I am looking to see if there are any tips from those with personal experience with partners with a dual diagnosis of BPD AND ADHD where the ADHD has only recently started being treated.
MBXTR,
This can be a frustrating, hurtful, gut wrenching and explosive time. I wish I could tell you it isn’t - but it is. Buckle up and put your oxygen mask on before you fix anyone else. My W has comorbidities of high functioning quiet BPD, CPTSD, ADHD, Depression, Restless Legs, Insomnia, and Anxiety. We are three years into the journey of healing within a very difficult 27 years of marriage. ADHD is the most recent diagnosis for us in the alphabet soup of stuff.
While I can’t give you direct advice, I can explain some thoughts. I never have labeled her. I don’t care what the “name” of what she has is. (I know - because I want the education, but I don’t push it in conversations with her). I push the behaviors I do/don’t like and how it affects me, her, and our family.
Our path:
1) Me getting counseling support first. Breaking bad codependent habits that had built up over years from a very powerful emotional manipulator. (Codependent no more - Beaty) is a great book. Improving myself second. Enhancing my social support network (not asking permission to hang out with friends - but being respectful), better eating habits (cook my own separate meals if necessary), sleep (moved into a separate bedroom - a boundary due to emotional abuse), and physical fitness (running club).
2) Learning the techniques from here (Grey Rock, SET, JADE, FOG, etc) and educating myself (Stop Walking On Eggshells/I Hate You Don’t Leave Me/ Loving Someone With Borderline Personality Disorder) and creating healthy boundaries for me, her, and our family. [Many extinction bursts]
3) Her getting into weekly therapy as HER CHOICE due to my healthy boundaries (unwilling to continue under the status quo)
-> Her Dealing with the Emotional Abuse and dangerous life threatening BPD traits first with her counselor (via CBT)
->Getting appropriate antidepressant meds adjusted through her GP Dr. to deal with the depression and debilitating anxiety.
-> Second tackling the CPTSD via CBT and EMDR to bring the anxiety lower and take that noise off the table. (The Wounded Heart) is a good book I read to educate myself.
-> Third tackling the ADHD via techniques and meds (The ADHD effect on Marriage) is a good book I read to educate myself.
-> Getting appropriate ADHD meds added through her GP Dr. to manage ADHD.
…setting boindaries that seems to be making things worse under the impression that the partner can be talked to in a calm state.
In my experience I can only validate and have a boundary for what I am willing to tolerate. She has to regulate herself - I can’t make her.
… refusing to acknowledge even let alone apologize for the emotional torment.
ADHD people don’t remember. But the emotional abuse indicates a strong boundary opportunity for you.
…when given the bomb of BPD without the comfort of knowing it is a) treatable and b) currently having a hard time accepting it.
Symptoms can go into remission - but in my experience - they don’t disappear. SET technique, Grey Rock, and kindness/Patience will be needed in my experience.
I don’t know how to tell him that it is treatable with dbt and doesn’t have accept a permanent diagnosis.
You can’t in my experience. They won’t listen, or won’t remember.. They have to figure it out themselves.
I feel like if he only knew what I found out he wouldn’t be so emotionally abusive and can get to the start of his healing journey sooner.
Diagnosis names don’t matter in my experience. Actions/inactions do. Focus more on the behavior and less on the name since it seems to be a trigger. My W was totally triggered by the label, but both her therapist and I focus on not mentioning the label and focus on the actions and issues instead.
Fast forward three years and things are much less toxic, and she has many CPTSD and BPD traits in remission. ADHD she is working on that now. Meds are helping.
Hope that helps a little,
Outdoorenthusiast