Hi helplesscarebear and welcome back
Sounds like some new things have happened in the last couple of years such as the arrival of your baby (congratulations, by the way!
), but some things have stayed the same, like the conflict cycle between you and your partner.
It's good to hear that you're interested in breaking the cycle. When there's a partner with BPD involved, something fundamental to keep in mind is that if we want the dynamic to change, we need to be the "emotional leaders" and initiate those changes. On the one hand, that can sound unfair: "Why should I have to change if he/she is the irrational one?" On the other hand, it can be very freeing -- you don't need your partner's agreement or cooperation for you to have the power to change the relational dynamic.
Have you had a chance to check out our
article and video on Ending Conflict yet? One part that stood out to me was this:
Before you can make things better, you have to stop making them worse.
Someone has to be first. This means generating the motivation to stop making things worse, learning how to interrupt your own negative responses, and learning how to inhibit your urges to do things that you later realize are destructive to the relationship.
For better or for worse, for this cycle to change, you may need to start making changes on your own -- but for some couples, that can make a difference, and at minimum for you, there's the opportunity for
your life with him to become more livable (or at least less unlivable).
I want him to feel supported and know I love him and am attracted to him. BUT, any little argument spirals into him ranting and raging about how little I support him, spend time with him, touch him, or am a partner to him. By the end of it I’m so damn checked out (I don’t argue or try to justify things because it never helps). I feel even LESS in the mood to have sex or put effort in when I’m hurting from all the nasty things and blame he just put on me.
Can you walk us through how that looks in a little more detail? For example, if the two of you are just having a normal day, what happens to turn a normal statement into the start of a little argument? What happens next? Who says what? How long does it last? Sometimes writing it out like a dialog or script can help us here find moments to make changes. So, something like:
You and him: talking about the weather
Him: blah blah blah
You: response
Him: response
Argument escalates
I bet we can find areas where you can "change the tune" even without getting his agreement or buy-in ahead of time.
Fill us in on some details, whenever works for you;
kells76