Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Now I feel bad about moving out because she started sleeping with a belt around her neck on days I didn't stay at the house.
And what happens if she has an epileptic attack while the belt is on her neck?she has epilepsy
This to me is very black/white thinking. You may want to research this here. There are also many posts that speak about blue/not blue. You may find some insight into what you are up against with this. I think the issue here for you is to research so that you are not taking it 'on'. This is about her distortions imho, not so much yours.She responds with you don't love me the way I need to be loved, so I don't think you love me at all.
She still feels like she can't give me what I need unless I prove to her I deserve it by me giving her what she needs.
She's always telling me she's a scientist, therefore she knows what she knows and knows what she doesn't. If only she could realize that we both need to give each other what we want to make this work. She's still on the "me first, then you.." bandwagon.
I just can't agree with this enough. Borderline is an oft-maligned diagnosis, and it isn't always well understood, but the extreme, to the point of dangerous, expression of her emotional state and needs - it doesn't go away on its own, and she won't be able to change much of it without getting some solid DBT (dialectical behavioral therapy, the protocol that was developed by a person with Borderline for Borderlines. It has broader uses now - but it's still the gold standard for BPD treatment).But if I had to pick on specialist, I'd say BPD right now. Is there a DBT skills group in the area?
Please, just keep remembering the first part of this statement - no, you can't take the burden of being blamed for everything - and keep being as honest with yourself about your own feelings as you have been. You clearly do love her, very much. Keep watching for 'breaks' in the symptoms, times when she is able to listen without reacting - and keep encouraging that she give herself the support she needs by investing some time in some deeper therapy. Look for centers that offer 'classic' DBT, or DBT in the Linehan style. It's generally a six month stretch of three things - weekly individual therapy, weekly group therapy, and 24 hour access to one of the therapists you work with. It's highly structured. It's not going to deal with her PTSD at all, but right now, she seems to be much, much more symptomatic for BPD. Also, even doing an intake at such a place, they will really be able to provide clarity on her diagnoses and how they interact.I can't take the burden of being blamed for everything. It's not fair to me or her. I'm doing my part by staying committed to improving my listening skills, but she has to do her part and get the help she needs, which I offered to help her with. Today she will drive to see her therapist and offered me to go with her. It wasn't easy for me to agree because I've been so shaken by this relationship I don't know if it will help or not but I agreed for the simple fact I wouldn't be able to live with myself if I didn't try everything in my power to be with the person I love.
she has become someone much different and says I will never see that side of her until I prove to her I deserve it
telling me all her ex-boyfriend's she still talks to claim they have never found anyone like her and how I will regret leaving her
She also mentioned how I can be easily replaced and how easy I've made it for her to do so.
That's borderline flaring up. It's hard to sometimes get one's head around the fact that it's not actually what the person thinks, so much as they have such a pathological insecurity that they act out in order to provoke response.Maybe someone could shed some light on this, but in the beginning we were both fine. Then she started claiming that I wasn't paying attention to her enough and warned me that she wasn't feeling good because of it.
Nope. She has an illness, that's all.Is she right to think since I was the first one to make her feel bad everything rides on me? The thought seems selfish, but she's extremely manipulative and I wanted to know if anyone here can see where she's coming from.
I think that's only because it had not been named yet (Borderline, that is). But definitely, she was thinking about her own chronic suicidality and self-harm, which is what led her to believe that she would have been diagnosed borderline when she was institutionalized, if they had invented the diagnosis. I just think she's really brave for coming out eventually.Marsha Linehan, the developer of DBT, originally made no mention of BPD,