Hi Leftbehind,
To be left behind is to be abandoned. My understanding of this disorder is that it has everything to do with abandonment and betrayal. Abandonment and betrayal had a hand in the cause of your BPD loved one's disorder. The disordered fear of abandonment and betrayal is what dominated his behavior during latter part of your relationship. And in order to avoid that imagined abandonment your BPD loved one did what he believed he had to do, which was to abandon you before you could abandon him.
Even though I said on another post earlier today how I was letting my ex go this weekend, I fell into a pit and checked his facebook. His life is going great, with many new beginnings and accomplishments. I see he's friended a lot of new women, and I also see he's with his sex buddy having a great time. I don't think he needs, wants or thinks of me anymore.
You write "His life is going great... . " I don't believe that for a second. You believe his life is going great because that is what he is posting on his facebook. He may even believe his life is going great, but only because he believes he's found someone who will not abandon or betray him later on. His problem is that it isn't his poor selection of partners which leads to his "abandonment." His problem is that any kind of intimacy and familiarity will lead him to feel his disorder fear of abandonment. Fortunately for him, there is little real intimacy and familiarity at the beginning of any relationship. Unfortunately for him, it is only a matter of time before it does... . and then his disordered issues will crop up again. Just like it did with you.
So maybe his life is great for the moment. Just like it was great at the beginning of his relationship with you. But it will not last. It will never last.
I helped him get to a higher level, where he moved forward professionally ( he asked for my help and I gave it ) where he healed his relationships with his kids, family of origin and extended family. I feel I also helped him move on from his ex, although they were broken up for several months before we got together.
Did you really heal his relationships with his kids, family or origin and extended family? Because it doesn't get any more intimate and familiar (familial) than family. His disordered behavior is what led to the rift between them in the first place. You might have helped him bridge that rift for the time being, but his disorder will splinter it again. It is only a matter of time.
I felt I made his life better in so many ways, and then got discarded when he: 1. Got bored, 2. Didn't need me anymore, 3. Didn't know how to conflict resolve, 4. Couldn't go to the next level of intimacy.
You may have made his life better in many ways, but you did not cure him of his disorder. He may have told you he got bored of you. From you perspective, he no longer needed you. But if he suffers from borderline personality disorder, what drove him to discard you was his disordered fear that you would abandon him. The closer he felt towards you, the more he became overwhelmed by his disordered imagination that you would abandon him.
He couldn't resolve conflict, when the conflict was internal, within him. I'm sure he wanted to love you, wanted you to be the one for him. But he couldn't because he also felt that you were going to abandon him, that you couldn't be trusted.
He couldn't go to the next level of intimacy because he was already getting overwhelmed by the current level of intimacy he had with you.
Part of me wishes him well, because he is someone I love. The other part of me is so hurt and angry that he's skipping along through life without me.
You feel conflicted about him because he was someone you loved, but then he also abandoned you. What you feel is a taste of what he was feeling because he wanted to love you but because of his disorder was convinced that you would abandon him, if he gave you the opportunity.
He was the one who brought up that we were soulmates, - he's the one that said "This is it", that said this is a very long term relationship, and that he couldn't see his life without me in it.
He wanted this to be true. It was true for him. But he is also disordered. So you were his soulmate. And in his mind, you were destined to abandon him. Because in his mind, anyone he lets into his heart, will eventually abandon him.
I think if he hadn't said those things I might have been able to keep more perspective, but instead I dropped all my guard, thinking "here is someone that feels the same way, wants the same things as me."
I don't think he would have so eagerly said any of those things if he were not also disordered. Most people do not drop their boundaries so absolutely and in such a short time. This is, however, quite common for disordered people.
I hate that he's moving on so happily without me in his life. There is a big event coming up in his life that is a huge accomplishment for him, and it's in an area that I was very supportive and helpful to him. Of course I'm not invited, but everyone else he's known for 5 minutes is.
Would it help you to know that he isn't going to move on happily for very long because he's disordered? No, it won't help very much because it doesn't lessen the pain of being abandoned. Little does. Taking care of yourself does though. But that takes time and not a little effort.
I'm certain that you were very supportive and helpful to him in his huge accomplishment, but that isn't what he remembers you for. He remembers you for all those feelings of impending abandonment and betrayal. And he chooses to believe that it is your fault that he felt such disordered feelings. The thing is, no one that he's only known for only 5 minutes will ever make him feel these disordered feelings.
The only reason I did was because I had a dream that he was posting on Facebook, so I felt I was supposed to check. I guess it's just another piece of the connection that I need to severe. He comes into my dreams a lot, and every time he does there is another piece of the puzzle revealed. But it's also bringing my thoughts back to him. Maybe I need a lobotomy... .
You've been dreaming about him because it is not in the human psyche to develop such a close and intimate attachment and lose that attachment so suddenly. At least this is the case of non-disordered people. The difficulty you are experiencing in detachment is normal.
Your wondering if you should have a lobotomy reminds me of a film "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind." I wonder that if we could erase these kinds of pain from our mind, if we would only doom ourselves to repeating history. As I see it, that is exactly what pwBPD do. The way they "cope" with this disordered feelings, dooms them to repeating the same experience over and over again.
You are in the right place.
Best wishes, Schwing