And so this is why so many of my first relationships were ones that begun with "instant" intimacy. They were full of intensity (what I called passion) and drama. Because only then would my insecurities and anxieties be swept up and carried off. And this is why I had so many relationships with pwBPD; like a moth to the flame.
Then again it seems appropriate: if I am afraid of intimacy, who better should I court than women who are incapable of intimacy.
This is true for me as well. I've been talking with my therapist about what it looks like to have real intimacy with a woman. She says I need to date a mature, stable, emotionally available woman. I understand what she is saying, but it is a bit frightening. Not as much as it used to be, though. I believe my Mom has BPD, and I've been discussing that with my therapist as well and how it has affected my relationships with women.
I'm very drawn to women who offer a false sense of self and intensity from the get go. This does bypass what should be a natural progression of really getting to know someone on an emotional and intellectual level. I would hold back a lot of who I really was w/exBPD because I could, and I don't think she wanted to go there with me anyway. I didn't hold back on intensity so much, but I did on intimacy, a lot.
Part of me did want to go there with her (more intimacy), but I saw it wasn't possible. When I tried to have deep conversations with her, she would get very flustered and usually terminate the conversation. This is the same dynamic with my mother.
I told my therapist I loved my ex, though. And I did. I'm still not completely over her. But it was not a very functional relationship. In fact, it was becoming torturous. Sometimes I wonder if I'm destined to play the emotional caretaker role in these types of relationships, but I don't think so. I want to be with someone who is capable of intimacy. Am I willing?