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How to communicate after a contentious divorce... Following a contentious divorce and custody battle, there are often high emotion and tensions between the parents. Research shows that constant and chronic conflict between the parents negatively impacts the children. The children sense their parents anxiety in their voice, their body language and their parents behavior. Here are some suggestions from Dean Stacer on how to avoid conflict.
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Author Topic: My ex has a new GF already? How can they move on so quickly?  (Read 1817 times)
Supernova9star

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« on: October 20, 2013, 09:53:24 PM »

My exbf left me after 8 years. We have had several rounds of recycles but not in 4 years. My father died last year and I have been handling his estate. I just received the money from selling his house and we (my ex, my 12 year old daughter from a previous relationship) and I found a home to move into. Our first house. But it was causing problems between me and my ex. He wanted his name on the deed. Even though we weren't married. I felt like it wasn't stable enough between us to do that. So then he told me it was my house not ours. So he wasn't going to help me pack. He also was angry that I bought a new car but only spent a fraction on him for a new car.

As the moving day approached on Labor Day weekend, he said he would help me with what I needed. But he continued to blow me off throughout the weekend. He had many angry outbursts for the previous two weeks and he was becoming very abusive. Finally on the last day of the holiday weekend, I asked if he would help. He said after he finished fixing his coworkers computer. I snapped. I knew the other show was going to drop and I was petrified so remained numb and detached up until that point. But then I couldn't control myself. I was shocked he would commit to someone else on the weekend we were supposed to move. And as soon as I snapped that was all he needed. He was extremely physically abusive. He sat on top of me and smothered my face with his hands. He called me names and told me he didn't love me anymore. And he said he was leaving. He said he felt sorry for me but he couldn't be with me anymore. After 8 years.

So I moved with my daughter and my parents helped me. He left me with a huge burden. And he didn't contact me. I went NC with him too. Something I had never done. In the past I would be frantic about calling and texting. I would try everything to get him back. But this time I couldn't do that. I was dead inside. And then I started to wake up. And I cried and cried and cried. All the time. It was such intense grieving. But I know it was part of the process. And I accepted that.

Then 3 weeks ago, I got a phone call in the middle of the night. It was him. He said he had been watching a movie and he was so sorry for what he had done to me and he missed me and still loved me. I got sucked back in and agreed to see him the next day. For the next week we talked and hung out and had sex. We even went on a date and saw gravity opening night. I found out he was hanging out with coworkers a lot. Like all of a sudden he had this new social life. And I was holing up in my new house with my daughter crying my eyes out.

Then after about a week, he started blowing me off again. Stopped answering the phone. Finally told me after 3days of not talking to me that he just wanted me in his life casually. Still exclusive with each other but not living together. I said I didn't want that. So he told me this would be goodbye for good. After holding me in his arms while we made love and looking tenderly into my eyes less than a week before that, now he's done for good?

So 2 days ago I broke NC. I had to talk to him. I looked at his FB. And he ended up texting me back several hours after not answering my call to tell me we have no business together and I shouldn't call or text. He told me to move on. He said he had. When I asked if that meant he was with someone else he said yes. I asked him how after 2weeks he could do that and he didn't answer. When I asked him about the time we had just spent together and he said he still loved me, he replied that he had lied. I was devastated. Just like that, he threw me away.

Now he is on cloud nine in love while my heart is shredded to pieces and I'm still looking for the lost fragments of my soul. I don't get it. Did he really lie about loving me? Did he ever love me? He said he would never leave me. And is he going to do things right with this new person since he is starting fresh? I'm so sad.

I feel so empty. I don't believe in love anymore. I'm just a mess. And I still miss him even though I hate him. Someone please help.
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rollercoaster24
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« Reply #1 on: October 20, 2013, 10:20:31 PM »

Hi Supernova9star

Your ex sounds like mine, abusive and dangerous and cruel, yet I too, just like you, was addicted to him inspite of that.

I also got the 'perhaps you should move on then', and that he had moved on, (but I neglected to ask if he had moved on to someone else).

I kind of already knew in my heart/gut... and had ignored that very strong instinct for most of the time I was with him.

These guys are two different people, and it hurts like hell to think that they could say all that stuff so romantically, with such feeling, and then days/weeks/hours later, act like it meant nothing at all, but there are two parts to them, one might have meant that and then the other kicks in, and all that sentiment vanishes on the wind.

Such is their illness, heartbreakingly cruel... .

You must realise that whoever he has shacked up with now, will be getting exactly the same treatment within a very short time, and most likely has no idea that either you exist, or has been served with a very different picture than the truth. He will look her in they eyes and lie through his teeth too, eventually she will wake up, (hopefully very quickly and sooner than us!).

I hope my ex's new source of supply dumps his sorry ass, and I would love for her to find out very quickly just what she has got involved with. I know she will of course, and I almost hope she comes looking for me when that happens. I will gladly help her.

In the meantime, I am dealing with the fallout, the low self-esteem, the weight gain, (he often called me a fat C**T), and he was obsessed with youth, (his own and others) and blondes, oh and his ex's, he never stopped talking about the ones that got away... I will be the new ex on that list now... and I shudder to think what lies he has already told...

you are not alone in this Supernova, please do not disapair.

I am shuddering now, because a Private/Blocked number just called my cell, and thankfully I missed that call.
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bpdspell
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« Reply #2 on: October 20, 2013, 10:47:59 PM »

Now he is on cloud nine in love while my heart is shredded to pieces and I'm still looking for the lost fragments of my soul. I don't get it. Did he really lie about loving me? Did he ever love me? He said he would never leave me. And is he going to do things right with this new person since he is starting fresh? I'm so sad.

I feel so empty. I don't believe in love anymore. I'm just a mess. And I still miss him even though I hate him. Someone please help.

Supernova,

You may not want to read this but your ex just did you a tremendous favor.

I know your heart is bleeding and you are feeling the pain of abandonment but your ex is playing childish narcissistic games to punish you for not giving into his demands. After eight years together I'm pretty sure you've been experiencing this kind of demanding entitlement for some time as you've recycled with your ex.

I know you are probably feeling confused, dazed and lost but as you learn about narcissism and it's strain called BPD you'll better comprehend the toxic dance that takes two to tango.

When I didn't give in to my ex's demands he literally dumped me in the morning; for a girl he had sex with the night before. He dropped me like a half-eaten sandwich in the middle of the street and gave me his butt to kiss because I wouldn't give him $50 when he asked for it. Never mind the fact that we made love two night before that.

So he cheated. Twice.

I had had it up to my neck in being my ex's mother. The entitlement, the neediness and the expectations were becoming a huge source of resentment for me. And yet I held onto my ex even with the glaring lack of reciprocity coming from his end. And how did he repay me? By giving me the shaft.

Their actions are cruel but it is their sickness at work.

Supernova. Empower yourself. Learn all you can about BPD so you can make an informed choice on whether to go No contact.

Our ex's are mentally ill and need attention to feel validated. They need to mirror others to feel as they exist.

It does hurt to be discarded but this is your time to truly step back and evaluate the entire HISTORY of your relationship. Do you really want to be with this person for the rest of your life? Was your relationship really a good one or one you tolerated out of fear?

BTW. Our BPD's don't move on; they repress by painting us black. It is what their child minds do to survive. They are used to swallowing and repressing painful conflicting emotions by shutting that part of themselves down.

You are probably enmeshed in a toxic bond with your ex. It would help you a great deal to get some talk therapy for catharsis and assistance in understanding why you're in love with someone who cares so little about your feelings.

Keep posting on here and keep reading the stories of others... .

You are not alone in this.

Spell


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Surnia
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« Reply #3 on: October 20, 2013, 10:57:40 PM »

Hi Supernova

a big, big hug. 

I would be sad and devasted too.

You are not alone with this here - so many members here are struggling with the fact how fast their partner are in a new rs. It is often part of the fear of abandonment, a quich replacement is needed.

Its okay to be sad, angry, all this. We are here for you.

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“Don’t shrink. Don’t puff up. Stand on your sacred ground.”  Brené Brown
fiddlestix
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« Reply #4 on: October 20, 2013, 11:06:58 PM »

Same here, supernova.  My soon to be ex BPD wife recycled me last spring.  Luckily, we did not end up in bed. But she did kiss me, tell me I was cute, told me she still loved me, she wanted to sit in my lap... .very intimate talk... .It was heroin to me.  Then, literally days later she lost interest. No warning, no explanation, just gone. She met a young biker at a bar. As far as I know she is still "honeymooning" with him.  

I don't know if BPD people willingly turn off the love like a faucet, or if it  just "happens" as per their disorder.  Perhaps it wasn't love at all. I am less hurt if it is truly out of their control.  As a chaplain in a home for retired and ill veterans I see a lot of schizophrenia and other illnesses.  I feel compassion for them, not anger.  They can't help the mental oddities they display.  If that is the case with my ex, then   I can move forward and not take the rejection quite as personal.

Fiddle

Perhaps their moving on is only the symptom of a very disordered mind.  It still
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fiddlestix
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« Reply #5 on: October 20, 2013, 11:12:29 PM »

Oops, that last post got cut off... .


  I know it is difficult, but seeing their ghastly behavior as the effects of a crippling mental disorder can make it a tad easier to overcome the anger, resentment and grief.  Perhaps, when I heal some more, I will feel compassion for my ex.  I hope.

Fiddlestix
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PhoenixRising15
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« Reply #6 on: October 20, 2013, 11:27:42 PM »

The short answer is:

1.) They are sick, so they "move on".

2.)  They don't actually move on.  They are just so hurt and impulsive they do whatever it takes to soothe themselves in the moment.

Read.  Read.  And Read more here and elsewhere until you begin to let it sink in.

It's taken me months of reading and im still not out of denial fully, but trust your gut.

And lean on your family here.

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thisyoungdad
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« Reply #7 on: October 21, 2013, 01:46:22 AM »

In my mind, logically I can understand that my ex wife has to move on quickly for her own sense of survival. My emotional self is torn apart by this fact, left crushed and wondering if I even mattered to her and or if she even even looks back on what we had. I do better if I stay in the logical part of my mind on this one it is less painful and easier to detach. I am so sorry you are going through this too, but like someone else said so many of us are and so many of us understand.
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strikeforce
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« Reply #8 on: October 21, 2013, 05:18:14 AM »

Mine has already moved on too, or so she says, I doubt she really has the time for a R/S

But yet she wont stop contacting me, despite the fact she told me to delete her number a week ago
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fromheeltoheal
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« Reply #9 on: October 21, 2013, 05:56:46 AM »

I'm sorry you're hurting Super.

I was reminded of something as I read your post: a BPD, lacking the ability to self-soothe, will do something impulsive in an attempt to deal with an emotion.  That something creates it's own shame, so they do something else impulsive, and on and on.  It snowballs, increasing the chaos between their ears.  My relationship was short compared to many, and I couldn't imagine spending 8 years with mine, my head would explode.  I'm wondering if there were periods of relative calm and stability in your time with him, there was very little in mine, short lived, and she was never faithful to me, even though she thought I thought so.  Things will get much better for you as you walk through a detachment, and things will never get better for him; the current fantasy is just that, and unsustainable.
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Century2012
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« Reply #10 on: October 21, 2013, 06:14:02 AM »

It is because they can't stand to be alone. Their irrational need to have someone fill them up causes them to act impulsively. Many us feel so discarded and question if they really cared. They have a hole in their heart. They are so insecure. They can only get their self-validation from someone else. Not within themselves.
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Ironmanrises
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« Reply #11 on: October 21, 2013, 10:56:44 AM »

They appear... .

To move on.

That appearance... .

Is for the enablers... .

To reward their god awful behavior... .

And... .

To hurt you.

And... .

If they are of the type... .

Of pwBPD... .

That has returned to the non... .

Before... .

The disorder... .

Will drive them... .

To keep returning... .

So that you... .

Can sooth them.

They have to portray this... .

Appearance... .

Because if they do not... .

Everyone else(the enablers)... .

Will see them... .

For how they really are... .

And... .

Will not stick around... .

Literally.

They will not be as understanding... .

As us.

Hang in there Supernova.

I am sorry you are experiencing this.

I know it hurts.

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hopealways
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« Reply #12 on: October 21, 2013, 11:36:46 AM »

They appear... .

To move on.

That appearance... .

Is for the enablers... .

To reward their god awful behavior... .


And... .

To hurt you.

And... .

If they are of the type... .

Of pwBPD... .

That has returned to the non... .

Before... .

The disorder... .

Will drive them... .

To keep returning... .

So that you... .

Can sooth them.

They have to portray this... .

Appearance... .

Because if they do not... .

Everyone else(the enablers)... .

Will see them... .

For how they really are... .

And... .

Will not stick around... .

Literally.

They will not be as understanding... .

As us.

Hang in there Supernova.

I am sorry you are experiencing this.

I know it hurts.

Very interesting observation. During our last breakup of 4 weeks my BPD would text me like clockwork once a week and I remained NC - but when I met up with her best friend who is also my best friend, and told the best friend that she had been texting me during the breakup the best friend had absolutely no idea (and I believe it).  She said "wow I never knew."

So they do not want the enablers to know how they act - they know they are manipulative and do not want their covers blown.
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Ironmanrises
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« Reply #13 on: October 21, 2013, 12:10:56 PM »

They appear... .

To move on.

That appearance... .

Is for the enablers... .

To reward their god awful behavior... .


And... .

To hurt you.

And... .

If they are of the type... .

Of pwBPD... .

That has returned to the non... .

Before... .

The disorder... .

Will drive them... .

To keep returning... .

So that you... .

Can sooth them.

They have to portray this... .

Appearance... .

Because if they do not... .

Everyone else(the enablers)... .

Will see them... .

For how they really are... .

And... .

Will not stick around... .

Literally.

They will not be as understanding... .

As us.

Hang in there Supernova.

I am sorry you are experiencing this.

I know it hurts.

Very interesting observation. During our last breakup of 4 weeks my BPD would text me like clockwork once a week and I remained NC - but when I met up with her best friend who is also my best friend, and told the best friend that she had been texting me during the breakup the best friend had absolutely no idea (and I believe it).  She said "wow I never knew."

So they do not want the enablers to know how they act - they know they are manipulative and do not want their covers blown.

In bold.

Exactly Hope.

How many of those supposed friends... .

Would remain friends with... .

The pwBPD... .

If they knew... .

If they really knew....

How they treated... .

The very people... .

That did nothing to them... .

To elicit... .

Anything remotely close... .

To the rain of fire... .

And hell in earth... .

That we endured... .

As a direct consequence... .?

They would be horrified... .

And immediately think... .

If that person... .

Can act in such a way... .

To the very person... .

Who got that close to them... .

In such a horrific manner... .

Imagine i got that close... .

To that person... .

That could very well... .

Be me... .

And they would jettison themselves... .

Of the pwBPD.

The pwBPD knows this.

An awareness... .

That is needed... .

To further propel... .

The dysfunctional behavior.

Your exs best friend... .

Not knowing of this... .

Is a direct reference... .

To what i described above.

Horrifying... .

Sad... .

And... .

Destructive to us... .

And only... .

Us.

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Iwalk-Heruns
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« Reply #14 on: October 21, 2013, 03:22:47 PM »

Hi supernova,

I'm so sorry for your pain. I know how dark and lonely those times can be. Been there and am back again. It can feel like your in a hole and can't get out.

To answer your question directly. I believe they are able to move on so quickly because their emotions are not deep. They are superficial. They just can't be deep. They can pretend deep but they don't feel it the same way we do. My ex used to always make the comment when I was talking about something deep. Let's just keep it surfacey. Hmm. Our emotions were deep so of course it will take us much longer to recover. It hurts to see them off like nothing ever happened while we are left in the dust crying but theirs is a temporary high. It will come crashing down again so we shouldn't envy them.

If you can try and be grateful you are a healthy enough person to have these emotions as painful as they are. I will work on taking my own advice as this is hard for me too.

I think we all know people like this are not worth it but we are human and we loved someone and we believed they loved us back. They are very good at deception. They show us what they want us to see until we are hooked then it's so hard to detach. If he didn't do it for me I don't think I could on my own and I consider myself a very strong person. Mine was a master manipulator. It is an evil disease. Dont blame yourself. It's not you. And I believe thinking it is keeps us stuck.

You don't deserve what he did to you. Stealing someone's heart and soul is one of the worst things someone can do to a person. I think because it's become so common place today for people to do these things and be selfish there is almost no stigma attached to it in society and it makes it easier for people to get away with it and there is not the right amount of sympathy to help us heal. Even nons do this.

I am just 3mo out of my 2nd major discard. 1st time he was with someone a few days later. This second time I just find out he had been cheating on me for much of our relationship with a coworker and now they are together. I am still numb. I haven't even processed it all yet.

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fromheeltoheal
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« Reply #15 on: October 21, 2013, 04:07:33 PM »

To answer your question directly. I believe they are able to move on so quickly because their emotions are not deep. They are superficial. They just can't be deep. They can pretend deep but they don't feel it the same way we do. My ex used to always make the comment when I was talking about something deep. Let's just keep it surfacey. Hmm. Our emotions were deep so of course it will take us much longer to recover. It hurts to see them off like nothing ever happened while we are left in the dust crying but theirs is a temporary high. It will come crashing down again so we shouldn't envy them.

These have been the primary questions since I've detached:  why was I having such a deep emotional experience by myself?  Why was I thinking this person was on the same page I was when we weren't even in the same book?  What did I think I was in love with?  How detached from the reality of the situation was I?  Why did I think if I just kept pushing and kept loving that I could 'fix' everything?

Pondering these things, soberly and in the absence of input from the Disordered, has been a profound opportunity for growth, and continues to be.  My current teacher showed up in beautiful packaging with a disordered mind.
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saw_tooth
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« Reply #16 on: October 21, 2013, 04:42:32 PM »

Supernova,

Totally understand how you feel and how difficult it must be for you to cope with all the hurt and pain.8 years is a long time and things ending suddenly like a switch being turned off sure bust be hard to fathom and live with.

You need to understand

-BPD is an emotional regulation and attachment disorder and rationalizing his behavior will ruin you but you will not be able to make sense of it so please stop that ASAP.Accept the fact that he is disordered and that is all there is to it.

-The relationship was abusive and looks like you were the giver,all along.He overstepped your boundaries by physically assaulting you.Abuse of any form(even though it is due to a person being disordered) must never be tolerated.

-It would never have been a whole and loving relationship even if he stayed.There would have been times when he would make you feel special only to top it up with abusive irrational behavior which would cause you great emotional pain.

-Even if he is seeing someone new(as he claims), the relationship will meet the same fate and he will leave yet another heartbroken confused lady behind.You are much better now because you are not a victim anymore.By discarding you he has given you the ability to cease control of your life and maneuver it in a direction you choose.Re-finding your self esteem and learning to respect your beautiful self yet again can be a good starting point.

To end this post,I'd like to share with you a few lines from my mentor which helped me heal from the BPD aftermath.

"There are two types of love-the one that heals and the one that sickens.You need to tell the difference between the two and promote the good one".

Good luck with healing.
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Iwalk-Heruns
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« Reply #17 on: October 21, 2013, 05:03:13 PM »

My current teacher showed up in beautiful packaging with a disordered mind.

I have used a similar analogy many times about my ex. I would say he was like a beautiful house that was built on sand. (I think something similar is from the bible about relationships)

Not to change topics but just to digress for a second. I hear many many people here talk about how above average good looking they are and the looks are part of the hook. Mine had women always coming after him and he is 50. Couple that with fake charm and he has a lot of opportunities. Even though I am not a superficial person I have to admit I couldn't help but be attracted to that combined with his idealization of me. I just wonder how much looks played a part in forming the disorder. Maybe that's more the narcissistic part of the disorder. Plenty of normal good looking people too though.
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Daisy 4Me

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« Reply #18 on: October 21, 2013, 05:13:43 PM »

Hi supernova,

They can pretend deep but they don't feel it the same way we do. My ex used to always make the comment when I was talking about something deep. Let's just keep it surfacey.

Iwalk-Heruns,

My ex said that same thing. He would say let's change the subject whenever our conversation went deep. And sometimes he said our conversation was going to make him cry, and then he would promptly change the subject. It was weird because often, he was the one who initiated the conversations.

I've been learning about BPD for a few years now because he wasn't the first one I've known. And I see the patterns. What I don't know still is if they dislike deeper talks because they can't relate to what you're saying, or is it because its too painful. Maybe a little of both.

Supernova,

I know the words that everyone has written here are probably not sinking in just yet. I've been there in that despair. Believe the words- as everyone says, it does get better. Keep reading, keep learning, and eventually you will be able to focus on yourself instead because you'll realize he is who he is and will always be. Patterns remain until or unless the individual truly seeks change, and that means many years of serious work in therapy. Whenever I miss him and forget what I've learned and who he really is, I come here to remind myself.

Daisy
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« Reply #19 on: October 21, 2013, 05:16:06 PM »

Supernova,

All the post here are so correct. There is not much to fill in... .

Keep on reading.

Mourn, do what you need, swift focus from your ex to you.

And somewhere in this whirlwind of feelings understand that you are happy that he swifted focus from you... .

You know how it will end.

You have seen it.

You would not want your worst enemy to go thru that.

I am not out of that whirlwind, I am all newly broken.

I know how you feel. You are not alone. 
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fromheeltoheal
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« Reply #20 on: October 21, 2013, 05:22:17 PM »

My ex said that same thing. He would say let's change the subject whenever our conversation went deep. And sometimes he said our conversation was going to make him cry, and then he would promptly change the subject. It was weird because often, he was the one who initiated the conversations.

I've been learning about BPD for a few years now because he wasn't the first one I've known. And I see the patterns. What I don't know still is if they dislike deeper talks because they can't relate to what you're saying, or is it because its too painful. Maybe a little of both.

Bingo.  Deep emotional conversations require two autonomous selves, and a BPD doesn't have one.  The seduction was all choreographed fantasy, gleaned from what has worked before, but it's all a charade, digging deeper would expose it, and then you will leave, which is their worst fear.  Better to keep it light and meaningless, whatever it takes to keep you my dear, since I literally don't exist without you.
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« Reply #21 on: October 21, 2013, 05:33:40 PM »

(he often called me a fat C**T), and he was obsessed with youth, (his own and others) and blondes.

Rollercoaster,

Mine would call me the c word when he was angry. Which I told him and he knew I hated. He of course would apologize but I think it's just indicative of how they perceive woman and the reason they can move on so quickly. They just don't value women or what they have.

Oh the I like blondes is a sore spot for me and always was in the relationship. On our 3rd date the topic came up somehow innocently and he said that all men prefer blondes. I said not all men some men prefer brunettes. It's like saying everyone likes red. He said anyone that tells you they like a brunette over a blonde is lying to you. I'm like helloo I am a brunette! Thinking aren't you at the stage of trying to impress me?  I was insulted. I said what if I said all women like white collar over blue collar guys as he is an electrician. He seemed to get that but it was obvious he preferred blondes. Things got a little touchy for a bit.  I dismissed this because I thought well he can't be that serious and he otherwise seems so interested in me. Should have been a major red flag  red-flagto me and the last date. He lived in my building though so there were more opportunities to see each other. He mentioned the blonde thing several times in our relationship. Even though he would tell me that I was beautiful I never quite felt like I was good enough or I was the ultimate for him. I In turn became very sensitive to pretty blondes in his presence and even in movies. Which I was always very secure before. No man should ever compare you to other women if he cares about you. Just another example of the not very deep nature of their personality and their ability to move on.
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LaSuede
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« Reply #22 on: October 21, 2013, 05:49:50 PM »

I am so grateful to this forum.

At least I am not alone... .although its tragic to see how many has been living thru so hurtful situations.

The B or C word, I can not count how many times he said to me?

Even in front of the kids.

Normally he repeated things, a joke, a verbal abuse, a hang-up he had on me, some situation way back when he had noticed something that revealed my bad personality.

Have you others experienced that? The repetitions? And I explain ones, twice, three times - than at the 25th time like: helloo did you not hear? And then the 100th time: "hear we go again", which is the one phrase that blows a BPD up I have noticed... .

I am as far from porn as anyone can be.

My ex was obsessed by it and the girls in it. He thought it was real somehow.

Meanwhile "loving me for who I am".

Just to soon "hate me for who I am"

Now he is together with an escort. 1,5 week after our final separation where he was going away, back home to heal.

Promising to our son to come back, even be here this week I realise, today... .

She first sold sex to him, and then they become a couple... .

So he moved on, even to another country. The 4th in a short notice and cause of women as far as I know.

I was the one standing up the longest. And probably awoke some health in him, because he started to be aware.

I don't know if that is good or bad. For sure co-dependent.

I guess this time its all so crazy so not even me can protect him or stand behind him.

Good in a sense.
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saw_tooth
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« Reply #23 on: October 21, 2013, 05:54:08 PM »

My ex used to always make the comment when I was talking about something deep. Let's just keep it surfacey. Hmm.

I had once written my ex quite a few love poems(in my hand,on special paper)  how happy I am to have him about how deeply i feel about him

His initial reaction was,write these on a letterhead and then maybe I will read them.Co-dependent and boundary less that i was,I actually wrote them on a letterhead and he said ':)on't ever write emotional stuff.You know I don't like to get emotional,don't you?'.Despite saying this he spent an entire day with me and insisted on focusing on the superficial aspect of things like food and the movie we watched as against anything related to feelings.

He vacillated between clinging to me, seeking assurance that I would not leave him and saying 'I will go abroad forever(was his code for for 'I will leave' on that day we spent together.

We had come very close and he could not take it.Shut down thereafter for 3 months which drove me nuts.

So yes,anything emotional triggers them and they prefer to keep strong feelings at bay lest the mask of normalcy they wear slip off(it does anyway,but they sure try)
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Iwalk-Heruns
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« Reply #24 on: October 21, 2013, 06:05:59 PM »

My ex used to always make the comment when I was talking about something deep. Let's just keep it surfacey. Hmm.

I had once written my ex quite a few love poems(in my hand,on special paper)  how happy I am to have him about how deeply i feel about him

His initial reaction was,write these on a letterhead and then maybe I will read them.Co-dependent and boundary less that i was,I actually wrote them on a letterhead and he said ':)on't ever write emotional stuff.You know I don't like to get emotional,don't you?'.Despite saying this he spent an entire day with me and insisted on focusing on the superficial aspect of things like food and the movie we watched as against anything related to feelings.

Sawtooth,

WOW! I completely belly laughed at this. I am obviously not laughing at your pain but the absurdly of the things they can say to us. I mean many people would kill for someone to love them that much to put it into words like that. The letterhead thing is classic.

My ex actually majorly raged at me once for crying at Cinderella man. He later told me it's because his mother would drink badly and go from happy to sad. He hated crying. Unless of course they were his tears.
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saw_tooth
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« Reply #25 on: October 21, 2013, 06:18:37 PM »

Sawtooth,

WOW! I completely belly laughed at this. I am obviously not laughing at your pain but the absurdly of the things they can say to us. I mean many people would kill for someone to love them that much to put it into words like that. The letterhead thing is classic.

The absurdity sure is  lolable I walk Smiling (click to insert in post).If we were to journal them,it would become a life-long laugh riot .

Jokes apart, thank you for acknowledging the depth of my love,glad someone understands.

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« Reply #26 on: October 21, 2013, 06:26:45 PM »


Despite saying this he spent an entire day with me and insisted on focusing on the superficial aspect of things like food and the movie we watched as against anything related to feelings.

Sawtooth,

Oh I just picked up on another thing that struck a cord my ex loved cooking and always cooked for me which I of course loved. But I always noticed it was a little strange that let's say after a couple dark days of raging or mr Hyde behavior he would suddenly come out of it and 9 times out of ten would just start talking about food and asking me what we should make for dinner . Like it was the main topic. A lot. What we were making for dinner, what we should get at the store. He went to the grocery store everyday. Seems normal enough but I noticed because it happened a lot. Something surfacey.

Also he loved to watch movies. So do I but... .Sometimes I just wanted to sit and talk. He would say let's get lost in a movie. I noticed that it was above normal escapism for him.  There were also movies that he said he had watched at least fifty times. I said wow that's too much! jokingly but he said no seriously!

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Iwalk-Heruns
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« Reply #27 on: October 21, 2013, 06:38:04 PM »

Sawtooth,

Jokes apart, thank you for acknowledging the depth of my love,glad someone understands.

Yes sawtooth I did recognize it and I do understand because I felt the same way. For all my ex's faults I had a very very deep love for him. I actually think that it is his loss because people would kill to have someone love them that much. But he is more interested in following the next shiny thing that catches his eye. ( And of course there the disorder. Sometimes I can even forget. ) They love the infatuation stage( again surfacy). I am also realizing that the depth of your love is more about you and your ability to love and not as much about them. You will someday have that love for someone who values it and reciprocates.
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Supernova9star

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« Reply #28 on: October 21, 2013, 09:27:44 PM »

They appear... .

To move on.

That appearance... .

Is for the enablers... .

To reward their god awful behavior... .

And... .

To hurt you.

Thank you Ironman. I know he is choosing some very young and naive people to surround himself with because they will buy into his illusions. What I don't understand is why he would want to shut out the one person who has stood by him all these years and loved him even while seeing his real self. And I don't get why he would want to hurt me. I'm not a bad person. Te hardest time is at night when my daughter is in bed and I alone. He isn't here to talk to and I miss the companionship. It also hurts to know he could be holding his new girlfriend "victim" the same way he held me while I am sitting here in tears every night dealing with the pain.
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Supernova9star

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« Reply #29 on: October 21, 2013, 09:34:07 PM »

I kind of already knew in my heart/gut... and had ignored that very strong instinct for most of the time I was with him.

These guys are two different people, and it hurts like hell to think that they could say all that stuff so romantically, with such feeling, and then days/weeks/hours later, act like it meant nothing at all, but there are two parts to them, one might have meant that and then the other kicks in, and all that sentiment vanishes on the wind.

Such is their illness, heartbreakingly cruel... .

You must realise that whoever he has shacked up with now, will be getting exactly the same treatment within a very short time, and most likely has no idea that either you exist, or has been served with a very different picture than the truth. He will look her in they eyes and lie through his teeth too, eventually she will wake up

I know I ignored my instincts as well. But he also helped me to second guess myself. He always called me paranoid. In fact, he tried telling me I had an anxiety disorder. There were also many times he fought with me just because I had a bad gut feeling about him. He would turn it around and convince me that I was delusional.

He would say the prettiest things sometimes. I felt like I was the most loved person in the world. But then his actions would contradict it all. The abuse and the lies made me question his feelings for me which drove me insane and made me resentful towards him. I was certain I was being blindsided. But the denial was so intense and his charm was like a drug. I didn't want to believe that it was all fake.

Now to see how easily he can turn away from his life with me and move on it makes it clear he wasn't ever really there. But I was. And I was trying to make it work. I was giving it my all. It just feels so unfair.
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