SummerStorm
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« Reply #3 on: July 30, 2015, 03:29:46 PM » |
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It's different for everyone. Some people can let go rather quickly after dating someone for years, while other struggle to let go after only dating someone for a few months, and vice versa.
It's been almost two months for me, and I'm still struggling a bit. I knew her for less than a year, was friends with her for five months, and was romantically involved with her for a month.
Letting go has to be a necessity for me soon. I am in the process of buying a house, and I go back to work soon. I have to focus on work and be a good teacher because I need money in order to pay my mortgage/bills. I can't be distracted and let my job performance slip. Obviously, not everyone is in the position to buy a new house, but it has helped me.
I still ruminate about saving my ex, even though I know that I can't. Part of it is the fact that I look at her boyfriend and think, "This guy is such an idiot. He works all the time, never sees her, never does anything romantic for her, didn't even notice the fact that she was cutting again and was wearing bandages all over her wrists. He is bad for her." Maybe so, but it's not like I could stop her from doing any of that. He never sees her; she fears abandonment. I saw her all the time; she feared engulfment. Neither he nor I can change her.
A lot of us Nons are rescuers/caretakers. Again, you may not be in the position to do this, but maybe take the thoughts you have about your ex, many of which probably still revolve around how were told that you were the one and how you were going to save your ex from this awful world, and apply them to something else.
If you have rescuer/caregiver traits, adopt an animal from a local shelter or volunteer at a local after school program for troubled youth. You can't save your ex, but you can provide a wonderful home for a cat/dog/rabbit/lizard/mouse/ferret/bird that is sitting in a cage at a shelter, wondering what it did wrong to end up there. You can't change your ex, but you can provide a good model for a young man or woman and maybe help change his or her life and put him or her on a better path. If you can't adopt an animal and don't like kids/an after school program doesn't work with your schedule, then volunteer at a local animal shelter.
There is nothing wrong with wanting to be a rescuer/caregiver. It's why we have doctors and nurses. Unfortunately, BPD is not something we can take care of.
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