hearing that the love we felt was never 'real'
no one can tell you what you felt wasnt real. well, i suppose they can, if youre in earshot, but they cant make it so.
i personally dont see where its helpful for healing for one to tell themselves that, either.
nor do i see where its helpful for healing to say that about our exes.
i certainly see where its helpful to see that our relationships had strong fantasy elements. to see that the foundation they were built on was shaky. to see that our partners, and/or our relationships, werent necessarily exactly what we thought they were. to also see that what any of that means has different implications for everyone.
I do believe that their mirroring, and other subconscious manipulation tactics are meant to get you to love them unconditionally.
i think that the term "mirroring" tends to trip people up. like its something sneaky. and that might lead a person to believe that our partners "faked" who they were, or that they werent "real". and its often true that our partners may have misrepresented parts themselves, but we all do this; we all put our best foot forward, and veil parts of ourselves in new relationships. people with bpd, for reasons having to do with bpd, just take it to an extreme.
mirroring is essential for bonding. the earliest development of our sense of selves depends on it. it is a bonding tactic. it is something that every one of us does. every time you laugh at someones joke, every time you actively show someone youre listening to them, every time you validate someones story here or share your own, you are mirroring them. it is no more or less "real" when someone with bpd traits does it, but it is again, for reasons having to do with bpd, something that people with bpd traits do to a pathological degree.
some people have a pathological need to mirror.
some people have a pathological need to be mirrored.
The result of this is to get people addicted to seeing them through their eyes because they love you SO MUCH MORE than you love yourself. So when their view of you changes and shifts, so does yours. This makes you entirely dependent on them.
but what mirroring doesnt, is do any of these things to us any more than a bottle of alcohol can do them to us. if a person can do this to us, then there is nothing to prevent it from happening again.
adulation can be intoxicating, and cross words from a loved one can cut deep, but we arent slaves to either one.
However, I do think that they feel real love. I just don't believe that it is tenable for them because of their intense fears of losing it.
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As a result, they simply can't exist in a healthy relationship without serious therapeutic help and self-awareness
to put things in perspective, every single one, of every single persons relationship will fail/have failed, except for that final one (assuming they find it).
how many people walking around are beacons of self awareness, baggage free, and in happy, healthy, thriving relationships? i dont know the answer to that question, but most marriages still end in divorce.
in discussions ive read here, as well as literature, one frequent comparison for the love of someone with bpd is to that of a toddler, or it might be referred to as "childlike", or it might be called "immature".
well, ive never seen someone tell a mother that their toddler doesnt really love her because hes not mature enough to love yet.
love, and the capacity to love, are things within us all, that mature, grow, evolve. in relationships that get to such a point, you will love them more in the future than you did when you met them. your love for them will grow over time. and if the relationship ends, ideally, you will take from that relationship, into the next one, an even more mature, more highly evolved idea of love, and a greater capacity to give and receive.
for some people, that may mean a lower ceiling than others. but pathologically speaking? borderlines give everything theyve got.