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 91 
 on: May 01, 2026, 02:47:21 PM  
Started by PearlsBefore - Last post by PearlsBefore
Hoo boy, when you've been on BPDFamily long enough you're no longer talking about your wife/ex, now it's your child. So long story short, "Kim" was diagnosed with BPD and spent years asking me to date her or marry her and I consistently refused citing her mental health - eventually she claimed to be dying of catastrophic drug-induced liver failure and not wanting to die alone (I was a moron, I know, I know) so I married her because alright, why not...turns out of course she wasn't actually dying, anyways, we had a kid, some misadventures, I caught her acting out on our kid what her father had done to her and laid down the law for her, when I caught her again much later I phoned 9-1-1 and we split up.

As it stands right now, she has majority custody and I have holidays/summers (we live quite a distance from each other); long story short her father was a MAP, her best friend in her teens and 20s was a MAP with a mother-son fetish, and then the guy she began hanging out with after I phoned 9-1-1 and we split...yeah, I won't go into details except to say he's in prison and you might've read about his case. Obviously our son was not unaffected by this environment; he has PTSD (technically he has Complex-PTSD but due to the connotations they're hesitant to label it that), he's been suspended from school dozens of times including for threatening school shootings, etc.

Anyways, we do Zoom calls three times a week when he's not here - and he's fine on all of them, showing me tricks he taught his gerbil, nerf guns, one piece books, whatever - just acting like a kid with his Dad. And when he's HERE on holidays or summer he's fine other than a few rough days of adjustment (Mom has no rules, Dad has rules - adjustment is to be expected) - he was here for March Break, ten days, didn't curse or lose his temper even once, planned a hike for this summer that he seemed excited about and discussed on subsequent Zooms and whatnot.

But occasionally, either at midnight or at like 1pm on a schoolday (when he SHOULDN'T be online) at his mother's house he'll send me alarming emails - I usually manage to soothe him somewhat with my experience caring for his mother and such, but for example here is today's.

"Even if 5% of the time im free like in a 3 hour free range parenting time or fort time the other 95% scares me what could you do shove me push me hit me the same things others did You psychologically cant recognize it but your mental health makes you illusion the truth All moms friends agree, Mom agrees Everything about trauma agrees ita just an effect and i dont care what you have to say im not believing anything from you anymore i already have no trust in you anymore and everyone else who i do trust and all moms friends. Everything points to you being wrong I have absolutely no reason to believe anything you say it means nothing against the word of every human who researches it Actually knows it most of the books you read are old conceptions PTSD was hardly understood until about the 2010s Every media source Every psychologist Mom (who doesnt have mental disabilities other then ptsd) I know this wont change your decision When i get a voice or maybe turn 18 im suing for the trauma you put me through Firstly for being a dumbass Granny Gramps Grams and Papa everyone didnt think you should have gone to detroit fifteen years ago You dont follow authority and dont understand the difference between right and wrong And secondly for continuing to trigger my PTSD then mock it After that im getting a maximum authority Restraining order against you because God knows what kind of a stalker you will become if you lose rights to see us I've begun throwing away anything sent by you im trying to live a life not a twisted lab test Nothing you try will work I,ll go farther to never go on these trips then anything you could even emphasize I dont care what connections i have to ruin what crimes i have to commit what i have to do what laws or sins i have to break I,ll go to any extent to avoid this Even if it means destroying the foundation i have i can build it back up effortlessly Nothing i have means more then getting rid of you Even if that means forcefully running away at the handoff into god knows where and starting a life with nothing I,ve accessed the dark web dozens of times and may hire a hitman if this misery continues God wont do anything Society wont do anything so ill have to do it myself even if it means crimes sins or everything I own destroyed I dont want anything to do with you and i never will Even if you change As soon as I can im cutting all ties If i ever get into any inescapable situation I even researched seppuku for an emergency where i have no other option Two nerves I have to burst and then it will slide right off This is not a desperate attempt at stopping the trip That im already in the process of Just explaining how i feel and what i truly do to get rid of you"


(his mother and I had a remarkably horrible experience in Detroit when he was a toddler, left it when he was 4 but his mother wants to play it off as "THAT" is the reason for all his emotional disturbance - not the molestation and boundary-crossing and adultification, etc)

Now it's important to note he's tested above average IQ, in Gifted & Talented class, this isn't how he speaks or writes normally - he gets something in him and suddenly this all pours out like this onto the page. Obviously some of the wording appears to be parroting his mother but I'm not sure how to properly handle this - all the DBT acronyms seem to escape me when trying to deal with a 13 year old who has the mind of a 16 year old but suddenly reverts to the massive stream-of-consciousness run on sentence.

Would appreciate any advice, these don't come in often - and most likely he'll get on Zoom with me in an hour and be totally fine and laughing about favourite hockey teams or misadventures or games he's playing, etc...there's such an eerie disconnect between typing what's above, and then being totally fine - but as his mother once testified to a judge (unwisely, yikes) "You know how Bipolar is like a few weeks of manic euphoria and then a few weeks of suicidal depression? While I cycle between those two extremes 5-6 times daily every day of my life".

Where he's 13 I'd LIKE to get some early intervention here, though am somewhat handicapped as the backup parent right now (petitioning court to reverse decision-making etc)

 92 
 on: May 01, 2026, 02:02:32 PM  
Started by wantmorepeace - Last post by ForeverDad
Haltlose PD ... I am stunned... still learning new terms after all this time...

 93 
 on: May 01, 2026, 01:49:27 PM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by ForeverDad
In most states alimony appears to be viewed as short term support to enable the disadvantaged spouse to transition into post-marital life.  That can include career training.  Also, as happened in my case, if the disadvantaged spouse gets equal or more parenting time on the official schedule, then the ex-spouse also gets child support.  (In recent years the law changed and now CS is post-tax which would mean that you would pay CS after you first paid taxes on those earnings.)

This time last week after a particularly bad episode, I was pretty sure I needed to end this relationship.  After a few days of thinking, I was 99% sure I wanted to work harder about making it work.  But now I am back to being on the fence, or at least on the fence about being on the fence.  And I know I need to set some firm and clear boundaries in order to protect myself, so that the "fence" becomes so narrow that I can no longer ride atop it...  Last Friday, she hit me.

I briefly went back and reviewed some of your early posts such as the one above.  You weren't married then so it appears your children aren't teenagers yet.  Yet the gist of your posts is similar to today.  She hasn't made substantive progress toward recovery.  And the issues are the same old, same old?  Would you agree you've been in a holding pattern (airplane reference) all these dozen years?

I'm not fluent with all the therapeutic terms but I wonder if co-dependence applies here.  It wouldn't be your fault since it may be this is influence from your childhood FOO (family of origin).  Just thinking outside the box...

 94 
 on: May 01, 2026, 11:11:05 AM  
Started by DesertDreamer - Last post by wantmorepeace
Remembering the advice not to JADE (justify, argue, defend, explain) has been so helpful to me.  It's hard to do but pays off.

 95 
 on: May 01, 2026, 09:32:05 AM  
Started by DesertDreamer - Last post by hotchip
Re has anyone else experienced a desire to explain, justify, defend yourself - yes, yes, oh, yes. It's incredibly destabilising and painful to exist on a different plane of reality from someone you used to trust and love. Sadly, you cannot force someone else to be accountable to reality when their lack of accountability is the reason you are unable to be in the relationship. Your healing can't depend on her validation.

 96 
 on: May 01, 2026, 09:20:13 AM  
Started by DesertDreamer - Last post by hotchip
It sounds like your mind knows what needs to happen but your heart and emotions don't. When you're in a committed relationship, you love and trust the other person. You do this every day, it becomes a habit, and habits are hard to break. It's a physical process as much as a mental one, and it is self reinforcing. As time goes by, new habits will form and it will be less painful. I feel for you. No contact sounds like the right decision and it will hopefully accelerate the process.

 97 
 on: May 01, 2026, 08:36:04 AM  
Started by wantmorepeace - Last post by PearlsBefore
The wikipedia article on Haltlose got castrated five years ago, but https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Haltlose_personality_disorder&oldid=1000202418 is the fullest version, rather than the "current".

 98 
 on: May 01, 2026, 07:49:44 AM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by CC43
Hi there,

The situation you describe is disconcerting to me.  Though you're benefitting from a temporary break from your BPD wife's daily chaos, and that is a wonderful reprieve, it's at the expense of infidelity.  What's more, she's establishing a track record of being completely dependent on you, not unlike an adult child living with you--free room and board, no household responsibilities, allowed to come and go whenever she pleases, with access to a "parental ATM."  She enjoys adult freedoms without the corresponding adult responsibilities.  And now she's creating the narrative that she "sacrificed" her "career" to take care of kids.  In my opinion, an issue here is that if you do decide to separate, you might be on the hook for alimony, long-term.  And your wife might be awarded more time with the kids than she should, because she's telling the story that she "sacrificed" her life to raise them.

Anyway, I think the general advice here is to document, document, document.  That would include evidence of how much you are caring for the kids, and any indications of neglect or abusive behavior by mom.  You could keep records of who transports the kids, who takes them to doctor's appointments, who attends meetings with teachers, etc.  Maybe you take a cute picture of the kids every day as they head off to daycare, school or activities as documentation.  Also, I would think twice about permitting your wife to have any extra spending money from you, because I think that would potentially be used against you as a baseline for future alimony.  I've seen situations where a spouse was considering divorce and increased spending in the months before filing, seemingly just to establish a higher level of ongoing financial support from the ex.  Let the new romantic interest pay for stuff if they want to.

 99 
 on: May 01, 2026, 05:56:28 AM  
Started by maxsterling - Last post by Notwendy

From what you've been saying, she may not be likely to start a divorce. 

She has no reason at all to start a divorce. Her "complaining" that motherhood stopped her career" - this is her "rewriting history" to avoid shame and avoid her issues being discovered, which I assume hasn't happened yet with new GF.

The serial "pie in the sky" wishful and magical thinking - wanting the next thing- the new house, the  place of her own, the GF, because she thinks this is going to be the solution for her discomfort- you've seen that and you've seen that if she attains it- in time, there's another wish.

Even if your wife has complaints, this situation is working for her. Only if this new GF is able to and willing to provide for her better, take on the role of emotional caretaker,  and things progress to this point would she possibly consider it. Since relationships with pwBPD tend to be unstable, I don't think it's realistic to count on this if you want this. The more likely situation (IMHO) is that once "reality" sets in with this relationship- as it does for everyone to some extent after the initial newness, it would fall apart.

This relationship is like dating in high school. Parents pay the bills, there's no children to be responsible for, no worries about jobs, a mortgage, saving for retirement. The most responsibility a teen carries is usually schoolwork and a part time job. The relationship feels idyllic. Marriage involves work, childcare, it's a more mature commitment that teens aren't ready for. This is working for the GF too. She doesn't have to support your wife or share the care of the kids. They can have fun together while someone else does that. The reality of a long term relationship hasn't set in for them and it may be that the GF doesn't want that- she just wants what they have now. This situation doesn't necessarily lead to your wife divorcing you for this.

If you want to end the marriage, you will need to do that task but from your posts, it doesn't seem to be what you want to do at the moment. I think you'd be OK if she did it, but for you to do it, you'd need to take action. On the topic of boundaries- boundaries are what we act on. If infidelity was a boundary- that line was crossed when your wife went on a dating site. I'm not being judgmental or preaching morals- what two people do is between them and if both are OK with this, then it's not an issue in the marriage. It's that she did it and it wasn't OK with you but you adapted to it. It's not a boundary on which you will act- but boundaries are individual ones and so you can choose to tolerate this.

I watched this dynamic between my parents and it can go on for the long term. Dad mostly went along with BPD mother's wishes, and so, her wishes took the lead in the family. It seemed as if she could do what she wanted and without consequences, which isn't how the real world works, but it worked for her because this is what their arrangement was.

In every marriage there is the need for compromise and forgiveness, and to overlook some behaviors but also, people have boundaries- which are the very limits of what someone will tolerate. What behaviors are so intolerable that one can't remain married? Only you can decide what that is for you.

 100 
 on: May 01, 2026, 12:43:58 AM  
Started by Lifegivesyou26 - Last post by TelHill
I understood the risks going in, and I completely understand why. I had an amazing 11 months with him he was my best friend. It is such a confusing shock to the system to be discarded abruptly though. Psychosomatic symptoms and grief cycle have been intense.

Keen to hear experience on trying to maintain a low key friendship with someone after a rupture like this. That is if he chooses or has capacity to reconnect with me.

Relationships with a BPD are intense and magical when in one and intense and confusing when they abruptly discard you. There's no sense that it's happening. When it does, the reasons given aren't the whole story.

I was discarded by a disordered man. He was a rebound guy after my marriage broke up.

The usual behavior of a male BPD after a discard is periods of intense communication, often out of the blue,  with the former partner. It's never really over in their minds. This guy went to extraordinary lengths to make contact with me - different phone numbers, email addresses, letters. I blocked and ignored him. It stopped and then it started again. It wasn't flattering at all. It was a form of stalking. I wanted my life back and him away from me. I was tired of the intense push and pull. It seemed very, very disordered.

I'd suggest it might not be good for you to maintain a friendship with someone who discarded you. They'll draw you close when they need something from you and discard you again.

It might be to your benefit to see a therapist to help you get over this painful relationship and move on.

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