Hello republik_van_batavia,
As the others have said, that is great news! It must feel so frustrating to feel so isolated in this situation, and many of us have been in the same place. It takes great commitment to stay with a BPD partner, but you are trying to do that with your wife.
We have a great wealth of information on BPD which can perhaps help you understand what may be going on with her. A core fear of abandonment lies at the heart of a BPD sufferer. Add to that emotional dysregulation and perhaps a mood disorder such as chronic depression, and it is so much to deal with for those of us not afflicted with the disorder. Your anger is understandable, yet we can become unwitting triggers for their own worst fears. We also need support, and being the targets of inappropriate anger outbursts, withdrawal and silent treatment, and even dissociation from reality in some cases can be maddening. pwBPD (people with BPD) also suffer from a core sense of shame, born long ago in their childhoods. "I'm a bad person, undeserving of love." In a lot of cases, the more we show that love, the more it can trigger their shame, often resulting in denial, and in a lot of cases projection of their issues onto us.
I congratulate you on having the control to not throw a diagnosis in her face. I made that mistake once, and mine admitted later it scared the crap out of her. I came here... .got support, and understood. She later self diagnosed herself with some type of attachment disorder. I was silent by that point. She abandoned her therapy, diagnosed two years previously with depression. There was no testing performed.
She moved out 5 months ago. Using the communication tools I learned here, however, has helped me to be more empathetic with her as a co parent of our two young children. The communication tools, developed by experts in treating the disorder, have helped me keep conflict to a minimum. I also learned to set clear boundaries in a non-triggering way with her, which protects me.
Please take a look at the
lessons on the staying board. I think they can be of great help to you in a number of ways. Also, it would be great to join and post to that board, as senior members there can best support you.
Staying: Improving a Relationship with a Borderline PartnerTake Care, republik_van_batavia, and I hope you stick around!
Turkish