Rapt Reader
Retired Staff
Offline
Gender: 
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Child
Relationship status: married
Posts: 3626
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« Reply #1 on: September 25, 2014, 08:40:42 PM » |
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Hello, coworkerfriend, and welcome back to the family
Your story sounds very familiar to me (except my Husband and I are not co-workers), but I found this site about a year and a half ago, and things have improved so much since then that when my Husband does dysregulate (and like your situation, it is always for the same issue. His is that I don't pay enough attention to him), it is always a shock to me because it doesn't happen very often any more now that I use the Lessons taught here. He used to do this kind of thing a few times per month; now it's about once per month.
It sure can be devastating when it happens, because it's very easy to get lulled into the mindset that things are better now and this behavior won't happen any more. When it does, it can really take the wind out of our sails! Do you find that, though, when he does dysregulate now, the episode lasts less time than in the "old days"?
Although my Husband's episodes aren't totally gone, I find that because I don't JADE or overreact any more, the dysregulation most times can be stopped before it escalates to a full-blown painting me black, or at least it can drastically reduce the time of the silent treatment, etc. to something quite short. Like hours, rather than days or weeks. Is the situation you had today on its way back to normalcy yet?
I know the PTSD feelings that you are talking about, and that used to cause me to go back to my old habits of trying to "fix" a dysregulation by begging him to listen to my story, to let me explain why he was wrong about his feelings about me. I would follow him around and beg him to "talk to me" and that stuff would just escalate his anger further. Learning to detach from his dysregulation/anger so that I didn't take it personally anymore, helped me to let him vent and just deescalate on his own. But I'm sure you realize this already... .the positive reinforcement of your past successes with this type of thing is already informing your thoughts about it.
I'm so glad you came back to us when you needed to; it's wonderful to read your story, and to know that the communication tools and techniques on this site can transform a relationship into something loving and fulfilling. We all have set-backs; even marriages between people who have no BPD involved have their up and downs to deal with. We're still here to listen to you, and offer a shoulder to lean on... .We understand, coworkerfriend
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