without even closing the door — I caught bits and pieces. Telling people I’m hiding money, that I’ve financially abused her, that I’m inattentive to our son and she’s been the primary caregiver. That last one is complete nonsense — I’ve been the primary caregiver for years, including meals, doctors’ appointments, everything related to his Social Security and annual guardianship plans. When my wife goes on one of her many girls trips, there's nothing missing, there's no gaps in stuff being done around the house. Logistically there's nothing she takes care of that's missed. She only takes care of her own stuff. If anything it's been easier when she's gone - one less person for me to cook for or clean up after or take care of. I still take care of everything around the house now that I always did: meal planning, grocery shopping, cooking, all of it.
The smear campaign has honestly been one of the hardest parts. I knew it was coming. I knew she’d be building her narrative with her family and our mutual friends. I pretty much understood that there was a long list of people I would likely never see or talk to again. That doesn’t make it easier, especially when I think about the people I’ve known for nearly 30 years. There are only a couple I still have regular contact with — people who’ve witnessed her episodes firsthand so they know she's full of it when she starts making stuff up.
There have also been outright fabrications — things that have come through the attorneys that I’ve had to correct. And in a strange way, it’s actually scarier now than before the divorce announcement. Before, everything was out in the open — she’d scream and rage and it was external. Now it’s unpredictable and mostly under the surface. She’s had a few moments where she’s lost control. One day in the kitchen she told me if I’m staying in the house, she’s not going to make it easy for me. She’s left me strange handwritten notes. I’m keeping everything documented.
I worry she could make some kind of move for exclusive use of the marital home. I like to think that truth and evidence will ultimately matter — I do have audio and video of physical abuse, and several years of text and email records showing clear behavioral patterns. Once I told her I was divorcing her she unilaterally removed several of the internal security cameras we’ve had for years. Then suddenly a few days ago she was extremely upset that our ring doorbell wasn’t working. I installed a new one and she's been testing it, making sure it captures motion, etc. it’s bizarre and outside her usual pattern. She's never cared about the doorbell camera before. Makes me worried if she’s trying capture me doing something. Can’t imagine what though. And what makes it even harder is this sort of stuff isn’t anything a lawyer can do anything about. It’s the things that only we, as the partners of these disordered people recognize. Its the patterns of our partners. It's like my marriage as a whole. I've had people ask me what was it, what happened that made you want to move forward with divorce? And it never was just one thing. It was death by a 1000 cuts. It wasn't one bad moment or episode. It was 100s of them.
I recently joined an in-person CoDA support group for men, and it’s been incredibly helpful. The first day I was there, I was describing the patterns of behavior and one of the other men immediately said, “Your wife is a borderline.” I was stunned — I don’t think anyone I’ve ever spoken to even knew what that meant. Turns out he divorced his borderline wife about seven years ago. You never want someone else to go through this, but there’s something genuinely comforting about not feeling alone. He jokes that whatever the rest of them are going through, I’m in the middle of mine and just trying to stay out of jail right now. And honestly, he’s not far off — I truly believe she would relish any opportunity to make that happen.
Most recently, a female neighbor approached me — someone we’ve known well since we moved in about eight years ago. Apparently my wife had told her that I’d threatened to call her and “bitch her out” over something involving our cat many months ago. Our cat was in heat and meowing constantly, and my wife was dysregulated about the whole thing and kept putting the cat outside. The neighbor had texted my wife suggesting the cat be brought in or looked at. Next thing I know, my wife had spun this whole story about how furious I was with the neighbor and had threatened to call her. Of course none of it was true. I had to explain that we’re going through a difficult divorce and that I’ve been hearing similar things from other people. I had to sit there and explain that this is just not in my character — I’ve never threatened anyone like that and never would. It’s clear projection: she’s the one who has been aggressive with neighbors in the past. I thanked the neighbor profusely for coming to me directly, told her I completely understood why she’d be upset if someone told her something like that, and apologized for the confusion. She seemed to take it well and appeared to believe me.
Then the other day — at a Special Olympics event for my son, of all places — she starts working the room. Going around to other parents, telling them we’re divorcing, that I asked for the divorce. That part I don’t love, but okay. What I do mind: she then starts telling a woman who is literally sitting right next to me that I asked for a divorce and I’m still living in the house and won’t leave — and that she thinks I’m staying just to torture her. The woman stepped away for a moment, and my wife turns to me and starts making small talk. Asking how I slept. Saying we should still try to be friendly. I’d been holding it together all day but I did say, calmly, that I don’t find it very friendly to tell people things about our private life while making false statements. I told her I financially cannot afford to move out — I’m covering all the household bills and debts. She said she knows how much I make and knows I can afford it. I just shook my head and said we’d be getting to mandatory disclosures soon.
All of it makes it super tempting to make a 'best hits' mix and blast out a stream to friends and family of audio and video and texts of my wife's behaviors over the years. Let's see what people think if they hear and see the truth. Not what I'm going to do. Just tempting.
The emotional whiplash is genuinely jarring. The finance thing in particular was triggering — she’s made similar statements many times over the years. “You make X, you can afford it!” But she’s never once been willing to look at an actual budget. It’s either denial, accusations of hiding money, or just pushing forward with demands regardless of the reality.
Ugh. I just want this to be over.
And one last thing — even if I could afford to move out, I’m not sure I could leave the kids alone with her...
Pray for me, friends. Hope you’re all doing well in your journeys
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