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VIDEO: "What is parental alienation?" Parental alienation is when a parent allows a child to participate or hear them degrade the other parent. This is not uncommon in divorces and the children often adjust. In severe cases, however, it can be devastating to the child. This video provides a helpful overview.
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Tokenfam

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What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Ex-romantic partner
Relationship status: Newly separated.
Posts: 7


« on: January 23, 2024, 03:24:55 AM »

Hi all,

My partner and I broke up last week.

He has BPD.

We were together for 18 years and I am so lost now.

He is very self aware and has been in treatment for over 10 years. He always managed well. Minimal splitting and a couple of crises moments early in our relationship.
He shared that he wasn't coping about a year ago. The management techniques he always used no longer worked for him. He seemed lost, confused and panicked. He became anxious and experienced his first panic attacks along with depression. He asked me for help and I so wanted to but I just didn't understand or know how to help him. I still don't
The last year he has been having conflicts in all his relationships. Family, friends and ours.

He tried so hard the last 6 months. He talked about having an obsessive love for me. To the point he had been neglecting his own needs. He communicated respectfully what he was going through and that he needed extra support. I feel so stupid because I couldn't figure out what that meant and what that support looked like. I became so insecure and fearful of him leaving me. I'm ashamed of how selfish I was when he was the one that needed help.

We agreed to break up because he was concerned that he wasn't coping and was becoming suicidal. He was scared that his behaviours would negatively impact our household as he has been splitting alot more. He has a safety boundary for himself. If he is risking safety for himself or others, he needs to remove himself from that environment.

He has removed himself from our home environment and I am so lost now. We share 2 kids, a dog, and a house. Now he's gone.

I feel so much regret and guilt and shame that I couldn't help him when he asked and that he had put so much focus on me that he got worse with his condition. Now I'm so scared to do life without him. I still love him dearly and he says he still loves me more than life. I feel I've let my family down. I want to support him still. I just don't know how. I also am struggling to cope without him.
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kells76
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Gender: Female
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Romantic partner’s ex
Posts: 3317



« Reply #1 on: January 23, 2024, 02:48:10 PM »

Hi Tokenfam and a warm Welcome to the boards. We do get it here about how complicated BPD relationships can be. It's not just "well try harder and stay" or "count your blessings that he left" -- you two shared so much, and it makes sense that you'd be feeling lost, guilty, regretful, and confused after nearly two decades together.

We can take this baby steps at a time, no worries.

How old are your kids? What have you (or you and your partner) told them about why he isn't at home?

We agreed to break up because he was concerned that he wasn't coping and was becoming suicidal. He was scared that his behaviours would negatively impact our household as he has been splitting alot more. He has a safety boundary for himself. If he is risking safety for himself or others, he needs to remove himself from that environment.

He has removed himself from our home environment and I am so lost now.

Where is he staying at the moment?

In the safety plan, was there a plan for "once XYZ is achieved, then it is safe to move back"?

As far as you know, is he changing/increasing treatment right now?

...

Glad you landed here... you're not alone.

-kells76
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Pensive1
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What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Ex-romantic partner
Relationship status: broken up
Posts: 78


« Reply #2 on: January 23, 2024, 11:47:37 PM »

Hi Tokenfam,

Welcome to this board.

The course of BPD can be so complex.
Some of the elements in my own story are comparable to yours, and others are extremely different. My BPD partner and I were together 25 years, then she severely deterioriated. In her case it was after a crisis (her adult son, who also appears to have BPD, became addicted to meth, homeless, and suicidal), and she dealt with her distress by getting into an affair and leaving me. She had no prior treatment for BPD and is only minimally self-aware.

I'm sure you've heard this from others - I would suggest finding a good therapist for yourself. That's helped me immensely. And be kind to yourself. You deserve self-compassion.

I don't know if this would be helpful for you, but I found the book "When Hope Is Not Enough" by "Bon Dobbs" very helpful for myself - in better understanding BPD and what I could do. It's written by the husband of a woman with BPD.

I also don't know if this is relevant or helpful, but a recent meta-analysis suggested that of the conventional forms of therapy available for BPD, Schema Therapy might be the most efficacious (in alleviating symptoms). But I know that many localities lack therapists with good training in Schema Therapy. In addition to DBT (the most widely-available form of therapy for BPD), Mentalization-Based Therapy and Tranferance-Focused Psychotherapy also have established efficacy. I'm just mentioning this in case a form of therapy other than what your partner has already had experience with might be helpful for him.

With respect to better understanding suicidality, I found "Why People Die by Suicide" by Thomas Joiner helpful. I purchased that book after my ex-partner's bother (who also appeared to have BPD) committed suicide. It discusses risk factors and protective factors, etc.

I hope things improve in your situation with time.
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Tokenfam

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What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Ex-romantic partner
Relationship status: Newly separated.
Posts: 7


« Reply #3 on: January 24, 2024, 06:39:36 PM »

Hi kells76,

Thank you for the warm welcome and encouraging words. You are so right. I feel as though we have shared so much together for so long, its not so easy just to wipe my hands, get over it and move on.

Our children are 14 and 9.

He is staying with one of his family member for now as far as I know.

There is no formal safety plan as such. He has a self imposed responsibility to "say something" when his mental health declines. Or if he is worried about where his head is at. He has done that. There is no plan to reconnect at this point, he was splitting and said we have never really been compatible, we have no like interests and he was tired of trying to make this relationship work. I know I always need to take what he says with a grain of salt when he splits. But he seemed so sincere, I now have my own doubts about this and am wondering if he was right.

I know that his therapist has been on annual leave for the past month, due to return in 2 weeks. He was getting DBT. He'd been struggling with the absence of his weekly appointments. 

Its comforting to be able to speak to people who are aware of what is takes to love someone with this condition.
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kells76
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Online Online

Gender: Female
What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Romantic partner’s ex
Posts: 3317



« Reply #4 on: January 25, 2024, 09:49:27 AM »

Hi Tokenfam;

Thank you for the warm welcome and encouraging words. You are so right. I feel as though we have shared so much together for so long, its not so easy just to wipe my hands, get over it and move on.

You're welcome  Smiling (click to insert in post) Are you feeling like you have to make a decision (about moving on) right now?

Our children are 14 and 9.

Have they said anything to you about Dad not being around? Have you noticed anything behavioral going on -- or have their schools?

He is staying with one of his family member for now as far as I know.

OK, hopefully that is a positive thing -- he's not with a stranger or out on the street. He has a roof over his head with a known person. Are you able to be in touch with that family member (or would you want to be)? Is that in the area or out of town?

There is no formal safety plan as such. He has a self imposed responsibility to "say something" when his mental health declines. Or if he is worried about where his head is at. He has done that. There is no plan to reconnect at this point, he was splitting and said we have never really been compatible, we have no like interests and he was tired of trying to make this relationship work. I know I always need to take what he says with a grain of salt when he splits. But he seemed so sincere, I now have my own doubts about this and am wondering if he was right.

pwBPD can be extremely emotionally convincing. The stuff they say sounds true, because they genuinely feel it... in the moment. He may have really felt that way -- at that specific point in time.

And, pwBPD can sometimes "extrapolate" and "interpolate" feelings forward and backward in time. If they feel XYZ now, then they must have always felt XYZ, and nothing will ever change in the future to change them feeling XYZ. They struggle to have perspective and to sit with shades of grey. It can't be that "well, even though right now I'm struggling with feeling alone and isolated in my relationship, we did have some good times in the past, and if we can get through this, the future might be better". If they feel XYZ, then it has always and will always be XYZ.

The challenge for you is not to let his feeling XYZ be what leads the relationship. He struggles with mental illness -- he can't be the emotional leader.

It may or may not be true that you two need to separate -- but that's not because he had a day recently where he convincingly felt like you two had never worked together! If you need to separate, it would be for other reasons, not how he's feeling on a bad day.

How did you respond (or did you) when he said you'd never been compatible and had no shared interests, and he was tired of trying to make things work?

I know that his therapist has been on annual leave for the past month, due to return in 2 weeks. He was getting DBT. He'd been struggling with the absence of his weekly appointments.

Do you think that his T's absence could be tied to his recent decline?

What do you think might happen when his T comes back?

Its comforting to be able to speak to people who are aware of what is takes to love someone with this condition.

 Virtual hug (click to insert in post)  These are the hardest relationship -- but there is hope. While a relationship with a pwBPD likely won't ever be a "generally normal" relationship, people stay for all kinds of reasons that we respect. Here we focus on new tools, skills, and approaches that are 100% under your control (he doesn't need to agree or participate or cooperate, fortunately!) that you can practice to make your participation in the relationship safer and more workable.

Have you had a moment yet to look at our section on Saving a relationship that is in or near breakup? I'd be curious if you've seen articles like those before.

Looking forward to hearing more;

kells76
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Tokenfam

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What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Ex-romantic partner
Relationship status: Newly separated.
Posts: 7


« Reply #5 on: February 07, 2024, 01:55:21 AM »

Hi Pensive1,

Thank you for sharing you're experience.

I can see a couple of similarities. Its so jarring when things deteriorate so low after so long.

Excerpt
I'm sure you've heard this from others - I would suggest finding a good therapist for yourself. That's helped me immensely. And be kind to yourself. You deserve self-compassion.

I certainly have had this advice and have recently found a therapist who specialises in personality disorders to help me understand and unpack my own thoughts and feelings as well as getting the perspective of how things may have looked for my bpd ex. Its been eye opening so far. 

Excerpt
I don't know if this would be helpful for you, but I found the book "When Hope Is Not Enough" by "Bon Dobbs" very helpful for myself - in better understanding BPD and what I could do. It's written by the husband of a woman with BPD.
I will look into this, thanks. I've found it really difficult to find information or perspectives or guidance on being the partner to a pwBPD. Even though we aren't together now, I still care for him and want to support him if I can.

Excerpt
I also don't know if this is relevant or helpful, but a recent meta-analysis suggested that of the conventional forms of therapy available for BPD, Schema Therapy might be the most efficacious (in alleviating symptoms). But I know that many localities lack therapists with good training in Schema Therapy. In addition to DBT (the most widely-available form of therapy for BPD), Mentalization-Based Therapy and Tranferance-Focused Psychotherapy also have established efficacy. I'm just mentioning this in case a form of therapy other than what your partner has already had experience with might be helpful for him.

I know he has had CBT, DBT and tried SSRI's for a time. The medication was when he was first diagnosed, about 13 years back. He continued with the therapies but not the medications as he described feeling "out of it" and "numb". He saw a few different therapists for CBT after his diagnoses and is currently receiving DBT treatment at the only BPD specialist in the country. It was a 5 year wait for the specialist.
I've heard of Schema Therapy and mentioned it to him a while back, he wasn't sure he wanted to try it.
I have spoken with one of his therapist before, so i might reach out and ask if they offer any of these particular therapy treatments. Hopefully they do.

I appreciate your perspective and recommendations.
Thank you
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Tokenfam

Offline Offline

What is your sexual orientation: Straight
Who in your life has "personality" issues: Ex-romantic partner
Relationship status: Newly separated.
Posts: 7


« Reply #6 on: February 07, 2024, 03:45:38 AM »

Hi kells76,

Excerpt
Are you feeling like you have to make a decision (about moving on) right now?
Its been a couple of weeks now, and I am still dealing with acceptance that things are they the way they are for now. So, no decision to "move on" right now.
He has actually asked for support in a friendship capacity. I have no clue what to do with that honestly, but it certainly will be the hot topic for my next therapy session.

Excerpt
Have they said anything to you about Dad not being around? Have you noticed anything behavioral going on -- or have their schools?
We explained that dad was having difficulties managing with his mental health and needed to take some space to sort himself out.
I've been speaking to my therapist about this as he nor I knew what to do.
We decided to take an open approach with the kids.
We had spoken to our eldest about 2 years ago about his condition as the questions about things like therapist appointments and splitting moments inevitably came up . Our eldest is, from what I can see, doing ok, very open to asking dad about his condition and we both are open to answer them as best we can. Our youngest doesn't have the emotional maturity to understand the situation, (youngest is being seen by a pediatrician for long standing behavior issues at school. Currently under assessment for ADHD and giftedness), so basically she's been told dad has not been feeling very good and needs some time to get better, but he loves you always and you will still see him lots. I've encouraged them to ask anything, whenever and I'll do my best to answer.
He is still picking them up from school everyday to try and maintain a sense of normal/routine for them. I feel this still gives them a chance to see him and chat daily. Even if its just for a little bit.
This will be a work in progress I think. Been considering co parenting options with consideration to how much he can take on deal with at the moment.


Excerpt
OK, hopefully that is a positive thing -- he's not with a stranger or out on the street. He has a roof over his head with a known person. Are you able to be in touch with that family member (or would you want to be)? Is that in the area or out of town?
I personally think this is the best option for now. They're not far from us and I myself am on good terms with this family member.

Excerpt
pwBPD can be extremely emotionally convincing. The stuff they say sounds true, because they genuinely feel it... in the moment. He may have really felt that way -- at that specific point in time.
I never really understood this point. How genuine these feelings were for him. He would speak about black and white thinking and I always took that to mean binary. Good/bad. Or happy/sad.

Excerpt
And, pwBPD can sometimes "extrapolate" and "interpolate" feelings forward and backward in time. If they feel XYZ now, then they must have always felt XYZ, and nothing will ever change in the future to change them feeling XYZ. They struggle to have perspective and to sit with shades of grey. It can't be that "well, even though right now I'm struggling with feeling alone and isolated in my relationship, we did have some good times in the past, and if we can get through this, the future might be better". If they feel XYZ, then it has always and will always be XYZ.
Yes, he had been struggling a lot with this. He would talk at length about friendships he'd had since childhood and how they just couldn't work anymore. I struggled to comprehend how he could think like that about friends he'd had so much history with. Good times seemed to be forgotten and bad times seems amplified. I see now, this is the nature of the dichotomous thinking patterns.
It's been interesting though, even with BPD he is very self aware. He had been highlighting things like invalidation, gaslighting, cognitive dissonance, projection and lack of consideration behaviors from his friends. He kept saying how exhausting it was to maintain these relationships. Honestly, he wasn't wrong. I think he just lacks the "and if we can get through this part, the future might be better" bit.   

Excerpt
The challenge for you is not to let his feeling XYZ be what leads the relationship. He struggles with mental illness -- he can't be the emotional leader.
This! This part hurts for a few reasons.
I never truly understood the gravity of what he deals with day in and day out.
He managed so so well, he always tried his best not to let his BPD out. Towards the end he called it masking. He would say it was all different masks for different people and situations. And that it was exhausting.
It wasn't until recently it dawned on me.
I saw him as my rock, and in a way, the leader of not just our relationship, but our family.
This is part of the guilt I'll probably carry from here on, the fact that he has been struggling with his mental health the whole time and I let him. I let him, even though it was too much for him to deal with. It was me that needed to lead us.

The other side to this is feeling lied to. I was left feeling like he had never been authentic. Like the 18 years we had was a mask he had curated for me. Like none of it was real. I don't know if this part is just me feeling hurt or if its true. 

Excerpt
It may or may not be true that you two need to separate -- but that's not because he had a day recently where he convincingly felt like you two had never worked together! If you need to separate, it would be for other reasons, not how he's feeling on a bad day.

I agree on this point. We were teens when we got together. Recently I've been researching and become aware of how a pwBPD and FP relationship can be highly dysfunctional. Issues of codependency were very much highlighted  for us towards the end there.
Although neither of us wanted to split up, I honestly believe we need some time apart to address some of the underlying individual issues we have. Neither of us had or 20's, we were parents already. He's always struggled with his sense of self and I kind of got lost in the role of parent/ partner/ friend etc. 
In saying that, I'm still hopeful it won't be forever though.

How did you respond (or did you) when he said you'd never been compatible and had no shared interests, and he was tired of trying to make things work?
I had to take some time with this one.
He had given me so many convincing examples to support incompatibility. I approached him a day later with "receipts". Facts, that outlined that although we have differences we still do have shared values, interests and hobbies. He seemed accepting of that point.
I had no legs to stand on with him saying he was tired of trying. He really did try. For 6 solid months. I honestly let him down on that one. I found every insecurity I had was being triggered. Even insecurities I didn't know I had. The only words I have are 'emotional downward spiral'. It reminds me of when your a kid, riding your bike, heading for a tree. You panic and put so much focus on not hitting the tree, that you end up hitting the tree. That was me.

Excerpt
Do you think that his T's absence could be tied to his recent decline?
What do you think might happen when his T comes back?
I don't think the absence caused this. We had both noticed he wasn't coping about a year ago.
I'm hoping with his therapists return he can gain some stability with his own management. I would go so far as to hope for reconciliation, but with this bit of time away I've had a lot to reflect on. Honestly, I'm thinking we both may need some time to gain back a stable sense of self. I feel like we became too tangled up in each other.

Excerpt
Virtual hug (click to insert in post)  These are the hardest relationship -- but there is hope. While a relationship with a pwBPD likely won't ever be a "generally normal" relationship, people stay for all kinds of reasons that we respect. Here we focus on new tools, skills, and approaches that are 100% under your control (he doesn't need to agree or participate or cooperate, fortunately!) that you can practice to make your participation in the relationship safer and more workable.
This is very encouraging. And yes! Fortunately indeed!

Thanks for reaching out and caring.
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