Hey there Crushedagain!
Sending you greetings from the community again. How have you been keeping?
I feel so weak, still. It seems like after 3 or 4 months I was doing much better than I am now. I hope this is a bit of a step back before another leap forward. The reasons I fell in love with her remain. I would be weak if I looked at her. The only thing I can think of is that Phil Collins song "Give me just one more night."
I'm sorry that its been tough and there is still so much processing to do on your end, given the assumption that your ex-partner indeed has BPD, the intense bonding of through "love bombing" has as a result caused the reward centres within our brains to associate this person with, "pleasure, feeling good, safety, hope, desire", now that has suddenly not only been taken away from the person, the person has to associate our ex-partner with loss and all the other negative emotions.
But deep down I know that would only hurt me. I don't know why I long for things which aren't healthy.
That itself hijacks our brains and we now have to "tear apart" source which was previously associate with positive feelings. Now that this source is gone, our brains are "desperately" trying to regain a source of comfort and perhaps a source of familiarity. We as human beings are creatures of habit. Therefore when we are wired in a certain way by our experiences and environment, that becomes the "norm".
Note that familiarity doesn't mean that whatever is familiar to us is healthy, and i expound a little bit on this behaviour below.
A person who has spent many years being beaten up daily might find it weird and even uncomfortable that he/she has found someone who loves him/her and does not beat them up. They have unfortunately associated love with being beaten up daily especially in the context of trauma bonding during the early stages of adolescences - this perhaps gives you the long answer which
Cromwell mentioned earlier about the term "cognitive dissonance".
If you would like to read more on the psychological (technical) term of "cognitive dissonance", i've attached the link below from the site, psychlogy today -
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/cognitive-dissonanceThat realisation, acknowledgement, conscious recognition and re-adjustment would take time. This is why humans grief the loss of loved ones. Part of the stages of grief and loss would include anger and sometimes even indifference which I believe you may be experiencing now to a certain degree based on your previous post. It is only human to do so, so don't be too hard on yourself when the pain still lingers on.
Here with you. Do take heart ya?
Spero