Hi arjay,
Thanks very much for your words, which cover my situation and feelings quite well.
I remember as a child going to kindergarten, wanting to give something to the homeless along the street. I suppose that was generosity that became my "fixer" tendencies as I grew up.
Thanks to your post, I recognize that I have been defining myself as "fixer" and wanting others to acknowledge that as a way for me to feel validated. From an analytical perspective, it seems very logical: I fix things (and so help others), they recognize and acknowledge what I have done and (Voila!) I feel validated.
Maybe my BPDm resulted in an attachment disorder in me, or maybe I was born this way. Or maybe others failed to validate, or their validation did not seem enough to me. But the fixer me came to "chase after" recognition. In some cases, this has led to the opposite reaction, where my fixes were no longer desired. Or my fixes became something to be expected, and so the level of acknowledgement decreases.
All this has contributed to my current situation with my wife.
being the “fixer”, I was superior in my assessment however and could see she needed help and once she realized my sense of righteousness and love to “make her better”, my payoff of love and admiration would be realized. The reality is that the disaster that ensued, left me feeling “unappreciated, unloved and misunderstood, at levels so deep, it took two years of personal work to recover. The white knight/fixer model simply didn’t work and given that it was “at my core”, failure shattered me and my own sense of “who I really was”. Rather than being a “whole person” seeking to find a relationship with another “whole person”, I had a “hole within me” and was seeking to fill that hole, with somebody else looking for the same. Those relationships often bankrupt us in the end, because nobody is able to fill the hole in ourselves, but ourselves.
Thanks to you, I now see that I should not be "fixing" my wife, which I previously told myself (and her) was helping her to "improve" for the sake of everything (kids, family, life, etc.). I now see that as the giant load of spin that it is! I also see how "fixing" might be an extension of the endless "improving" that my BPDm has pressed upon me for nearly 50 years.
Looking back at my choices in life, the red flags were often “overruled” by my need to fix, with the subconscious desire to find self-worth. That notion of a payoff even challenged me to consider my reasons for “giving”. Yes it was a very powerful force and it challenges me to this day. The difference now is I can take a day or two or three and go through the process of introspection to discover my true motives. If there is even a “twinge” of expected payoff to include admiration, recognition, appreciation, self-worth or expected love, I am likely going to do it for the wrong reason; I am not “giving” without an expectation of “receiving”.
Wow! I see your progress and am scared to think about how I can do the same. The "hole within me" has seemed to grow over the years, especially after finding out about BPD in my mother about 2 years ago. This led me to try and try to find ways to fill it. Maybe my wife wasn't interested, or wasn't capable. Maybe no one is capable. So what to do?
Do I continue to look for help from others with the hole? Do I accept the hole as something that might never be filled or satisfied? Or, and this is new/radical: do I chose to put down the hole and leave it behind as I move forward in life? Jettison the hole like I am a hot air balloon so that I have less drag. (It is amazing how a hole can be "a drag" and how hard it can be to let go of nothing--like a hole!)
I am asking myself, can I have no hole to fill (and so have no expectations) so that I can go on, fixing (or not fixing) as I choose? Let go of neediness... .
Thanks again to you--this has been a great help.
A