Is this a matter that Social Services can deal with it does it need to go through the Court ?
Hi DaveS1,
Have you been in contact with a family law solicitor? It's good to know how things work where you live, especially when it involves your child.
Did the school contact you by phone, or did they email you? If by phone, I wonder if they would agree to put their concerns in an email so you have a paper trail.
I'm not sure how things work where you live (I'm in the US), but in general, having third-party professionals involved can shine light on the situation, which is usually advantageous if the BPD behaviors are relatively covert.
I'm intentionally not showing her that I am willing to step in and take him as this will fuel her to pick up a fight.
I understand your thinking here. She will likely want you to feel as miserable as she feels, and could use fighting for your son to make you miserable.
You may be able to leverage the school's concern, and funnel things to child services without it appearing to involve you. In my case, when third-party professionals became involved, my ex channeled a surprising amount of fury their way. Others began to experience what I had alone been dealing with.
Does anyone have experience and know of a BPD mother giving up a child on her own.
There is such a range of behaviors with BPD sufferers, it would help to know a bit more about what your wife is like, if you feel comfortable sharing. In general, I would suspect your wife will fight if only because fighting at least feels like
something. Also, to lose would mean that she is the bad parent others say she is, and that may be so contrarian to her survival instincts that even if she does not want her son, she cannot appear to be giving him up lightly.
The more typical scenario might be a BPD parent who fights for custody while seeming to sabotage themselves in the process.