Hi Purplerain23:I enacted a consequence for a Boundary I set. When I went through with the consequence he went ballistic, I had to lock myself in the car and call the police after he had a huge temper tantrum.
What was the consequence you enforced? Temper tantrums like that are very alarming. I'm glad you took measures to stay safe.
I was wondering if it’s the right thing to do to write out and give him a list of my boundaries and needs ect .
If you are still considering working things out, then I'd lean towards doing it now, but be sure to maintain your boundaries about limited communication. If it leads to too many interactions and JADEing (Justifying, Arguing, Defending & Explaining), you may need to abandon course.
If you aren't sure if you want to reconcile, or need to maintain a complete break for a period of time, then defer it and give him a target date to supply the information. At some point, if he is serious about really examining his problem behaviors and changing/continuing to change for the better, your input would be helpful.
He asked me for it he also asked me to write down all the specifics of how he betrayed me and broke my trust . I’m wondering if I should do this or is this just a charm tactic to keep me communicating with him when I told him I need a break ... It’s all very confusing
One approach would be to start out with sharing your boundaries and needs only, if you want to, and take it a step at a time. If I'm understanding correctly, he is seeing a therapist, but can't afford DBT training?
If he is seeing a therapist, do you think a suggestion from the therapist could have prompted this request for information? I guess there are some pros and cons to sharing right now. If you decide to do it, you might want to step into it and see if you get a reaction or backlash. Be clear about your communication boundaries if you go forward with sharing. (i.e. email only & limitation, no phone calls, no texting, stick with the issues only, etc.).
If you like the progress he makes, and then think about getting back together, you might want to have some joint counseling, before doing that. So, step into a reconciliation, if that is what you decide to do.
It generally takes year for people with BPD or BPD traits to improve. It will likely be something that has to always be managed. Stressful life events, commonly bring about significant reoccurrences of prior behaviors.