Hi, this is my first post here. I'm so glad to have found this forum. I've been married for 19 years to my spouse who was diagnosed with bipolar about a year after we married. It's been a hard road. We have one child, 11 years old with special needs.
Recently, after about 4 years of unspeakable chaos he started taking a med that got the bipolar mania under control. With that not being an issue at this time we've both realized that he has 8/9 of the diagnostic criteria for BPD as well. The only one he doesn't is self harm, but this is likely due to his extreme religious beliefs against suicide. Apparently BPD frequently comorbid with bipolar and we've both long suspected some sort of personality disorder but it was hard to figure out which one fit until the mania was controlled.He has an appointment with his psych next week and will discuss it with her then, but they tend to only care about med issues honestly.
So, I'm reading Stop Walking on Eggshells. He often asks what I've learned because he has no idea what the heck gets into him during BPD meltdowns either. I did years of work on myself including counseling, codependency recovery groups, other various recovery groups, learning about boundaries and healthy communication years ago so all of that is nothing new to me. However, learning all these things didn't help me learn how to apply them to BPD. They are taught in ways that assume you are dealing with the average difficult person.

In many ways that has made our relationship harder, because I had the communication skills, boundaries and other tools but didn't have a clue how to use them effectively on him. It's just so hard even with all the tools to remain calm and logical in the face of completely illogical nonsense. Ugh. I've gained some new tools from the book and a better understanding of the why behind so many things. Why he doesn't remember what happened, why he acts like nothing happened after an episode, what is behind it and more. Let me know if there are other books you liked better.
He might agree to counseling, but we have no insurance and any low cost counseling he could get would probably not be skilled enough to manage his dual bipolar and borderline plus the childhood PTSD. He really lacks insight into the why behind any of his Do you have any favorite self help workbooks, mindfulness links or courses?
Anyway, and thanks for having me.