How do you tell your loved ones and friends what you went through?
How do you make them understand?
What do you tell them about Borderline Personality Disorder? Do you even tell them?
People that have never been involved with someone that has the illness can never know to be honest. You can only know if you've been involved with someone that has BPD. The process of brainwashing, manipulation, emotional and even physical abuse over an extended period of time has traumatic effects on your psyche. A trauma bond is formed.
You become addicted to the person with BPD. You become a slave to Intermittent Reinforcement, desperately clutching to any amount of normalcy and affection that you can. Over time, that affection becomes less and less, and the rage and blaming become the norm. Then without warning you are split, painted black, devalued, rejected, abandoned, betrayed. The BPD will show no remorse. No guilt. No empathy. It doesn't matter how much you loved them. It doesn't matter how much you did for them on any level. You are the perceived enemy for whatever paranoid delusion is happening in their mind and you need to be punished. In the end, you're a shell of a human being. You feel like your soul has been sucked out. You've lost yourself.
This does not happen over night.
I empathize completely with people that suffer from BPD, but there is nothing really being done for the people that suffer from being involved with them in close relationships. Either family members, or a personal relationship. Even a friendship. It's a very serious issue that many people are silently suffering from. Especially if you're a man. Men don't report abuse. Men take it in stride and deal with it. We're taught from a young age to respect women and never be aggressive towards them in any way.
But what if the man is being abused?
What is Borderline Personality Disorder?
People who are diagnosed with borderline personality disorder have at least five of the following symptoms. They may:
1. Make frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment.
2. Have a pattern of difficult relationships caused by alternating between extremes of intense admiration and hatred of others.
3. Have an unstable self-image or be unsure of his or her own identity.
4. Act impulsively in ways that are self-damaging, such as extravagant spending, frequent and unprotected sex with many partners, substance abuse, binge eating, or reckless driving.
5. Have recurring suicidal thoughts, make repeated suicide attempts, or cause self-injury through mutilation, such as cutting or burning himself or herself.
6. Have frequent emotional overreactions or intense mood swings, including feeling depressed, irritable, or anxious. These mood swings usually only last a few hours at a time. In rare cases, they may last a day or two.
7. Have long-term feelings of emptiness.
8. Have inappropriate, fierce anger or problems controlling anger. The person may often display temper tantrums or get into physical fights.
9. Have temporary episodes of feeling suspicious of others without reason (paranoia) or losing a sense of reality.
My ex who we'll call "Mai" exhibited every single one of these criteria over an extended period of time. I plan on recounting as much of it as I can over a period of time so I can confront it, accept it, and put it behind me. You will never get closure from someone that has BPD. Not ever. They will string you along as long as they can to keep you engaged. Even after they've betrayed your trust in the most horrific ways, they can "hoover" you back in at any time and pretend like nothing bad ever happened. They will never face any wrong they committed in the past or apologize for it. Not ever.
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Very true!
ReplyDeleteTrue, true! that's exactly what happened
ReplyDeletesums up my last 12 months pretty much perfectly, now all that is left is a shell of my former self, time to rebuild.
ReplyDeleteSpot on. My BPD exWife abused my son and I, physically and emotionally (Shaking, screaming and hitting my 3mo son. What monster does that?). She would punch herself in the face and cut herself as well and was constantly cheating on me throughout our relationship, although I only found out later. I do not mean she was having an affair with one guy, I'm honestly saying that she was riding a different guy every week. When I tried to speak to her about it and defend my son, she played the victim, made excuses and quickly betrayed me in the most horrific way possible once she could no longer control me and I called her out on her BS. We haven't even been married a year and now I'm stuck in a custody battle with false allegations sitting over me. Thank goodness for a ton of evidence on my side (911 was called on her multiple times a year for domestic violence, suicide attempts and videos of her abuse and a TON of witnesses, etc) and she has nothing. I'm glad to be out sooner rather than later but it still affected me in a very negative way on a psychological level, especially once the divorce started. I'm still seeing a counselor and attending classes for people recovering from NPD/BPD abuse. It's been a long road but I'm slowly coming out of the fog.
ReplyDeleteIf anything, I was a fool for falling for her. She was a siren and her music was addicting. I could see the signs, but I chose to ignore my gut feelings. Personal observation: Her little bro committed suicide, her mother is a suicidal battered wife and her father is an abusive narcissist (He beats his family and raped my ex as she grew up and yet, they're now best friends?). My ex was a gorgeous red head but when she was triggered, she looked like the Devil himself. My point is, if she's too good to be true in the beginning and her family isn't normal, then I suggest you keep your wits about you.
Projection, basically she accused me of everything she herself was doing (like cheating, abuse, etc) Once her fear of abandonment came true with me (although she filed for divorce and abandoned me) the lies, slander and false allegations started. My ability to protect my son was ripped away from me at that point by the judge until I could prove my innocence. I had to take a polygraph, give a statement, collect evidence and spent tens of thousands on an Attorney and Private Investigator. During that time I became a hermit and went completely No Contact with my ex. I am still fighting for my son to this day.
My ex loves playing the victim and loves hurting me. She does not care about my son, he is just a pawn for her to use in her campaign to hurt me. She ruined our lives and I still have nightmares to this day. It's not a nice thing to say but the truth hurts: My ex is a Psychotic Whore. If someone can devalue you like that in a heartbeat and all of the memories you created with them suddenly mean nothing and they start a war just to hurt you, then they are evil. Period. I have no empathy for these creatures and it pains me that our country offers no help for abused husbands.
Stay away from BPD people, they will ruin your life with no regrets. They are masters of lies, manipulation and gaslighting. They will do everything within their power to see you suffer. They are evil. Period.
If you are or have been in a relationship like I have, please do me a favor: DO NOT blame yourself in ANY way. The few, tiny mistakes you may have made do not make up for the hell they put you through. Forgive yourself, focus on you for a while, find who you are again and what you enjoy in life and with time, you will move past this and be a better person for it. You will find love and happiness again.
I know how hard it is to be in a relationship with a mentally ill person, believe me. Remember this:
The world is a big place and although the storm has blackened the sky, you will eventually see the sun and bathe in warm light again, you just need to keep fighting and don't give up. Never give up.
Love you all
-Kaydus
Shrink4men.com
I think you are referring to a sociopath or a narcissistic personality..people with BPD are often victims of this type of abuse early on from childhood from intermittent reinforcement relationships in which they have no consistency in the relationship. When there is no consistency their reactions can be volatile and manipulative but To say that a BPD has no guilt or remorse or empathy isn't accurate unless you are also describing someone who is sociopathic.
ReplyDeleteWrong. This is spot on about BPD
DeleteThis is BPD. Empathy isn’t a relevant factor. It doesn’t matter whether they can feel it. The point is that they suffer from cognitive distortions, and interpret the situation as not being worthy of their empathy.
Delete- Everybody else’s fault.
- Doesn’t matter because the other person doesn’t care anyway.
- they wronged me so they deserve it
- they’re lying about how they feel so they can hurt me
And so on.