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Author Topic: Did they warn you?  (Read 598 times)
lost not dead
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« on: December 20, 2013, 04:47:59 PM »

I ended up engaged in a long conversation with my exwife last night because our daghter "rejected her". The blame started rolling of her tongue like a well rehearsed opera. When I tried to fleetingly tell her it wasn't my fault she repeated a line I hadn't heard from her in at least ten years. " I told you I wasn't capable of love like you wanted. I told you if you stayed with me I would destroy you. So this is all your fault. "

How can you argue with that logic?
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« Reply #1 on: December 20, 2013, 04:52:15 PM »

Sometimes we don't listen when we should have and other times we listen when we shouldn't have... .

But yeah, when I look back, I was warned too... .
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« Reply #2 on: December 20, 2013, 04:54:13 PM »

I ended up engaged in a long conversation with my exwife last night because our daghter "rejected her". The blame started rolling of her tongue like a well rehearsed opera. When I tried to fleetingly tell her it wasn't my fault she repeated a line I hadn't heard from her in at least ten years. " I told you I wasn't capable of love like you wanted. I told you if you stayed with me I would destroy you. So this is all your fault. "

How can you argue with that logic?

Except the other half is if you stayed she could have accepted responsibility for not destroying you.  She claims she isn't capable: is that the truth or a cop out?  Bottom line is she's going to do whatever she wants and if you don't like it, it's your fault; blame is a handy tool for not taking responsibility.
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« Reply #3 on: December 20, 2013, 04:58:51 PM »

Circular talk. No matter what the hell you say YOU are in the wrong.

That is one piece of clarity I got in a email from one of her exes. The woman told me I deserved someone who would "fully love me as I deserve". She said she believes my ex has "demons" and cannot fully love a person.

I que'd her in to BPD. Probably got back to the ex but whatever Smiling (click to insert in post)

Anyways she told me when she would argue with my ex she was always wrong and she couldn't rationalize with her.

This turned out to be the best closure for me, knowing I am not the only one.
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« Reply #4 on: December 20, 2013, 05:05:41 PM »

My exBPDgf told me she had walked out of every relationship she had been in.  She, of course, followed that up with she would never do that to me.  I was special, I was her soul mate, I was the only man for her, we were made for each other,  I had ruined her for all other men.  Etc., etc., etc.

I should have listened to the first part and ignored the second part.
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« Reply #5 on: December 20, 2013, 05:09:20 PM »

How can you argue with that logic?

You can't reason logic with crazy.

It took me 8 years to learn that lesson.
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« Reply #6 on: December 20, 2013, 05:20:43 PM »

Amen, Mutt. Amen.

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« Reply #7 on: December 20, 2013, 05:23:18 PM »

Lostnotdead

I don't listen to whatever my husband says and sometimes I pretend that I listened and appease his ego to confirm whatever craps he says. Who cares?

You cannot reason with a crazy! Yes and yes mutt

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« Reply #8 on: December 20, 2013, 05:40:37 PM »

Pearl,  Doing the right thing (click to insert in post)
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« Reply #9 on: December 20, 2013, 05:42:26 PM »

She told me many things that in hindsight I should have seen as the red flags and warnings they were. I thought that I was different than those who had come before. I believed her version of her past, and was glad she had made it through it. Why wouldn't I?

The biggest warning for me was seeing with my own eyes how she would twist things around to be whatever story she needed it to be. Facts didn't matter, other people's feelings didn't count. No questions, that's an order. Personal accountability zero.

It creeps up on you, being caught up in someone else's reality like that, but we can shake free. The FOG will clear, and any future signs of it will be a warning we should heed.
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« Reply #10 on: December 20, 2013, 05:50:39 PM »

Excerpt
The biggest warning for me was seeing with my own eyes how she would twist things around to be whatever story she needed it to be. Facts didn't matter, other people's feelings didn't count. No questions, that's an order. Personal accountability zero.

It creeps up on you, being caught up in someone else's reality like that, but we can shake free. The FOG will clear, and any future signs of it will be a warning we should heed.

Sub in she for he. Mine was/ is high functioning, took a while before he dropped the mask.

Logic and Reason, Facts were to him , I don't know, irrelevant? Personal accountability was utterly non existent. Took me 10 years to finally accept that.
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« Reply #11 on: December 20, 2013, 06:05:38 PM »

 When we were first dating ( but it wasn't dating according to her),  she said, " with me.  you'll  get both heaven and hell." I  never saw heaven,  and while I certainly can imagine worse, I  got closer to hell.  so in the beginning,  she lied to me.
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« Reply #12 on: December 20, 2013, 06:34:10 PM »

She told me many things that in hindsight I should have seen as the red flags and warnings they were. I thought that I was different than those who had come before. I believed her version of her past, and was glad she had made it through it. Why wouldn't I?

All her ex's were abusive etc... .I remember she recounted the story of the guy before me often. She had said that he had poured gasoline on her and I felt sympathy. I remember thinking "that's not going to happen on my watch!"

That was the caretaker/knight and shining armor in me.


I'm a physically/emotionally/financially/alcoholic abusive man in her mind and to her network of enablers she calls friends.

The biggest warning for me was seeing with my own eyes how she would twist things around to be whatever story she needed it to be. Facts didn't matter, other people's feelings didn't count. No questions, that's an order. Personal accountability zero.

It creeps up on you, being caught up in someone else's reality like that, but we can shake free. The FOG will clear, and any future signs of it will be a warning we should heed.

Gaslighting.

Nearly 2 years ago in January 2012.

I'll never forget the conversation I had with my BIL in his truck outside of his house, away from my sister. I was staying with him for the umpteenth time due to my wife's push behavior.

I wanted to talk to someone I trust completely. I asked him. "Is it me? Am I crazy? Am I this person that my wife thinks that I am?"

I was starting to doubt my sanity, reasoning and logic.
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« Reply #13 on: December 20, 2013, 06:37:50 PM »

   darn phone and getting mixed up with quote/modify. Sorry for double post.
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« Reply #14 on: December 20, 2013, 07:03:44 PM »

She told me "I'm a broken person, but all I really want is to be happy and loved". *cue big puppy dog eyes*

Silly, silly me... .

Red flag, right there!

I genuinely thought she'd just had a run of bad luck, and all her friends who'd "abandoned" her in the past were cold-hearted people who didn't know what they were missing... .

*sigh*!

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« Reply #15 on: December 20, 2013, 07:11:28 PM »

  darn phone and getting mixed up with quote/modify. Sorry for double post.

I hate posting from my phone... .but I'm so addicted to this site, that I try anyway, which is why some of my posts have spelling errors and nonsensical words thrown in.

At home, I use the tablet, depsite not having a swype keyboard, but give me a full keyboard any day. I'd try google voice, but if I'm outside, the neighbors might think I'm crazy.
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« Reply #16 on: December 20, 2013, 07:11:59 PM »

My BPDexgf did warn me.  She told me she thought she was too broken for me.  She told me about her high highs and low lows.  I feel somewhat broken too, and this was part of what drew us together - not being broken together but understanding how it feels and trying (at least on my part) to not just be another person who walked away from her.  I attributed the highs and lows to possible bipolar early on.  Stuck around because at least with some people this is manageable withs meds.  One of my best friends has bipolar, and you would almost never know it.

Sadly, my exgf has both bipolar and BPD and she's refusing medication.  I'm not a huge med fan, so I don't totally fault her decision.

She also "warned" me via her interactions with her adult son and her stepmom (which I observed).  Anger, venom, followed by idealization.  she would also explode at total strangers who had "wronged" her in some way.  This spoke volumes to me.  I knew it was probably only a matter of time before I became the target, and I was right.

I saw red flags very early.  I mentioned these  Red flag/bad  (click to insert in post)  Red flag/bad  (click to insert in post) to a psychologist friend, and she truly saved me from possible years of trauma and anguish.  I got out after less than 6 months (6 intense months that felt much longer).  I'm still recovering.

But yes, she did warn me.  I ignored or minimized some, but thank god not all.
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« Reply #17 on: December 20, 2013, 07:17:18 PM »

My BPDexgf did warn me.  She told me she thought she was too broken for me.  She told me about her high highs and low lows.  I feel somewhat broken too, and this was part of what drew us together - not being broken together but understanding how it feels and trying (at least on my part) to not just be another person who walked away from her.  

This is an interesting thread. Does anyone else think that this is both a filter and a bait to find Rescuer/Caretaker/Co-dependent types as most of us seem to be here?

In the end, it absolves them of responsibility, because they can say, "I told you in the beginning!"

Yes, a self-fulfilling prophecy. A script.

Fake.
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« Reply #18 on: December 20, 2013, 07:20:10 PM »

Yeah I was warned! Long distance relationship for the first year of three years.

Over the phone in the early days I was told... .

" I used to be a very angry person"

"I used to make friends easily but couldn't keep them"

"I don't do guilt, I don't feel it! I try but it just doesn't come to me".

So yeah I was warned & warned & warned!
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« Reply #19 on: December 20, 2013, 07:30:55 PM »

I hate posting from my phone... .but I'm so addicted to this site, that I try anyway, which is why some of my posts have spelling errors and nonsensical words thrown in.

At home, I use the tablet, depsite not having a swype keyboard, but give me a full keyboard any day. I'd try google voice, but if I'm outside, the neighbors might think I'm crazy.

The wife took everything when she left. Back to square one. I feel like an 18 year old bachelor. She drained me financially and took the computer left me with the old furntiture. CS is really high with 3 kids. I'm addicted too and most of my posts come from my Blackberry. I feel like I can pour bits of my story on this board over several posts and let it out. The support/guidance/knowledge is phenominal in understand a complex r/s dynamic and disorder.
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« Reply #20 on: December 20, 2013, 07:33:58 PM »

Yes, warned.

BUT

The warnings were couched between proclamations of 'not ever wanting to lose me' etc ... .it's not like I was sat down and told outright ... .
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« Reply #21 on: December 20, 2013, 07:39:49 PM »

Yes many MANY times. However, it was during the honeymoon phase. I didn't think too much of it. I figured if someone is crazy, they're crazy 24/7 and it would be obvious. Extremely Naive on my part. Lesson learned.
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« Reply #22 on: December 20, 2013, 08:09:29 PM »

Yes, warned.

BUT

The warnings were couched between proclamations of 'not ever wanting to lose me' etc ... .it's not like I was sat down and told outright ... .

mine was always, " you won't ever leave me,  will you?"  and, " you love me,  right?"  That finally stopped around year 4. I  figured she felt secure and had grown up some. I  figured wrong.
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« Reply #23 on: December 20, 2013, 08:24:10 PM »

Sometimes we don't listen when we should have and other times we listen when we shouldn't have... .

But yeah, when I look back, I was warned too... .

My uBPDxgf told me once that I deserve better. How right she was.

   It was probably around then that the initial ideation phase of our r/s was ending. The night before she had stood me up to go to a party without me and word got back to me that she'd made a complete mess of herself and looked like hooking up until she passed out and pissed herself on the hosts' sofa. After much tearful apologising and promising it would never happen again, which in hindsight was the first of many broken promises, I forgave her and actually apologised to her for being so upset about it.

   If only I'd stayed upset and got out then. Didn't see the Red flag/bad  (click to insert in post) for what it was. We fall into the trap of believing the lies, and not believing (or at least not wanting to believe) the truth. Several friends were warning me that I was never gonna be able to make it work, but good ol' Knight in Shining Armour me wasted another year of my life before seeing the light. 
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« Reply #24 on: December 20, 2013, 08:57:28 PM »

I was definitely warned! In the beginning when he was being sweet he would make these side comments like ":)on't get used to it. This hit won't be happening in a month." And he always made it out to be a joke. IT WASNT A JOKE, HE TURNED INTO THE DEVIL.

He also would say things RIGHT WHEN WE STARTED DATING like "oh don't worry you'll be living in _____ by this time next year." (The city I had always wanted to move to) and then in the next breath telling me he wants to marry me. I was always just baffled by his comments so didn't take anything he said seriously.

I guess he tried to warn me! I'm moving away jan 1! Who know BPDs could predict the future too!
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« Reply #25 on: December 20, 2013, 09:56:21 PM »

At the end of our relationship, he was making excuses for his behavior, he was like "I'm am an addict." I knew that he was in recovery but I feel that was his way to make his behaviors "not his fault."

I remember early on in our relationship, he was trying to hang a wall feature on the wall and he couldn't get it straight. He asked me for help, but I told him I didn't know what to do either. Then my Ex got really frustrated and threw it on the ground and it broke. Then he gave me a  Red flag/bad  (click to insert in post), which was him saying something like "well this is the first time you saw me get mad, that's a good thing" and then he gave me a hug, I think he knew I was taken back by his reaction. It was like he was proud that it was the first time I saw him get mad.

I remember once when we were just "friends" after the first breakup, we went out to eat and he looked like a little boy when he brought up one of his past transgression like he was almost proud. It was almost like he was embracing that he is a "bad" guy when other times he is really ashamed of it, which I think is the truth. I remember him saying that he was surprised we got together, because I'm a "good girl," I don't drink and never did any kind of drugs and he is a recovering alcoholic and drug addict who made other mistakes in his past.

I thought he was someone who wanted to work on himself and have a better life, he did stop drinking and drugs but of course his dry drunk or BPD behaviors or both are a real problem!

Also, he admitted to having anxiety and he had obsessive thoughts, which was the type of OCD he had. I feel this made the relationship with him so hard, because he was always trying to find something wrong with our relationship and no relationship can withstand that. It also made being intimate hard because he would second guess every facial reaction or doubt if the chemistry was right. Also, freaking out if sex didn't go how he thought it should go and would walk away upset. Also, the medication he took for anxiety affected him sexually which embarrassed and upset him to no end.

Also, he withdrew from sex, which was awful! I was warned about anxiety and OCD but I have OCD as well, but not as bad as him, but didn't expect this. Although, I did ignore other red flags, live and learn!

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« Reply #26 on: December 20, 2013, 10:24:43 PM »

Yes. She warned me. I thought she was joking. She wasn't. I didn't think it was going to be a big problem. I didn't know about mental illness.  I didn't know how it would affect me. I didn't understand drug addiction either. I didn't know how it was going to affect me. I had plenty of warning from her behavior and personality. I did not know how it would affect me. I had all kinds of warning signs. It didn't matter because I didn't act upon them. Now I know.
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« Reply #27 on: December 20, 2013, 10:58:48 PM »

The warnings were exhibited starting from when we were first friends. I saw them as just quirks of her personality. I honestly had no ___ing clue at that time what a truly godawful person I was allowing into my life as I was still healing on all levels from my second suicide attempt. Those very quirks in hindsight after she left me the first time now viewed through the BPD corrective lens were horrific deformations of her personality that was clearly 2 different personalities within one person. I was seeing glimpses of her Medusa side(other side) even when just friends, experienced the full explosion of that very personality when she RAGED at me over the phone in round 1 discard, and the coup d'grace was that I witnessed in person in final days of being in her house in round 2, the splitting of her personality. I encountered Medusa those last few days. I am still horrified to this day as to what I experienced. The mere quirks I once innocently thought in the beginning, fast forward to now, shows the naive idyll I was once in, has been thoroughly annihilated.
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« Reply #28 on: December 20, 2013, 11:52:05 PM »

The warnings were exhibited starting from when we were first friends. I saw them as just quirks of her personality. I honestly had no ___ing clue at that time what a truly godawful person I was allowing into my life as I was still healing on all levels from my second suicide attempt. Those very quirks in hindsight after she left me the first time now viewed through the BPD corrective lens were horrific deformations of her personality that was clearly 2 different personalities within one person. I was seeing glimpses of her Medusa side(other side) even when just friends, experienced the full explosion of that very personality when she RAGED at me over the phone in round 1 discard, and the coup d'grace was that I witnessed in person in final days of being in her house in round 2, the splitting of her personality. I encountered Medusa those last few days. I am still horrified to this day as to what I experienced. The mere quirks I once innocently thought in the beginning, fast forward to now, shows the naive idyll I was once in, has been thoroughly annihilated.

I'm sorry Ironman. Did you share what you had been through with her,and did she use that to further hurt you?

I count several personalities with mine... .not quite like split personality, but justfacets she shows people. She even wrote them in herjournal, confirmingwhat i already knew. Now, in the end, I've seen them all. No one will ever again know her as I do. A dark gift for me... .
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« Reply #29 on: December 21, 2013, 12:00:51 AM »

I hate posting from my phone... .but I'm so addicted to this site, that I try anyway, which is why some of my posts have spelling errors and nonsensical words thrown in.

At home, I use the tablet, depsite not having a swype keyboard, but give me a full keyboard any day. I'd try google voice, but if I'm outside, the neighbors might think I'm crazy.

The wife took everything when she left. Back to square one. I feel like an 18 year old bachelor. She drained me financially and took the computer left me with the old furntiture. CS is really high with 3 kids. I'm addicted too and most of my posts come from my Blackberry. I feel like I can pour bits of my story on this board over several posts and let it out. The support/guidance/knowledge is phenominal in understand a complex r/s dynamic and disorder.

I really like your posts, Mutt.  Thanks for all the info the last 3 days.  I hope I can get as strong as you one day, and have the feeling of loving myself and being over her games, or at least, recognizing them.

I am addicted to this site too!
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« Reply #30 on: December 21, 2013, 12:08:00 AM »

This is an interesting thread. Does anyone else think that this is both a filter and a bait to find Rescuer/Caretaker/Co-dependent types as most of us seem to be here?

In the end, it absolves them of responsibility, because they can say, "I told you in the beginning!" ... .

Yes definitely. Its part of the BPD script and comes shortly before the sh!t tests.

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« Reply #31 on: December 21, 2013, 12:10:15 AM »

The warnings were exhibited starting from when we were first friends. I saw them as just quirks of her personality. I honestly had no ___ing clue at that time what a truly godawful person I was allowing into my life as I was still healing on all levels from my second suicide attempt. Those very quirks in hindsight after she left me the first time now viewed through the BPD corrective lens were horrific deformations of her personality that was clearly 2 different personalities within one person. I was seeing glimpses of her Medusa side(other side) even when just friends, experienced the full explosion of that very personality when she RAGED at me over the phone in round 1 discard, and the coup d'grace was that I witnessed in person in final days of being in her house in round 2, the splitting of her personality. I encountered Medusa those last few days. I am still horrified to this day as to what I experienced. The mere quirks I once innocently thought in the beginning, fast forward to now, shows the naive idyll I was once in, has been thoroughly annihilated.

I'm sorry Ironman. Did you share what you had been through with her,and did she use that to further hurt you?

I count several personalities with mine... .not quite like split personality, but justfacets she shows people. She even wrote them in herjournal, confirmingwhat i already knew. Now, in the end, I've seen them all. No one will ever again know her as I do. A dark gift for me... .

Turkish, as our friendship deepened, I began to share with her what had happened to me(2 suicide attempts, depression) and we "bonded" through her telling me about her traumatic experiences. A "deep bond" in her words that she loved. She would always reference to that "deep bond". Did she mean these words? Unknown. Later on, she referenced my depression along with my suicide attempts as me being "weak" in devaluation. That I "remained stuck in life." while she was "personally developing". Right. Suffice to say, those words cut right through me. Here I was trying to understand her, her disorder and all the hell that it comes with and here she was, putting me down. Mine had 2 major personalities with 2-3 minor ones interwoven or they were the schemas she was going through. A dark gift I can certainly imagine.
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« Reply #32 on: December 21, 2013, 12:15:01 AM »

I hate posting from my phone... .but I'm so addicted to this site, that I try anyway, which is why some of my posts have spelling errors and nonsensical words thrown in.

At home, I use the tablet, depsite not having a swype keyboard, but give me a full keyboard any day. I'd try google voice, but if I'm outside, the neighbors might think I'm crazy.

The wife took everything when she left. Back to square one. I feel like an 18 year old bachelor. She drained me financially and took the computer left me with the old furntiture. CS is really high with 3 kids. I'm addicted too and most of my posts come from my Blackberry. I feel like I can pour bits of my story on this board over several posts and let it out. The support/guidance/knowledge is phenominal in understand a complex r/s dynamic and disorder.

I should take back the ipad I got her last christmas... .but working on a job for that company all weekend a few months ago, I came home drained. They are a customer of my company. Sat down to read and unwind and the x comes in and says we were done. I was "ignoring" her (shed already taken up with that kid anyway, so bs... .I didn't find out until a few weekss after).  No fraking appreciatin for working my ass off for our family. Zero support from her other than watching the kids which are hers too, and something id sure rather be doing.
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« Reply #33 on: December 21, 2013, 12:19:36 AM »

The warnings were exhibited starting from when we were first friends. I saw them as just quirks of her personality. I honestly had no ___ing clue at that time what a truly godawful person I was allowing into my life as I was still healing on all levels from my second suicide attempt. Those very quirks in hindsight after she left me the first time now viewed through the BPD corrective lens were horrific deformations of her personality that was clearly 2 different personalities within one person. I was seeing glimpses of her Medusa side(other side) even when just friends, experienced the full explosion of that very personality when she RAGED at me over the phone in round 1 discard, and the coup d'grace was that I witnessed in person in final days of being in her house in round 2, the splitting of her personality. I encountered Medusa those last few days. I am still horrified to this day as to what I experienced. The mere quirks I once innocently thought in the beginning, fast forward to now, shows the naive idyll I was once in, has been thoroughly annihilated.

I'm sorry Ironman. Did you share what you had been through with her,and did she use that to further hurt you?

I count several personalities with mine... .not quite like split personality, but justfacets she shows people. She even wrote them in herjournal, confirmingwhat i already knew. Now, in the end, I've seen them all. No one will ever again know her as I do. A dark gift for me... .

Turkish, as our friendship deepened, I began to share with her what had happened to me(2 suicide attempts, depression) and we "bonded" through her telling me about her traumatic experiences. A "deep bond" in her words that she loved. She would always reference to that "deep bond". Did she mean these words? Unknown. Later on, she referenced my depression along with my suicide attempts as me being "weak" in devaluation. That I "remained stuck in life." while she was "personally developing". Right. Suffice to say, those words cut right through me. Here I was trying to understand her, her disorder and all the hell that it comes with and here she was, putting me down. Mine had 2 major personalities with 2-3 minor ones interwoven or they were the schemas she was going through. A dark gift I can certainly imagine.

What a vampire! You sound like you had it worse emotionally. Id try to talk to mine about my past, but she'd always shut me down (I think it triggered her pain). And she wondered why I never talked to her deeply about such things. I never felt safe opening up! Yet I was the poor communicator, riiiight.
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« Reply #34 on: December 21, 2013, 07:42:36 AM »

Oh yea ----thats exactly what happened to me. At the height of the honeymoon / idealization stage she blurted out " I just need to warn you that all my relationships end badly and I end them all".  I very stupidly (in hindsight) said that won't happen this time we love each other so much. How wrong I was. 9 months and three breakups later boy was she right all her relationships do end badly and she does end them all. Silly Chuck I thought I was "the one" the exception that if I just loved her with all my heart and soul I would fix her I would rescue her. Silly me BPD and NPD cannot--- I say CANNOT be defeated. And, now 15 months later after an unprecedented 2 month silence on her part I'm still sad, shattered, and shellshocked. But one day at a time with faith, friends, and family I'm trying hard to little by little recover and get a little bit stronger. Just a little bit stronger. One day one hour at a time.

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« Reply #35 on: December 21, 2013, 03:00:23 PM »

I guess it is common and now a new red flag for me.
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« Reply #36 on: December 21, 2013, 03:16:39 PM »

I guess it is common and now a new red flag for me.

And the red flags for us is  that most of us here had LTRs  with someone with a  severe PD.  better to not lay that one out in the first date... . Or never to mention it.
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« Reply #37 on: December 21, 2013, 03:26:15 PM »

This BPD shyt is enough to scare the crap out of people we date in the future. 

I have a pub date tomorrow.  I did tell this person my ex is crazy.  I had to put it out there. The lesbian community is small and in case we run into her she needs some warning but I can't share anything else.  No one but the people on this board would believe this stuff. 
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« Reply #38 on: December 21, 2013, 04:04:30 PM »

Yeah I made the mistake of telling the truth to a date. She kept saying she could handle it. Sure. I find it very upsetting at the double standard of dating. I find that it is accepted for divorced women that her husband was an ass but when you're a divorced man there seems to be a stigma.

Sorry that should probably be its own thread.
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« Reply #39 on: December 21, 2013, 04:09:15 PM »

Yeah I made the mistake of telling the truth to a date. She kept saying she could handle it. Sure. I find it very upsetting at the double standard of dating. I find that it is accepted for divorced women that her husband was an ass but when you're a divorced man there seems to be a stigma.

Sorry that should probably be its own thread.

yes.  like we did something to deserve it. They deserve to be happy and do just about anything to justify it.  my x,  while not painting me entirely black,  has garnered sympathy as the unloved waif. I  think she isn't aware that not everybody buys into that ( like her family,  since they've dealt with her periodic rages and mood swings their whole lives),  but her new idiot obviously did.
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« Reply #40 on: December 21, 2013, 04:44:59 PM »

Turkish

It feels like we are talking about the exact same woman. Do they have a secret book called "How to make them walk on Eggshells"?
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« Reply #41 on: December 21, 2013, 04:51:53 PM »

  darn phone and getting mixed up with quote/modify. Sorry for double post.

I hate posting from my phone... .but I'm so addicted to this site, that I try anyway, which is why some of my posts have spelling errors and nonsensical words thrown in.

At home, I use the tablet, depsite not having a swype keyboard, but give me a full keyboard any day. I'd try google voice, but if I'm outside, the neighbors might think I'm crazy.

Just tell them it's your stbx Smiling (click to insert in post)
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« Reply #42 on: December 21, 2013, 05:08:21 PM »

Turkish

It feels like we are talking about the exact same woman. Do they have a secret book called "How to make them walk on Eggshells"?

She has been somewhat with me.  I've gently ripped into her a few times and her responses are weak and short.  she realizes I  am still providing her some stability. I  know on some level she appreciates it. Finally.
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« Reply #43 on: December 21, 2013, 05:09:37 PM »

Turkish

It feels like we are talking about the exact same woman. Do they have a secret book called "How to make them walk on Eggshells"?

I  imagine there's a factory somewhere,  churning them out.  :)ysfunction  Junction,  Inc.
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« Reply #44 on: December 21, 2013, 10:22:06 PM »

She did warn me.  She told me about her BPD, her depression and her ADD. But things were going so well then.

She told me she tends to not be the one ending the relationship, that she will act out and get dumped before dumping.

Looking back, I should have known. I don't know why I didn't leave then, I guess it wasn't my finest hour.
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« Reply #45 on: December 21, 2013, 10:32:31 PM »

jj

You were like the rest of us poor fools. You were going to show her how life was with a real man that knew how to treat a lady.
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« Reply #46 on: December 21, 2013, 10:45:32 PM »

Lost not dead,

Thank you, I needed to hear that. 

I'm keeping my hopes up that this will work out better with an actual lady. :P

J/
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« Reply #47 on: December 22, 2013, 07:58:07 AM »

Me too j.
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« Reply #48 on: December 22, 2013, 08:11:02 AM »

Yep. "Everyone in my life abandons me".

I felt so sorry for him and it made me fall for him harder. I guess I wanted to be the female equivalent of a white knight.


Now he's probably telling his new woman that I abandoned him even though he "ended" it- ie refused to see me.
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« Reply #49 on: December 22, 2013, 08:52:12 AM »

I loved reading everyone's warnings as mine were so similar if not identical.  Literal clue bats to the head that I glossed over as the real person who was being revealed to me was diametrically opposed to the woman that I had known for so many years prior to the relationship.  She hid it so well over those years that even in retrospect I can only remember a few whiffs of BPD that I can only connect to the disorder due to the knowledge I gained from the board.

The best one she ever told me was: "I am a monster." Yes, they are true monsters in all of their various types.

As part of my recovery, I was forced to reckon with with how I failed to heed her blatant warnings.  I have come to the following:

1) She triggered the "rescuer" in me

2) HF BPDs are so good at concealing the condition

3) I could not process the new information as the relationship progressed with the person I thought I knew

Having the three things listed above coupled with my weakness to defend my boundaries properly led to a really good long term teaching experience for me.

In the final cataclysmic event after which I immediately dumped her, she dysregulated so badly that it was really weird observing her behaviors.  She reenaged me one last time to gain back control whereupon she dumped me after having my replacement locked in place.  I don't think I could have simply dumped her as she had to be in control of everything to the Nth degree so it had to end with her, at least thinking, that she dumped me.  Anyway, I thank my replacement profusely for liberating me, and they are currently married by the way.
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« Reply #50 on: December 22, 2013, 10:07:33 AM »

I just remembered some more  Red flag/bad  (click to insert in post)  frightened I ignored. Although I did note at the time they were odd remarks for a person to make.

1, during a txt exchange filled with fury (from both sides I confess) she txt'd me "I'm bad to the bone & you will never BEAT me so give up!"

2, when she was doing her best to create an argument so she could cancel our plans & do something (someone) else. I saw her coming this time & wouldn't bite. She got furious & shouted "c'mon play the game!"

She knew/knows all too well that something's VERY wrong!
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« Reply #51 on: December 22, 2013, 10:15:34 AM »

I loved reading everyone's warnings as mine were so similar if not identical.  Literal clue bats to the head that I glossed over as the real person who was being revealed to me was diametrically opposed to the woman that I had known for so many years prior to the relationship.  She hid it so well over those years that even in retrospect I can only remember a few whiffs of BPD that I can only connect to the disorder due to the knowledge I gained from the board.

The best one she ever told me was: "I am a monster." Yes, they are true monsters in all of their various types.

As part of my recovery, I was forced to reckon with with how I failed to heed her blatant warnings.  I have come to the following:

1) She triggered the "rescuer" in me

2) HF BPDs are so good at concealing the condition

3) I could not process the new information as the relationship progressed with the person I thought I knew

Having the three things listed above coupled with my weakness to defend my boundaries properly led to a really good long term teaching experience for me.

In the final cataclysmic event after which I immediately dumped her, she dysregulated so badly that it was really weird observing her behaviors.  She reenaged me one last time to gain back control whereupon she dumped me after having my replacement locked in place.  I don't think I could have simply dumped her as she had to be in control of everything to the Nth degree so it had to end with her, at least thinking, that she dumped me.  Anyway, I thank my replacement profusely for liberating me, and they are currently married by the way.

Ha! Exactly. Every time I tried to end it she hung on. It would blow over, be ok for a while and then I'd want her gone again. The first time this happened was a month after she moved in. She was actually pilferung my things to supply her meth habit. She clung! So I figured she must really love me. I know now that all I was to her was a host organism. A means of survival. I could have been anybody. It wasnt over until she started feeding off of another benefactor. Dumb! Folks... This started off as a one night stand. That's all I really ever wanted from her. A one night stand that lasted almost eight years... Dammit!
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« Reply #52 on: December 23, 2013, 02:28:09 AM »

I loved reading everyone's warnings as mine were so similar if not identical.  Literal clue bats to the head that I glossed over as the real person who was being revealed to me was diametrically opposed to the woman that I had known for so many years prior to the relationship.  She hid it so well over those years that even in retrospect I can only remember a few whiffs of BPD that I can only connect to the disorder due to the knowledge I gained from the board.

The best one she ever told me was: "I am a monster." Yes, they are true monsters in all of their various types.

As part of my recovery, I was forced to reckon with with how I failed to heed her blatant warnings.  I have come to the following:

1) She triggered the "rescuer" in me

2) HF BPDs are so good at concealing the condition

3) I could not process the new information as the relationship progressed with the person I thought I knew

Having the three things listed above coupled with my weakness to defend my boundaries properly led to a really good long term teaching experience for me.

In the final cataclysmic event after which I immediately dumped her, she dysregulated so badly that it was really weird observing her behaviors.  She reenaged me one last time to gain back control whereupon she dumped me after having my replacement locked in place.  I don't think I could have simply dumped her as she had to be in control of everything to the Nth degree so it had to end with her, at least thinking, that she dumped me.  Anyway, I thank my replacement profusely for liberating me, and they are currently married by the way.

Ha! Exactly. Every time I tried to end it she hung on. It would blow over, be ok for a while and then I'd want her gone again. The first time this happened was a month after she moved in. She was actually pilferung my things to supply her meth habit. She clung! So I figured she must really love me. I know now that all I was to her was a host organism. A means of survival. I could have been anybody. It wasnt over until she started feeding off of another benefactor. Dumb! Folks... This started off as a one night stand. That's all I really ever wanted from her. A one night stand that lasted almost eight years... Dammit!

Perf,

Mine started as a one night stand also that I got sucked into for four years. Looking back I feel like an idiot for putting up with the ex so long.

Besides all the red flags I ignored, the clearest warning I got from her happened on her b-day after about a year into the r/s. I’m outside with another guy who at the time was dating her best friend (one of her only friends), the ex said out of nowhere “you guys are a couple of chumps for dating us.”

At that point I hadn’t been completely sucked into her world. I told her “if that’s how you feel, been nice knowing you and good luck” and walked away. I honestly thought it was done then, but she came back the next day apologizing, blaming what she said on the alcohol and couldn’t imagine life without me.

The first time I met her dad he told me “careful, the ex is a wrecking ball going through life.” I thought it was a funny thing for a dad to tell someone in a r/s with his daughter to say.

I was warned but stuck my hand in the fire anyway.

Trick

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« Reply #53 on: December 23, 2013, 08:06:49 AM »

Trick,

       That's kind of funny because a few of my friends who have been married to NPDs had their father in laws say the same kinds of things to them.

      Another irony is with one of my first cousins.  We were raised almost the same and many people including female friends we both know often comment how much our personalitys are alike. The divorce papers from his NPD wife aren't a week old. Mine from my high functioning BPD wife will be done in January. At our family christmas party last night we commented to each other how much we found the others ex interesting and attractive.  I joke we need to blame our mothers and run any potential r/s by each other. You know like sponsors in AA because we seem addicted to this poison.
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« Reply #54 on: December 23, 2013, 10:32:01 AM »

Oh wow!  Mine warned me too!  She was 38 when we met.  She had never been married before but had been in several "off and on" relatiosnhips.  About a month into our relationship she says to me "I've always been a runner but I'm not gonna do that anymore".  I took that statement to heart.  I trusted her.  So, 6 recycles later... .
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« Reply #55 on: December 23, 2013, 11:11:46 AM »

Oh wow!  Mine warned me too!  She was 38 when we met.  She had never been married before but had been in several "off and on" relatiosnhips.  About a month into our relationship she says to me "I've always been a runner but I'm not gonna do that anymore".  I took that statement to heart.  I trusted her.  So, 6 recycles later... .

Mine wrote in her journal last month, "I'm tired of running... ." Yet she is doing exactly that. In her mind, it will get better "next time." But it won't. Temporary bliss, perhaps, with no depth. But she can't handle depth. She had the bliss once (not with me, it was never blissful), and that guy left her out of the blue, recycled her physically, then left her again. She's attracted to man-boy narcissists, like the current guy. I've been the only anomaly in her adult life. Since she spayed herself, she'll never have to have a real adult r/s with someone ever again, since she got her kids out of me.
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« Reply #56 on: December 23, 2013, 01:29:25 PM »

Don't try to fix me!

Then 3 years of begging me to fix her.

FU crazy maker
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« Reply #57 on: December 23, 2013, 01:48:28 PM »

Lostnotdead

I don't listen to whatever my husband says and sometimes I pretend that I listened and appease his ego to confirm whatever craps he says. Who cares?

You cannot reason with a crazy! Yes and yes mutt

This is where I am at. She can't let me have some peace for more than two days (all I have asked for lately, to level myself out and try to be more positive for her) so screw it. I really don't listen to her anymore. I know that makes things worse, but she doesn't listen to me, doesn't help me, doesn't care about anything I say regarding my interests (she generally interrupts within minutes or less) so who cares. I hate hearing myself talk like this, but I can't wait until she is someone else's problem. I'm keeping a journal, and I will read the hell out of it next time she leaves and tries to come back. It couldn't be soon enough. oh, you want me to "die in a car wreck?" Fine. I don't have to care about someone that thinks this way of me; that hits me when I am down.
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« Reply #58 on: December 23, 2013, 02:59:08 PM »



Borderlines are addicted to CHAOS and DRAMA. I always respected my husband especially he's 12 years older than me but since last year I realised that he doesn't understand respect as he's historionic too! He only needs attention, doesn't matter positive or negative. I tried to be rude to him once and he liked it after that even he made me a cup of tea. What a disaster!

These disordered women LOVE very abusive men. I've been witnessed how my BPD/hpd mother inlaw adores my very abusive cheater NPD father inlaw. Such a waste of years for being so polite!




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« Reply #59 on: December 23, 2013, 03:08:52 PM »

I was warned quite a bit.  It says a lot about me that I didn't listen. 

I took some time to reflect on why I continued forward in the face of some glaring red flags.  Huge learning lesson.  It's not all about the person with BPD in this respect.
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« Reply #60 on: December 23, 2013, 05:50:22 PM »

Yes, there were several times while raging he said that he guarantees that he is going to be gone. Of course then later he would always say he never means anything when he is upset and actually means the opposite. Yes I should have listened.
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« Reply #61 on: December 24, 2013, 12:01:16 PM »

I also like to say, I once told her during the honeymoon phase... .you're beautiful I'm a lucky guy to have you in my bed. She goes are you sure? I am too much to handle. I need someone that wll be there for me no matter what. You would think perhaps a shoulder to cry on, or a person for some emotional and or financial support but no, my god Laugh out loud (click to insert in post), NO. No matter what meant through hell and back. Literally HELL and BACK. I didn't realize that at the time.
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« Reply #62 on: December 24, 2013, 01:44:26 PM »

Yes, there were several times while raging he said that he guarantees that he is going to be gone. Of course then later he would always say he never means anything when he is upset and actually means the opposite. Yes I should have listened.

That's a difference between disordered and non disordered people; when we get angry, normally we don't mean it but when they get angry, they tell the TRUTH. I believe one of the most annoying problems for non borderlines that stuck them for long is we think that they think the same way we do but they are short tempered.
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alterK
AskingWhy
At Bay
Cat Familiar
CoherentMoose
drained1996
EZEarache
Flora and Fauna
ForeverDad
Gemsforeyes
Goldcrest
Harri
healthfreedom4s
hope2727
khibomsis
Lemon Squeezy
Memorial Donation (4)
Methos
Methuen
Mommydoc
Mutt
P.F.Change
Penumbra66
Red22
Rev
SamwizeGamgee
Skip
Swimmy55
Tartan Pants
Turkish
whirlpoollife



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