UndauntedDad
Offline
Gender: 
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Romantic partner
Relationship status: married, living together
Posts: 44
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« on: May 01, 2015, 01:03:00 PM » |
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Before coming here I had just decided I need to divorce my uBPDw of 14 yrs, though I didn't have a label for our dysfunction. After reading content here that seemed to describe her perfectly, I am only more certain that I need to go for my sake and the sake of my 8yo son. I didn’t yet file, am researching, reading Splitting, etc., lining my ducks before I tell her.
However, its confusing for me right now. I feel like I tried really hard to fix things for the last year with little improvement. Then, after I wrote her a letter saying I was giving up (but not yet divorcing), she finally agreed to go to couples therapy, and she’s made big changes, though indiv. therapy, DBT, etc is explicitly off the table. No rages or verbal abuse for several months (yay!), having sex for the first time in years, and she’s showing me affection. The problem is that she still is overwhelmed by emotions a few times per week: mostly sadness, or irritability that lasts for 24 hrs or more, etc—she’s just more careful with anger, and instead seems constantly overwhelmed and helpless (waiflike). Yet for me, the anger and DV made it much easier to decide to leave her than it feels now.
Last night we had a 4 hr discussion which had a lot of her crying, me being calm and carefully trying to enforce some mild boundaries (Thanks, “Essential Family Guide to BPD!”) She said, “if you do divorce me, it’s not fair, you get everything! You have the great job, you have close friends, you can be happy. What do I have? Nothing. My life is awful and nobody will help me!”
Any advice for dealing with either her feelings, or my feelings? I feel manipulated, which makes me pull away from her, but that makes her worse, and then I feel guilty for abandoning her. I feel like the most selfish, awful person ever, to abandon someone so vulnerable, after I vowed to be there for her forever.
Not-yay.
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