If only believing those things was as easy as typing them
too true! It's easy for me to read your post and want to tell you that it's not about your worth; that you did your best but there was no way the outcome was going to be different; that you have to focus on yourself etc. But I still find it hard to believe these things when it comes to my own situation. I always manage to get really angry on other people's behalf but have struggled to do that for myself until recently.
We were married a long time but it's obvious from this board that even a relatively short relationship with pwBPD can result in a lot of pain and confusion - sometimes for periods longer than the relationship itself.
I've never been physically abused - I can't imagine what that's like. I think though that I have tended to minimise the digs, silent treatment, rages, snide remarks, name-calling, repeated leaving/returning. I tended to pride myself on 'being strong', having compassion for him and coping with this when the reality was that it was eating away at me like a corrosive acid stripping me of my relatively good self-esteem.
From your posts, you sound like an intelligent, mature and eloquent young man. Sometimes I think that's part of our problem. We want to analyse everything. We need answers and explanations. If you do well at university, you are probably used to researching issues and coming up with solutions. In these relationships, it's so difficult to find anything that makes sense.
I googled "recovering from emotional abuse" and found several helpful articles.
The phrase I am hanging on to from one of the articles is "be patient with yourself". Hope you can do this for yourself too.
take care
Claire