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AshleyParticipant
Hi Jonny
I’m sorry to hear about your situation at present. I am two months into a break up with my ex which sounds very similar to your own situation. Things had been great at first and really thought I had found my soul mate, however her behaviour would flip at times and become extremely abusive. I put this down to the fact she had disclosed that she had been sexually abused as a child and not told anyone or talked about it before. I find out she had fallen pregnant yet this push and pull behaviour continued throughout, one minute she loved me the next she hated me.
Anyway, to cut a long story short I got her to see a doctor as I had concerns she may have Borderline Personality disorder, I work as a psychologist within a clinical setting so know the hallmarks only too well. Her behaviour became increasingly erratic after the birth of our son. One day she came home with a tattoo with my name incorporated, two days later she told me she hadn’t loved my for a long time, I’d let myself go and she wished our son was her ex partners not mine. I went to work the following day and on my return I tried to reason with her, talk her down and get her to think about the implications of her actions. In a moment of temper she lost it and tried to push a pint glass towards my face, I blocked it but unfortunately she completely severed the tendons in my hand and left me whilst I was in theatre the following day.
I have lost all contact with her as she sent me an email whilst in hospital demanding child support, when I said I would organise it once I got home she called me a vile, disgusting man and said she hoped I rot in hell. I haven’t heard from her in over two months and have no contact with my son at all as she has blocked all lines of communication and moved away.
It’s been a terrible ordeal so I can completely understand your position and situation. My advice to you would be try to stay in the now, I spent week ruminating and analysing conversations, situations I could have changed.The truth is we can’t really change a person’s behaviour unless they realise they want to change themselves. It sometimes hurts more when we don’t have full closure, why someone can suddenly change and show no empathy, no remorse. The difficulty is learning to free your thoughts from the constant voice inside your head, reminding you of the good times, reminding you of what you’ve lost.
I am by no means over my situation, I am still off work and I have had to deal with all of this in our family home, alone and off work for a long period of time with little to do but worry, over think and analyse the situation. I am finding this is easing though as I try to focus on the negative aspects of the relationship. We all make mistakes and we can all look back and think we could have done things differently, but worrying and ruminating serves no purpose other than to maintain the negative cycle we end up trapped in.My advice would be to try and accept that this wasn’t the right person for you, her behaviour shows you that no matter she was dealing with from her past she could give you the future you wanted. Make a list of objectives, I found this helped. I re-decorated the home to my taste and to clear those memory triggers, I set time aside to mediate and be mindful of my situation and reassured myself that I had a life before her and I will have a life again when I am back on my feet. I think most importantly though I am starting to let go of the anger which is not healthy or helpful, it just fuels the cycle of rumination. I hope to see my son again one day but I know that I need to heal first and I need to resolve the inner pain and turmoil she has caused me, it’s a cliché but like they say, time is the greatest healer but try to find peace in the knowledge that life changes when we least expect it to but it works both ways, your dark times will end and it will happen when you least expect it to. One day when you have happiness again you will look back and not feel the same sense of loss you do know.
I hope things work out for you and remember, you don’t lose what’s meant to be yours.
Regards
AshleyAshleyParticipantHi Anita
Thank you for your reply, it’s very much appreciated. I supported my ex the best I could with the disclosures she made, more often than not though it was turned back on me and I was accused of been the cause of her negative behaviour by talking her past through with her and going to the doctor with her. The doctor referred her to a psychiatrist for a full assessment as he too thought she displayed many hallmark traits of a Borderline Personality sufferer. I can only say that the experience has left me in shock and deeply hurt, particularly for my eldest son who thought of her as a step-mum. She left with no remorse, no empathy.
I was taken into casualty and operated on, whilst this was taken place she was moving out and within days asking me for money and uploading pictures of a night out on social media. I was informed in the hospital the cuts had been so deep they had completely severed my tendons in my hand. Apparently if they been any lower my artery would have gone. It just shocks me how someone can do something like that with no empathy or feelings. It just seems so strange as sometimes she could be so kind and caring then change so much. Having said that when I reflect back on the relationship I realise how manipulative she has been throughout, she’s cost me a small fortune and it seems that her behaviour got worse when I had to work more to pay for things.
As soon as I have recovered and I’m back on my feet I will take legal advice and do what I can to ensure my son is safe and secure, she has had a lot of relationships which and seems to move from one to another almost immediately, by biggest fear is the impact this will have on my young son as her own daughter appears to have a lot of attachment issues, she referred to me at times as stepdad 4 and she was only 7, its very, very sad.
Thanks again for your support, it’s very much appreciated.Kind regards
AshleyAshleyParticipantHi
Thank you so much for your reply. It’s really useful to hear another opinion on the issues I’m currently facing. I’m sorry to hear you suffered in similar circumstances for such a long period of time. I tried my best to get her the right support and advice, shortly before we broke up I went to the doctors with her who referred her on for a psychiatric assessment. However, she blamed me for this and said it was my fault for discussing her past. Things actually got a lot worse and I don’t think I can write some of the things she said to me online, the level of verbal abuse was quite shocking at times.When I look back at the relationship it’s actually quite scary, how someone can present as so loving, kind and caring then like a light switch been turned off can change and become so aggressive, so manipulative and angry. I think what I’ve struggled with the most is her complete lack of empathy. She left me in hospital with very little money left after I’ve supported her and provided her with all that she wanted and needed.
My son had grown very fond of her and it’s the first relationship I’ve allowed him to become involved in. He was so excited to finally have a sibling when she fell pregnant and she has just cut both of us off. My friends informed me that whilst I was still in hospital she was uploading pictures of herself on a night out on social media sites. I guess sometimes I’m too soft for my own good, I tried to help and support her the best I could and she’s hurt my family in so many ways and within days it’s like we never even existed, it’s quite hard to digest to be honest.
I will definitely take your advice and once I get back on my feet I will do what I can to ensure my youngest son is not placed in a difficult or dangerous position.
Thanks again for your reply, very much appreciated.
Take careAshley
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