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 91 
 on: December 22, 2025, 06:21:08 AM  
Started by cats4justice - Last post by Pook075
I wanted to point out a distinction. What a pwBPD may want can appear like a normal "want" or an excessive want. What is different is how they perceive the purpose of that want- as if it is the solution for their own emotional distress. It's projection. Something external isn't a solution for what is internal to them but they may think it is.

There's a desperate emotional "need" on their part to have what they believe is the solution but the solution, whatever it is becomes a temporary fix. Thus the pattern- they have to have the marriage, the new car, the vacation, the whatever is on their mind as a need because they perceive it as the thing that will fix everything.

It's not "wrong" to want to marry someone. The faulty thinking is seeing marriage as the solution to their own emotional distress or you going into marriage for the purpose of easing your partner's distress when you don't really want to marry them. Marriage isn't a solution to someone's problems. It's also not "wrong" to choose to not marry someone. It's not helping or being kind to someone to marry them if you don't want to do that.

Whatever you choose, do it with purpose and thought on your part- as marriage is a major decision.



I completely agree and that's the point I was trying to convey.  There's nothing wrong with your partner wanting to marry, and her intentions may seem 100% pure.  In her mind, they probably are. 

You also mentioned that living together led to more dysfunction, and a wedding ring will not fix that.  It's very possible, probable even, that she expects that marriage will instantly fix everything (with you, with the kids, etc).  It will not.  Only working through it will make meaningful change.

With that said, the decision is completely yours and there are no wrong choices.  You love who you love and there's no shame in that.  We're just trying to give you a clearer big picture.

 92 
 on: December 22, 2025, 06:10:49 AM  
Started by cats4justice - Last post by Notwendy
For BPDs, there's almost always a belief that if they just had this one thing, their life would be perfect and they wouldn't be mentally ill anymore.  But time after time, they get what they want and there's soon a new thing that they must have for life to make sense.  A new job, a new partner, a new epic vacation, a new car, the list can be endless and none of them fix the actual problem in their minds.

It's just a stopgap- everyone's happy when they get shiny new things.  But that happiness always wears off.

For your BPD partner, marriage won't fix things.  Next it will be a baby, a new home, etc.  It will make things tougher on you though because the dynamic with your kids will change, and your partner's stance will change too since you should always stand by your wife. 

I wanted to point out a distinction. What a pwBPD may want can appear like a normal "want" or an excessive want. What is different is how they perceive the purpose of that want- as if it is the solution for their own emotional distress. It's projection. Something external isn't a solution for what is internal to them but they may think it is.

There's a desperate emotional "need" on their part to have what they believe is the solution but the solution, whatever it is becomes a temporary fix. Thus the pattern- they have to have the marriage, the new car, the vacation, the whatever is on their mind as a need because they perceive it as the thing that will fix everything.

It's not "wrong" to want to marry someone. The faulty thinking is seeing marriage as the solution to their own emotional distress or you going into marriage for the purpose of easing your partner's distress when you don't really want to marry them. Marriage isn't a solution to someone's problems. It's also not "wrong" to choose to not marry someone. It's not helping or being kind to someone to marry them if you don't want to do that.

Whatever you choose, do it with purpose and thought on your part- as marriage is a major decision.


 93 
 on: December 22, 2025, 05:52:40 AM  
Started by learning2breathe - Last post by Notwendy
I could have written your post. We all were enlisted into emotional caretaking BPD mother- and my father was her enabler. I agree with having some boundaries on your doing this as an adult, but how you go about this, and the reaction from your parents and other family members is something to think carefully about. My experience is a cautionary tale.

I had perceived my BPD mother as the one with the problem and my father as the nice good guy, victim to her behavior. This wasn't accurate. He also was a part of the dynamics between the two of them, a dynamic that was more complex than I realized. Your parents have been doing this for years. This is your father's primary relationship and focus.

Read about the Karpman triangle dynamics. https://www.bpdfamily.com/content/karpman-drama-triangle. This helped me to have a framework for the behavior and relationships in the family. BPD mother ( and I believe this is common for pwBPD) was in victim position, Dad as her rescuer. Any perceived threat to BPD mother- real or not- the two would bond together against. BPD mother perceived people as being
"on her side" and "not on her side" and Dad would be on her side. Any distress on her part- real or not- Dad would step in to appease- similarly to finding the college classes and complimenting her as with your mother.

It may appear otherwise but Dad wants this rescuer role as much as BPD mother sees herself as victim. Your father isn't a victim. He's a part of this, even if it is difficult- he could choose to have boundaries too, but he doesn't. I eventually understood his role better when I did work on my own co-dependent/enabling tendencies- these were behaviors that I was raised with- but wanted to change.

Next, look at family systems. I don't have a specific article to post but reading about it I saw that families operate as a unit. If there's a disordered person in the family, other members take on certain roles to keep the family in balance. The roles may be disordered too- like children being enlisted as co- emotional caretakers- but they are functional within the family unit. If one person changes their role, the other members will feel discomfort. First, they will attempt to get the "offender" family member back into their role. If that isn't effective, they may then oust or exclude that family member and form a new balanced family unit. This may help explain the behavior of other family members when you consider changing yours.

I think you are on the right track with your own therapy and how you interact in relationships. I have done this too, and also with attention to enabling behavior and boundaries. All this is good work. However, keep in mind that you have had some recovery and are interacting in new emotionally healthier ways with people, you know better, but your parents, and also possibly your siblings, have not changed.

So back to boundaries- yes to boundaries but "pick your battles". I did have boundaries with BPD mother- over the boundaries that were important to me. One was that she was beginning to enlist my own children as emotional caretakers to her. She could be verbally and emotionally abusive. Protecting my own kids, and my own emotional well being was a boundary to keep.

The other was Dad's well being. He got sick and she was in charge of his care. I intervened thinking I was doing this in Dad's best interest. What actually happened was that I unknowingly stepped into the Karpman triangle, which I didn't know about yet. I also was stressed, upset myself, and emotional over the situation. I loved my father and thought we had a good relationship but the dynamics with my mother were stronger than anything else.

BPD mother disliked boundaries. She was angry at my having them. I did have words with her, something I usually avoided doing as it resulted in her reacting even more but we don't have as much self control during stressful situations. A "normal" parent would have understood that the situation was difficult for all family members too. But BPD mother, could only see the situation from victim perspective, and she reacted. Dad took her side "against" me. She rallied other family members to her side as well.

What I didn't realize until I naively stepped into this dynamic is that- the whole family system relied on each of us maintaining our roles. If we didn't- BPD mother reacted and the result, is that this increased Dad's discomfort in the relationship and he felt the need to fix it. The very same dynamic you see if your mother has an issue, real or not, she reacts, Dad becomes uncomfortable, steps in to fix it- and also enlists others to do so.

I don't regret having boundaries with BPD mother. They were necessary. I don't regret standing up for my father's well being, but I didn't realize how much of a reaction that would elicit. If I were to do it differently- it would have been with more knowlege of the dynamics in their relationship and family dynamics, and also how my own emotional reaction to BPD mother added to the drama in ways I didn't imagine.

My mother's extended family would compliment her like your father asked her too. It seemed strange to us- they'd rave about her doing what we think of as ordinary things as if she did something amazing. But there was the same imbalance in the family as yours. BPD mother did attend college but her extended family members had careers and she didn't. I don't know how aware they were of what they were doing but somehow they knew that this helped to keep the peace with her.

My best advice to you is to have boundaries but pick your battles and know that what you are stepping into when you change your behavior in the family could be bigger than what you expect. I don't suggest you continue to have no boundaries and appease your mother- but to proceed with caution.

This also depends on how close you live to your parents and how often/long you visit. Sometimes going along with the dynamics and not rocking the boat over a short visit is the path you want to take. Sometimes holding a boundary even though there will be a reaction is necessary.

You decide but know, your parents aren't going to change their pattern. Still, you have changed your behavior for the better, and are going to change the cycle for yourself, your own relationships, and that is a good thing.






 94 
 on: December 22, 2025, 04:44:54 AM  
Started by Luckyduckie55 - Last post by Pook075
Hello and welcome to the family! 

Let's start with your question- you are not the problem.  The problem is mental illness and BPD is generally the worst for people that are the closest to the person with mental illness.  His family wouldn't see that and they might not understand it either.  There's no use arguing with them over it.

How old are you and your husband?

For the fabricated memories, he's telling "his truth" and it's not necessarily how anyone else would see it.  There's no use arguing over that either because that's the crux of the mental illness.  He always feels like a victim and arguing only makes things worse since he feels rejected.

Let me ask; what are you doing for your mental health?  Is there a friend, neighbor, or family member you regularly talk to?  Accepting his abusive behavior is not okay, and you need to take some space when things start to get out of hand.

 95 
 on: December 21, 2025, 11:13:13 PM  
Started by Luckyduckie55 - Last post by Luckyduckie55
Hi, so my husband was supposed to be diagnosed with bpd but some how the doctor didnt do it. My threapist actually alerted both of us to his diagnosis. I got him into intensive care he stopped yelling at me, he was discharged and he still treats me like im a villain. Aleays says I never listen or do what he asks, wont talk kindly to me when he us mad. Probably the worst is his memory is above my own and he fabricated things in his favor. He does more stuff but thats just what I thought of right now.
I want to stay with him but I also don't want to think im crazy, none of his family believes he has bpd because he was normal before me. Am I the problem?
 

 96 
 on: December 21, 2025, 09:24:17 PM  
Started by learning2breathe - Last post by Pook075
How do I explain why it's important to me to say I'm not going to tell my mom how much I appreciate her just to prop up her self worth, when it will just be this same cycle all over again next time?

Hello and welcome to the family!  I'm very sorry we're meeting under these circumstances but I'm glad you found us and shared a little bit of your journey.

For your specific example, I would actually take dad's side (even though the basis is 100% off).  There's no harm in telling your mom to take a few classes, that she's smart and capable enough to get back in school.

Now, I understand you don't want to because it's not about the topic at hand, it's a 24/7 cesspool of validating needs that are never quite enough.

At their core, BPDs need to feel needed.  And almost 100% of your mom's rants aren't over schooling or whatever, they're protests that she's not feeling needed, validated, etc in the moment.  He rant over schooling probably has nothing to do with anything and she's probably already forgot about it.  Now there's a new pressing need, and tomorrow there will be another.

Here's the thing though, when you "opt out" of that conversation, now you're proving your mom's delusions inside her mind that she's actually not needed or appreciated.  So for me, it's easier to just say, "You're smart and capable, go back to college if that's what you need."  Because what could she say after that?  Either she does it or she doesn't, but it's 100% her fault from that point forward.

Because that's the thing, your mom will never complain about what actually matters.  Why?  If she said that she didn't feel needed, and you say, "Nope mom, you're not," then that would break her in ways she couldn't recover from.  So it's always something else in an attempt to receive that same validation in less healthy ways. 

All I can say is God bless your dad.  I've been there and I did the same thing, having zero clue what was actually going on (because I was too close to the situation and too all-in on marriage).  She ultimately left me in the end to have an affair, so I hope and pray your dad doesn't end up in the same position.  I can see so clearly now that I enabled so much and accepted so much that I shouldn't have, but I don't regret it since I did it out of love and faith.

I hope that helps!

 97 
 on: December 21, 2025, 09:08:34 PM  
Started by JsMom - Last post by Pook075
When your son isn't acting like your son, he's thinking in a disordered way.  You're trying to follow his thoughts and actions logically...or in an ordered way of thinking.  And you never find the answers because you're comparing apples to oranges.

When he's disordered, the logic part of his mind shuts off...or at least becomes much less dominant...and he has delusions of why the world is a cold, dark place.  The real problem is mental illness, he's thinking in a harmful way.  But he can't accept that so he looks for other things to blame.  It must be the neighbor's dog, it must be my boss at work, it must be my crappy car, etc.

Then the disordered thinking goes to another level.  If it wasn't for the neighbor's dog, I wouldn't have to drive that crappy car.  It's all the neighbor's fault, he's ruining my life and making everything so complicated.  So he begins to observe the neighbor to build "proof" of his disordered thinking.  Oh look, he left his trash cans in the road, that proves everything!  Now I know for a fact that he bought that annoying dog just to ruin my life (....and it somehow forces me to keep driving this crappy car).

Does that make sense?  If you're mentally ill, you rely more on feelings in the moment than logic.  I feel bad, so the world is bad and I don't want to be here.  Or the opposite, I'm feeling great so the world is perfect and I'm fully in control.  Neither is true or logical, even though it might FEEL THAT WAY in the moment.

I hope that helps.


 98 
 on: December 21, 2025, 08:57:06 PM  
Started by MovieMan - Last post by Pook075
My BPD ex wife (of 23 years) was always running to rescue someone.  My 26 year old BPD daughter does exactly the same thing.  As long as they're off saving the world, they feel validated.

For my ex, that could be he brother needing help with their lawn.  Her other brother needing money or food.  Her parents fixing a leaky pipe.  The neighbor trying to find a home for a stray dog.  It really didn't matter what, she was always running towards something.  "But they need me," she'd say as she cancelled our weekend plans or explained why she was getting home at 11 PM for the third night in a row.

Over time, my wife was on the run more and more, there was always something to do or someone to save.  But what she was really doing was running away from our marriage.  Not that it was bad, mind you, but because she just didn't want to face growing as a couple and dealing with what we needed to do.

For instance, we had to replace a porch railing on some stairs.  I bought the lumber, but the wood, and just needed an extra set of hands to put everything together in place.  This weekend we'll do it, I promise.  But months went by, every Saturday and Sunday there was an emergency somewhere, something else she had to do.  Six months went by, and then a year.  Still zero time to help me at our home, even though she's out there "saving the world" and "solving everyone's problems."

For your situation, you're correct in your wife's hero complex.  As I said, my wife and kid both have it as well.  You can use that to your advantage though in needing your wife in a different way.  Show her you want to cook with her, plan with her, handle finances with her, etc.  Make her feel indispensable, because that's how a marriage should feel.

But at the same time, the narcissist attacks must stop.  Make clear boundaries- you want to do life with her, but you don't want the fighting and drama.  It's so hard to find the balance but it is possible.

 99 
 on: December 21, 2025, 08:45:40 PM  
Started by Casablanca - Last post by Pook075
Hello and welcome to the family!  I'm so sorry you're struggling and unfortunately, it will continue until you stand your ground.

My BPD daughter is 26, about to be 27 in a few months, and I've been through the same battles.  I had to cut her off and let her experience the world on her own so she could break past the entitlement and we could have a different relationship.  It was painful to watch but it was all her decision- I simply said, "If you live here, you'll be respectful and help out.  If you don't want to do that, then you're going to leave."

So she left and she hated me...but she also hated me when I was paying for everything and doing everything for her.  Over time though, she realized that living with dad wasn't a bad option.  Our relationship changed because she changed, she stopped feeling entitled.

You are responsible for you only.  Your daughter is responsible for her life.  Don't confuse the two.  Take back your home and stop accepting abuse.

 100 
 on: December 21, 2025, 08:38:54 PM  
Started by cats4justice - Last post by Pook075
I have made the decision for the holiday and I know it is the right one for my children. I have not been able to say yes to marriage, however. We lived together and it seemed to get worse. The blow-ups were more frequent and I had a hard time navigating. She seems to believe that marriage is what she wants and needs and if we were married, it would get better. I find myself believing her words and then what she shows me is often different.

For BPDs, there's almost always a belief that if they just had this one thing, their life would be perfect and they wouldn't be mentally ill anymore.  But time after time, they get what they want and there's soon a new thing that they must have for life to make sense.  A new job, a new partner, a new epic vacation, a new car, the list can be endless and none of them fix the actual problem in their minds.

It's just a stopgap- everyone's happy when they get shiny new things.  But that happiness always wears off.

For your BPD partner, marriage won't fix things.  Next it will be a baby, a new home, etc.  It will make things tougher on you though because the dynamic with your kids will change, and your partner's stance will change too since you should always stand by your wife. 

My advice is not to be forced into marriage over a false promise.  Therapy, medication, and a willingness to change is what makes a difference.  Everything else is just a temporary fix.


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