Ive been on the board for a while, off and on. Was undecided for a long time. Some things have changed, some have not. All the meds in the world, and all the therapy cannot undo what was done and cannot really change her completely. The cycle of abuse was only lengthened by the drugs and therapy, not ended.
It has been commented here that meds may help moderate the extremes of behaviors but it takes long term therapy diligently applied to life (thinking, perceptions and behaviors) to make substantive changes. So if the person isn't inclined to stop the typical Denial, get into meaningful therapy, make real changes and stick with therapy, then it is up to us to determine what our options are.
And that brings me here. I'm struggling with proceeding. I have three kids, one of which has mental issues of his own. I'm concerned with his reaction to a divorce.
I often quote from this book which I bought just to track down this quote:
Living in a calm and stable home, even if only for part of their lives, will give the children a better example of normalcy for their own future relationships. Staying together would mean that's the only example of home life they would have known — discord, conflict, invalidation, overall craziness, etc. Some 30 years ago the book Solomon's Children - Exploding the Myths of Divorce had an interesting observation on page 195 by one participant, As the saying goes, "I'd rather come from a broken home than live in one." Ponder that. Taking action will enable your lives, or at least a part of your lives, to be spent be in a calm, stable environment — your home, wherever that is — away from the blaming, emotional distortions, pressuring demands and manipulations, unpredictable ever-looming rages and outright chaos. And some of the flying monkeys too.
I have taken the step to interview lawyers, have one more to go. Looking for a lawyer I can get along with and has dealt with high conflict of the BPD type. Their approaches all different. One even recommending starting with civil protection order to have her removed from the house at time of filing. This due to the past and potential for physical violence, some fairly recent (within 3 months). Not so sure about that, given i cant prove the past violence. Additionally, it pulls her away from kids, and cause even more stress.
I can't tell you which approach is best but be careful that you misplace your priorities. Start with yourself, as the airlines always repeat, "In the event of an emergency put on your oxygen mask first then help others." Then the children. Sadly, your spouse will have to be further down the list. Anything else and you risk needlessly sabotaging yourself. Ponder that perspective.
When I do approach her and let her know how i feel, I'm afraid that will be the end right there. Start huge fight, could get physical. May have to leave house before I even file.
Sharing information is fine, even needed, for a relationship to remain healthy. In a dysfunctional and conflictual relationship, sharing information ("I'm {contemplating} ending the marriage" is a real danger, sadly. Otherwise you risk an extreme overreaction. For example she may try to frame you for some trumped up incidents. Remember, pwBPD can't handle accepting fault (even if you're trying not to set the fault). If she feels bad there is a high risk that she will do whatever she can to make you look even worse. And as a woman and mother, she has her choice of DV allegations or child abuse/endangerment allegations! (I faced repeated child abuse allegations — I lost count — during our months of separation, during our two year divorce and into our first year post-divorce.)
A good lawyer, once he realizes the high conflict and risks, will advise you to make
confidential preparations, no hints or insinuations, and only talk with her (safely, best with a witness in the background to prove you weren't aggressive or abusing) when all your ducks are in order and ready to go.
Has anyone here filed and left the residential home, leaving kids with BPD?
Or simply tell her i am done. As I have done in the past. Tell her I'm filing, and file. Find a place to move to. And go. Worry about time with kids later.
Many of us didn't have a choice and were forced out. My story is weird... .I got the house in my TPO due to her death threats but since
adult behaviors are not always seen as reflective of
parenting behaviors, she got temp custody for the separation and divorce process even though she couldn't come back to the house.
On some level I am wondering if I should simply sit back enjoy the quiet time now. Knowing she will go off the deep end again, and just do it then. Involve the police and all.
Or simply tell her i am done. As I have done in the past. Tell her I'm filing, and file. Find a place to move to. And go. Worry about time with kids later.
Okay, so use the quiet time now to get your ducks in a row (paperwork) ASAP while waiting for the next raging incident as a trigger event.
If you "worry about time with the kids later" then likely you'd abdicate parenting and control of the children to her and have an uphill struggle to regain substantive parenting. Frankly, if you keep the kids with you at time of separation then it will be her struggling to get back in presumed control. What would be hard for you as a father to regain won't be so hard for her since mothers are often defaulted to custodial/majority time.
You need to have a
strategy (or multiple strategies!), not jump from incident to incident, odds are that approach would have you losing too often. Your experienced, problem solving, proactive lawyer can help you develop smart strategies. If you choose a forms filer, hand holder lawyer, then you're in for a rougher ride. We here in (remote) peer support can help too, we've "been there, done that" and have an immense treasure trove of collective wisdom.
Any suggestions on how to proceed, how to approach divorce with BPD wife are appreciated.
As I recommended above, keep it confidential until served. Keep your phone within reach. Probably record too (out of sight!) so that you can prove you weren't the abusive or threatening one. View it like vacations post-separation. Each parent gives the other parent a written vacation
notice, not a vacation
request. Some things just don't work by asking or discussing or reasoning with someone who won't listen to reason.
Be prepared, though, that you may get sideswiped and thrown through a loop when you do tell her. Though she may rant and rage horribly, another possible response could be that she starts sobbing, says she needs her kids and claims, "If only I had known you were really going to do divorce then I would have been nicer/saner/working harder on therapy/{whatever}." What I'm saying is she may get you to feel sorry for her and then you hold off on taking action. And then if she doesn't immediately sabotage you with her own allegations (to put you at a disadvantage) and filing, then she may get you to stay on the roller coaster for a few more loops around the tracks.
EDIT: Why did I write in such detail? So many of your thoughts, however well intentioned and natural to us
Knights in Shining Armor, would sabotage your separation (from a conflictual spouse) and parenting prospects. It's not your fault, nor ours. You and we try to be Nice Guys and Nice Gals. However, we need to do so with awareness and strategic planning, knowing that our otherwise excellent qualities could result in us bringing a plastic butter knife to a gunfight.