Originally posted by Kourt
hey guys, I've been going out with this girl now for over 3 months now, and I love her but I really don't know how to act when her borderline personality disorder acts up. I realize that about 90% of you dont even know what bpd is, so if you dont know what it is, no need to post. But for those of you who know what it is, or have dated someone with it, I really need help with how to deal with it because it gets really hard sometimes. Oh, and she is on prozac for that (and depression). I've never encountered bpd before and I really dont know what I'm doing. I really need some advice on what to do. >.<
Wow...ironic that this is the first post I read after being gone for awhile. On top of that, I've been away in part because of a situation with my ex husband who happens to have BPD. He assaulted our 14 year old son and landed in jail. We've had court hearings, meetings and related issues out the wazoo.
I'm an expert on BPD. I was married for 10 years to someone who has it. Here's what you can expect:
Feeling like you are always walking on egg shells.
Frequent threats and some attempts at suicide.
Self-mutiliation...I bet she cuts herself, too, doesn't she?
One minute she'll love you and the next she'll hate you.
She will emotionally, verbally and possibly physically abuse you.
Lord forbid you have any children with her because she will treat them the same way.
Her moods will change more than you can keep track of.
She will alienate all of your family and friends to the point where they won't want to be around you because of her.
She won't be able to keep friends, so she will look to you as her only source of support...and you'll also be her main victim of abuse.
She is likely to develop alcohol and drug problems.
She will suck the very life right out of you.
People with BPD can't have healthy, normal relationships with people. They can improve with medication and something called dialectal therapy (sp?) IF they actually stay in treatment. Therapist find that people with BPD are the most difficult patients to deal with because of how toxic they tend to be.
If any of what I mentioned sounds familiar to you and you've already been experiencing any of it...it won't get better with time. My advice would be to end your relationship with her. A lot of people have psychological problems, and most can still have good relationships. BPD is a whole other monster entirely. Ending the relationship will be tricky, though. If that's what you do, you'll want her to end it otherwise she'll be bitter and angry with you until some other guy comes along and becomes her new victim. And no, she can't help it, but that doesn't mean that you should expose yourself to what this disease does to those close to the people who have it.