Hi all, I hope you're all having a great start to the new year. I'm feeling pretty scattered--more lost than before, for sure. This post will be about my brother (M21), my ex-partner (now close friend; M24), and me (F24).
My brother was diagnosed with BPD at 19, and up until now, he hasn't received consistent counselling. He takes medication, but I'm not really sure how effective it's been for him, because he says that it helps, but also says that he doesn't want to take it anymore quite frequently. More recently, I've noticed that he's been referring to his past traumas a lot. I've tried to encourage him to attend individual counselling, or maybe go to family therapy with me. I thought we were getting close to seeing a family counsellor, but today, he started to question why he needs to go, and how it would even be effective, since, in essence, I am the one perpetuating the problem here.
Back in late 2019, I started dating my ex-partner, who I'll call S. We met and started dating rather quickly--I was very mentally ill, nowhere near stable and pretty actively suicidal. S was different from anyone I had ever met before or since then. He brought a pleasing calmness and comfort to me that nobody had really been able to before. He's never made me feel unsafe, misunderstood, or unloved--and I'm sad to say that that's rare for me. I felt that he was something special, and to me, he is. But more pressingly, around the time that I met him, I felt that I was a threat to myself while living at home. My family members are all very emotional people, and used to understand very little about mental illness (i.e. how to be supportive, how to not make things worse, etc.), and I ran away from home within a few months of dating S to save myself from all of that. Before leaving, my only means of escape was drinking, and I was only getting worse every day.
But in the process, I subjected my brother to pure hell by leaving him there. I tried to implore my other family members (who did not live in the same house) to take him in, but they refused to, and still, I did not return home for quite some time. I regret this action a lot, even though it saved my life. I stopped drinking, I attended therapy regularly, and I was finally connected to a psychiatrist that listened to me and didn't just put me on zombifying medicine. In short, I got my life back on track, though looking back, I honestly wish I'd just died back then (not only because of everything I'm talking about here).
Anyway, I came home months later, and from the beginning, I saw how much my brother resented me. The jokes that he would make about me to my face were incredibly cruel, and it took a long time to get him to stop doing that. Even now, he'll still say hurtful things, but he's a lot more direct, and just says that he's "being honest" or "not saying anything wrong." I used to be very defensive about criticisms or comments he'd make about S, and this is a huge source of trauma for my brother, because he says that I took his voice away from him. The emotions he felt from being subjected this behaviour seem to get worse the more that he thinks about in the present day.
S is socially anxious, and wasn't always aware of how his behaviours around other people made them feel uncomfortable or unwelcome. He's getting treatment now, but not before everything went to hell. The thing about my brother is that he is very serious about upholding his standards--not only with himself--but with the people he surrounds himself with. In his own words, he says he becomes "disgusted" when he sees things he doesn't like in other people, because he sees tolerating these traits or behaviours as a form of disrespect to himself. Personally, when I consider my brother's social life, it makes me sad. He has very little friends, doesn't go out at all unless it's with me, and is easily peeved by outsiders. He's not exactly leading by example, but still judges my friends and people I choose to get close to harshly.
S is also a different person around people that he's comfortable with (e.g. more talkative, expressive, personal), and knowing this fact really pissed my brother off, because it makes him feel totally rejected. Because they could barely connect on any level, my brother sees someone who forced their way into his life and made it nothing but abysmal when he thinks of S. In short, he hates S because he thinks that nothing about him is "normal," he hates the entire timeline and associated memories of us meeting and being together, and thinks that S is secretly a total piece of
PLEASE READ that is only going to drag me down and bring me problems in the future. I can't say his name or mention him in any way without my brother completely shifting and experiencing intense anger and hatred. Suffice to say that S is totally painted black because of the surrounding trauma and lack of power/voice my brother felt all this time.
I could go on and on about all of this, but to save everyone time, my brother's resentment and anger towards S and me eventually led to us breaking up. And now that we're not even romantically involved, the fact that I'm still talking to him at all makes my brother's blood boil. He doesn't think that he needs therapy because he believes the solution to his problems is for me to stop associating with S, and until I do that, I am perpetuating his mental torture. While I think that giving S the time and space that he needs to address his social anxiety is a good thing, I think that the tremendous amount of stress that my brother put me under regarding S--which led to me suffocating S with my anxiety and frustration--ultimately led to this unnecessary outcome. Spending time with S, talking to him, and being connected to him is literally one of the only things that still makes me happy. I have to sneak all of this, or risk upset when I announce my plans--I have to keep all interactions with S on the down-low, or the day is practically ruined. These past years of my life have been
PLEASE READing terrible--it's been a grind to get better, to catch up to my peers academically and career-wise, and all this ridiculousness at home that keeps getting worse is no help at all. My brother is not as kind as he thinks he is. He is not as charitable and understanding as he thinks he is. His pain often makes him selfish (or at the very least, self-centred) and he fails to see that. And he really dislikes when things aren't done his way, or as he'd call it, the "normal" or "right" way.
And the worst part is that this is my best friend. Someone who has saved my life many times over. The only person in my home who actually sat with me and my pain at my lowest points. I have always loved my brother and wanted him in my life. I find it completely sickening that he is essentially deleting himself from my life little by little, and will eventually come to see it as my abandonment of him. This whole situation has torn me apart--he wants me to choose between two people I value and love deeply. And I don't know what to do, because being forced to live two lives is
PLEASE READing unbearable at this point.