Wentworth,
Those words above struck me. These are some heavy issues your facing. The boundary and identity issues have been hard for me as well. Reading and support from these boards can probably get you started on boundary setting, but for identity loss and a lifetime of putting your needs last, have you considered working with a therapist? I tend to look at therapy as hiring a consultant to help with a particular set of challenges, and those two you've identified right there seem like a good way to get your money and time's worth out of therapy.
Thanks for your comments... .I don't know if you will see this, but I tend to keep myself busy so I don't have to deal with living with a BPDH and I have made myself busy the last few weeks, but I have been thinking about your comments this whole time.
I also think I wasn't ready to reply, I am still going back and forth between "Am I crazy?, he's been fine since his last blowout!, maybe there's nothing wrong with him... .maybe it's me" and "I can't believe I have spent my entire married life living with a crazy person and he's never going to be normal and I have to be the one as usual to make all the changes!"... .and I know I shouldn't say that... .but I just feel numb, sad, empty, hopeless, stuck... .and yes I have gone to therapy, most recently last June through Feb of this year. It was just this last June that I first heard of BPD and light went off! What a roller coaster my life/emotions has turned into, even more so than one I have been on all these years!
I quit therapy in Feb because I am independent in many ways, or maybe it's just plain stubbornness, but I think I have carried the burden of making this relationship work for 46 years so after learning a few more techniques to help me not be so helpless, unhappy, depressed, etc. I just decided I was as fine as I was going to be and it was just costing more money and my BPDH was not happy that I was spending money on a therapist. (He didn't even know I was going until 3 or 4 after I started.)
I have read SWOE and am in the middle of The Essential Family Guide to BPD, and have started the SWOE workbook. I have read numerous articles and watched videos on this website. I am becoming familiar with and educated on BPD, but I am realizing that it is an ongoing battle/challenge and sometimes I just want to run away and not deal with it, not ever! I do lots of things that take me from spending time with my husband, I work full-time, I have children and grandkids I love spending time with and the ones that live close by spend a lot of time at our house, I'm actively involved with my church, right now I go to crossfit 3x's a week with 2 of my daughters... .I just don't see that I will ever have a "close" relationship with my husband, so I look for other ways to fill that need. My husband has told me many times what a wonderful person, mother and grandmother I am, but that I'm not a very good wife and I agree with that, it is so easy to love those that are easy to love.
Also what sent me to the therapist this last time was some choices our son made. He has a very successful career, worked and studied very hard to get there, married a wonderful woman, had 3 amazing children and then went through some crazy times, went to clubs and his wife ended up getting a boyfriend and divorcing him. He was devastated, we all were, we all loved his wife dearly. He continued going to clubs and met a 26 year old, he was 40. Turns out she is a true blue narcissist! She has to be, she is crazy! I have never met anyone like her! She totally controls my son's life and has pushed his 3 children out of the home, I can give several examples of her clearly not normal behavior... .but it all came to a head when he let her talk him into marrying her because she wanted to change her name, she has a felony for passing fake $100 bills and also assault charges from previous relationships. She got pregnant a couple months after the marriage... .he filed for divorce 7 1/2 months later... .she was supposed to be out of the house today... .he can't do it, he doesn't want to be mean, she comes from very poor circumstances, no education, he love the baby who is now 4 months old... .I have to detach from this whole other roller coaster!
It finally hit me like a ton of bricks that my son was just like me! Which in the past I wanted for all my kids... .to be like me, not like my BPDH! But now I realized, I don't want any of my children to be like me, an enabler!
This is what has been the hardest for me, I can live with my BPDH, but I don't want my children to live out their lives as I have.