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  • #426615
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Ben:

    I’ll reply more tomorrow morning (it’s Tues 5:35 pm here, U.S.), but for now:

    A long tirade ahaha“- actually, it was a pleasure (!) to read your post: you are an excellent writer in a literary sense, says I, plus your writing is so honest, so genuine, that it makes me feel affection for you. It makes me smile. I can understand why he likes and loves you.

    I paid for his flight…  I feel foolish for doing so“- I think that it’s fine, not foolish, that you paid for his flight, given that he can’t pay for it.

    … He’ll be here 6 weeks… my OCD tendencies and anxiety have ganged up on me a.. it’s a wonderful party going on inside my amygdala“- the brain, particularly the amygdala, has its own habits, chemical mostly, and anxiety, OCD tendencies and such are mental habits. Like any habit, it takes effort and a plan to change.

    Mindfulness is a part of modern psychotherapy that’s about changing mental habits. When I attended therapy, my daily homework was to listen to one of Mark William’s audio guided meditations. He was (maybe still is) a professor in Oxford and an expert on Mindfulness. I think that you can listen to a few of his recorded mindfulness meditations online free of charge. Listening to an audio first thing in the morning and/ or last thing at night, and anytime in between- is one way to slow down the brain, to calm it. Over time.. together with other Mindfulness Practices, you will be surprised by how well it works!

    Back to you tomorrow!

    anita

    #426616
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Ben: I forgot to add that you can prepare for his visit by listening to an audio+ a day and doing other mindfulness practices every day for the next six weeks, so to prepare yourself for the visit. More.. tomorrow.

    anita

    #426703
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Ben:

    “I feel so embarrassed to admit that, I haven’t told anyone, but in my mind I am conscious of it and it makes me so nervous. Does it need to make me nervous or anxious? I have no idea”-

    – Embarrassment/ shame is a very difficult emotional experience and it involves nervousness and anxiety. Maybe it will help you to share more about your shame..?

    “I was thinking today that I’m perhaps nervous about ‘what if it all goes wrong?‘ – he gets bored of it here, with me working, the gloomy winter weather…what if… Or… Or… What if…?“-

    – The brain is scanning for all the possibilities where it can go wrong, trying to prepare itself for a future devastation.

    I say this..  and then try to deploy the technique ‘What’s the evidence?’ – well… none really. He says he’s really excited about it.. ‘.. I just want to spend my time with you’“- no evidence in regard to your boyfriend. It’s the old evidence that plagues you, the evidence from childhood.

    “Another pressure: part of me perhaps worries about a repeat of last time – remember… my ex visited the same time of year (gloomy winter), I was nervous, clingy, insecure… He was already distant and aloof by the time of his visit… This time? Well… I don’t really see any behaviour from his side that indicates he is ambivalent”-

    – Looking at the title of your thread, Love lost, there are no guaranteed that love will not be lost, not for anyone in a romantic relationship. Key is to manage this fear, and one way to do so is to practice Mindfulness and other emotion regulation skills.

    Yet… I worry so much! I tell myself all the time, there’s nothing wrong, nothing amiss. As you say, I end up creating something amiss in my head most of the time“- another way to manage the fear is to get in touch/ become more aware of what really did go wrong, what really did go amiss in your formative years aka childhood, where this excessive fear was formed into your brain. It’d take quality psychotherapy to do that. But maybe sharing more about it here will help..?

    I know my fears don’t make any sense“- your fears make sense in the context where they originated.

    He goes for a drink and forgets to look at his phone for an hour (After I’d not really talked to him for like 5 hours) – I get upset because he then wasn’t ready for our daily call when I was ready (eye roll emoji time!)“- the brain focuses on the negative, and if the negative doesn’t exist, the brain creates it. Try to repeatedly redirect your attention to the positives.

    And please do post any time you’d like to, before and during his visit. It is a pleasure to read from you, and I will be glad to reply anytime you post!

    anita

    #430345
    Ben
    Participant

    Back again after some weeks.

    We’re still together, the visit here was fine overall. We argued sometimes, bickered etc but mostly it had a lot of love in – I felt genuinely sad to see him go, and he even said “I don’t want to leave”. We even discussed, albeit with the intention of doing so, him staying here instead of keeping with his studies.

    I was a bit upset after he left, I can see in a way it was perhaps a bit like “how can he not have been utterly devastated!?” – he said that it’s easier for him as he starts a new year, goes back to his normal life, I had him in my normal life, and now am missing something (him), so naturally I’ll feel sadder as i’ve lost something. I understood him, he said when I had left him after my visit (nearly a year ago now), he’d stayed in his room for a week and cried a lot, while after i’d come back and I hadn’t really registered it at all. Yet, my mind made me think it was unfair!

    I’ve remembered these past weeks (it’s been about a month since he went back) what you said before about how I struggle to believe i’m loved, and I think it’s a bit of that. The classic psycotherapy trick – what’s the evidence? – doesn’t really hold true. He still calls every day, and has gotten upset that it’s always him calling me (I wait for him to call, always). I’m planning to go visit him in July, only a couple months away, and he wants to come visit me again in December – six weeks earlier than last time, so i’d be with him nearly three months.

    We’ve had some arguments, heated conversations etc and i’ve been the one asking him if he wants to break up – which he always responds to incredulously as if the notion is absurd. I think it’s a bit of defensive “pre-empting” on my part, because every time I say it, I don’t really mean it. Even so, I put these arguments down to simply being in a phase where the honeymoon period has faded a bit, we’ve seen each other and liked it a lot but then now we’ve had to be apart from one another again. I think I resent the distance a bit – maybe him too? (how dare he, really, not be sad about it!).

    I think the reason for posting again is mostly myself. I don’t really doubt his intentions, I doubt… myself? Or my intentions? Sometimes, I wake up and think it’s all fine, how marvelous it is. Then I think it’s all foolish and i’m being utterly naive and delusional, or that he is. I remind myself i’m still supporting him, and I think that causes a big resentment because I feel it causes an uneven balance – I feel like he owes me, even though I’m fully aware that that’s a very unhealthy attitude, and I don’t actually think he does. But, when I get frustrated, that voice is there “gosh, Ben, and you’re paying for this!?” . I never tell anyone I am.

    I worry about the time too. Distance can be fine, but 4 years of this? He’s in Argentina of all places, one of the worst places to try and move to and get a job right now, even if I did it would barely support us. I feel I made decisions that were all because of love and emotion and feelings. And now the reality of the situation has hit and i’m totally lost.

    I love him, easier and more openly than anyone else, and I believe he loves me too. I don’t want to give up something that feels this good and that can come along so rarely. But I think a part of me is really doubting if it can really work, keep working, if it can last. The hardest question keeps cropping up – do I want this? I never know if I have a real answer.

    4 years is a long time. But even then, husbands went to war and all was fine afterwards… I don’t know what to believe. I think I can do it, then I doubt it’s all worth it. I think since he’s gone back it’s become a bit more normal for him in general – as we now know a decent amount about each other, the conversations have gotten a bit samey “How was studying” – “How was work”. I don’t mind that but then sometimes we just sit and don’t talk much. My mind is screaming “what’s the point of this?!” – I worry if that’s a sign it’s not worth it anymore. I ask myself “What is this adding to my life?” – security, the knowledge that someone loves me. These are important, even the daily call shows someone cares about me. But I don’t know… I worry it’s just all about “the future” – which is a long way off. The day to day? I don’t know.

    I’ve tried several times to mention it to him, I say how hard I think it will be – he just says something like “gosh, I hope these years pass quickly”. He is very optimistic, but I resent him for that response because it just seems naive to me. He reminds me he had some other long-distance relationship that lasted a couple of years and “that was fine” – but that was different time, people – that time he and the other partner at least lived in the same country. I feel like he just prefers to not think about it – a cultural failing, Brazilians prefer to think that negatives just don’t exist if you don’t think about them – but I can’t do that.

    As an aside, even beliefs seem to get on my nerves. I think I said before he’s very religious (grew up in a small town in the interior). It being Easter of course is a more religious time, and he said any children he cares for will go to church with him. I’m not intolerant of other beliefs, but that really irritates me. His whole attitude this Easter has irritated me – I just find it so… frustrating! Especially when he’s in a gay relationship and doesn’t see any issues with being a whole hearted defender of Catholicism?! I tried today as gently as possible to talk to him about it, he said oh it’s about love thy neighbour, the church is just men and not necessarily representative. So why believe in all the other stuff? Why not just have your own relationship with God if it’s so important? Maybe it’s my Anglo-Saxon disposition – the US and UK have created so many other forms of Christianity, maybe it’s actually just a cultural thing and i’m sorta misinterpreting it.

     

    #430347
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Ben: I am looking forward to read and reply to you Sat morning (my time, 11 hours from now, approx.)

    anita

    #430363
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Ben:

    I am glad the visit was fine overall, and I am sorry that the old distress and overthinking (not surprising to me) has been more intense after the visit ended.

    I’ve remembered these past weeks… what you said before about how I struggle to believe I’m loved, and I think it’s a bit of that. The classic psychotherapy trick – what’s the evidence? – doesn’t really hold true. He still calls every day, and has gotten upset that it’s always him calling me (I wait for him to call, always). I’m planning to go visit him in July, only a couple months away, and he wants to come visit me again in December… I think I resent the distance a bit – maybe him too? (how dare he, really, not be sad about it!)… I remind myself I’m still supporting him, and I think that causes a big resentment because I feel it causes an uneven balance – I feel like he owes me… I worry about the time too. Distance can be fine, but 4 years of this?… I love him, easier and more openly than anyone else, and I believe he loves me too. I don’t want to give up something that feels this good and that can come along so rarely. But I think a part of me is really doubting if it can really work, keep working, if it can last. The hardest question keeps cropping up – do I want this? I never know if I have a real answer“-

    -What I am getting from the above is that there are four emotions interacting here: anxiety (which is an emotional, long-term condition involving fear), hurt, anger and love. The old hurt of growing up rejected/ unsupported by your father attaches itself to your boyfriend, followed by anger at him, as if he already rejected you; fear of being rejected by him leads to anger at him, involving thinking negatively about him, so to motivate yourself to reject him before he rejects you.

    His whole attitude this Easter has irritated me – I just find it so… frustrating! Especially when he’s in a gay relationship and doesn’t see any issues with being a whole hearted defender of Catholicism?!“- as I see it, this is an example of you thinking negatively about him (suggesting that he is a hypocrite, perhaps) so to motivate yourself to.. reject him/ end the relationship) before he rejects you (before he ends the relationship with you).

    (Personally, I think it’s fine for a gay man to celebrate Easter and be part of a Catholic church as long as the particular church teaches tolerance, not prejudice/ homophobia).

    Do you agree with some or all of the above?

    anita

     

    #430376
    Atticus Asher
    Participant

    Ben,

    I went back to the start of this thread since it was still active and since I am a bit newer to this forum and I thought after reading it that we had some similar and shared experiences – to which I can give you my take on what I have learned about myself and my past relationships through the lens of advice to fellow guy that has also had his heart broken. Here goes:

    Navigating the intricate web of relationships, particularly those tainted by unreciprocated feelings and unfulfilled potential, is a journey fraught with emotional hurdles and existential dilemmas. Your poignant account vividly illustrates the depth of your investment in this connection, where time, emotions, and aspirations have seamlessly woven together, creating a storyline of complexities that now demand your utmost attention. The path you tread is shadowed by the looming specter of uncertainty and disappointment, casting a pall over the once-promising horizon of this relationship. The echoes of unreciprocated feelings reverberate through the chambers of your heart, leaving behind a bittersweet symphony of longing and introspection.

    As you navigate these stormy waters, it is essential to acknowledge the depth of your emotional investment and the courage it takes to confront the harsh realities of unfulfilled potential. Your willingness to confront these complexities head-on is a testament to your resilience and strength of character, paving the way for introspection and growth in the face of adversity.

    Remember, Ben, that every twist and turn in this labyrinthine journey serves as a stepping stone toward self-discovery and enlightenment. Embrace the challenges that come your way, for they are the crucible in which the true essence of your relationships is forged, transforming unreciprocated feelings into valuable lessons and opportunities for personal evolution – I had to learn this the hard way in a relationship that I lost after 3 years of abusive and toxic behavior from a partner and a relationship that I let fall apart by a lack of properly communicating how I felt and the reasons I had those feelings. So what can one do?

    Firstly, it’s essential to commend you for your vulnerability and honesty in sharing your story. Opening up about your experiences, particularly those that involve matters of the heart, takes courage and self-awareness. Recognizing and acknowledging your feelings is a crucial first step in the process of healing and moving forward.

    As you reflect on your journey with this individual, it’s important to permit yourself to feel the full spectrum of emotions that arise. Whether it’s longing, sadness, confusion, or even a glimmer of hope, each sentiment is valid and worthy of acknowledgment. Embracing your emotions with compassion and self-acceptance can pave the way for greater understanding and growth.

    At the same time, it’s beneficial to explore the underlying dynamics of your connection and the role it played in your life. Reflect on the qualities and experiences that drew you to this person, as well as any patterns or themes that may have emerged in your interactions. By gaining insight into the deeper layers of your attachment, you can gain clarity on what you truly desire and deserve in a relationship.

    Communication, both with yourself and with others, is fundamental in navigating complex emotional terrain. While it’s natural to yearn for closure or resolution, it’s also essential to recognize the limitations of external validation or affirmation. Ultimately, your sense of worth and fulfillment should stem from within, grounded in self-love and self-respect.

    Setting boundaries is another crucial aspect of self-care, especially when it comes to relationships that evoke intense emotions or uncertainty. Be mindful of your own needs and limits, and honor them unapologetically. This may involve creating space for yourself, establishing clear communication with the other person, or seeking support from trusted confidants.

    Moving forward, prioritize your own well-being and personal growth. Invest time and energy in activities and pursuits that bring you joy, fulfillment, and a sense of purpose. Cultivate meaningful connections with friends, family, and community members who uplift and support you on your journey.

    In your journey of healing and growth, it is essential to bear in mind that the path to wholeness is not a linear one. The concept that healing is nonlinear serves as a poignant reminder that progress may not always follow a straightforward trajectory. It is perfectly acceptable to approach the healing process gradually, honoring each step taken along the way. Embracing the understanding that healing is a multifaceted experience allows for moments of both advancement and setbacks. Navigating the ebbs and flows that accompany healing from heartache requires a delicate balance of patience and self-compassion. It is through these moments of introspection and self-nurturing that true growth and transformation can occur.

    Trust in the power of time, introspection, and self-care to guide you through the complexities of healing. Each moment of self-reflection serves as a building block in the construction of a stronger, wiser, and more resilient version of yourself. By honoring the nonlinear nature of the healing journey, you are paving the way for profound personal evolution and newfound strength.

    #430512
    Ben
    Participant

    Hi Anita

    I’m inclined to agree, to the extent I could almost hear your response as I was typing it!

    Yesterday I could tell in the call with him he was starting to bear some resentment towards me because of my constant gloominess as of late. Having borne much myself to many people I could see the signs straight away. He said sometimes its like trying to fill in a hole that is impossible to fill. Or leading a thirsty man to water yet he refuses go drink. Having borne much myself to many people I could see the signs straight away. Towards the end I said that this mood between us was creating distance between us, he agreed.

    I think the problem is that even though I’m trying to deal with it maturely sometimes, like saying “I think this is pushing us apart” – not arguing or shouting it at him – it’s still almost like, as you said, a part of me refuses to accept love. Sniffing around like a dog trying to find the break up line. Rather than find a solution or a resolution (or even just let these feelings go!), where I don’t keep opening up this topic for the millionth time, I just find another reason to keep the doubt and anxiety alive. So much so that now he is actually getting annoyed!

    I can tell he’s getting tired of my (persistent) bad moods. It’s a toxic cycle we find ourselves in. My day to day is fine but the calls are now fraught (for me), will I disappoint him or will I purposely interpret something negatively?

    I find it ironic (though painfully) that in my last relationship with someone unattached, distant etc I had infinite patience and always had explanations. Yet with this guy who I love and has shown he wants to commit etc (he even chose all his classes as morning classes this term because we call in the evening!), I’m constantly trying to pick it apart. Like when a cat gets stuck in something and pulls its head back, wriggling, I’m constantly doing that – allergic to just going with the flow.

    So too is it ironic about faith. As my therapist said, no one is obliging him to be with me. Yet I’ve gotten to the point of saying “Oh you want to break up then?”. The reality I have with him calls for a leap of faith, in a way but its like I’m “protecting myself” from that. But whenever was love about protecting yourself from it?

    I will admit that I think he doesn’t quite know how to handle depression. He will say things like reminding me I haven’t gone to the gym. Things that realistically aren’t a criticism but for a sensitive mind will instantly be forwarded to the “reasons why he hates me” department. I think that partially explains my defensive stance in calls as of late… which just adds to the cycle. We start a call and I’m stone faced, he sees that and that lowers his mood. I’ve had it the other way… a depressed person doesn’t make for great conversation. I was reading about depression and relationships, and sure enough the other often feels desperate after all their attempts to help come to nothing and this can turn into anger and resentment. I can see that’s exactly what’s happening. This too provokes worry! Even though the solution could easily be “take a breath, think of how nice it can be, and has been”, – letting go of these constant tests or doubts –  instead of trying the solution for a while, the mere fact I’m here means I must doubt the entire relationship. Something he says he’s never done.

    Perhaps there is a prospect that it’s no longer working. But I think what frustrates me is that I’m not giving it my best shot. Not like “Oh only i was wrong, it’s all my fault”, he could have a better attitude. But my anxieties have been winning and getting the better of me. I don’t want to end something because of that, because that would be an utter waste. Though as I write this I think of all the people who write these things with eternal optimism and then, a few pages later, “we broke up”… but then again… is that me being pessimistic again? ! Ahh!

    Its like I don’t know what’s valid. What feelings are valid. Part of me says ahhh just chill out, he’s still there. Another part is constantly adding things to a list, constantly saying “you’re ignoring signs, it’s so obvious”. I have no idea where to draw the line. AHH

    #430518
    Ben
    Participant

    I’d written this reply too, but left it on another tab! :

     

    Im inclined to agree, it’s what i’ve been feeling too when I try to reflect and take myself out of the situation per se.

    All the things I’m making myself worry about are so absurd at the same time as they could, “on paper” be an issue. I think previously I was content to sort of see how it goes – and I kept telling myself “focus on what’s in front of me” – but I keep slipping back into that well-trodden path of anxiety. If it’s not one thing, it’s another. I’m surprised even at myself for triggering myself so frequently.

    I’m constantly creating resentments too – reminding myself of ways I could be being taken advantage of or how I could be pulling cotton wool over my eyes. I remember my current therapist said we can “reproduce” what our parents do or did, or what those we live with do as well. Me living with my parents probably doesn’t help, I write this and see a lot of it is very similar to my mother and my father – my mother constantly acting as if my father is trying to undermine her/outwit her or take advantage. Things that probably he did do a long time ago but now I don’t really see it like that – he just wants to try and enjoy his last years. My mother has a lot of baggage – she holds on to receipts from supermarket shops from years ago – he tries to encourage her to throw them out, she screams about something of hers he threw away 20 years ago – he learned his mistake and doesn’t touch her stuff, but she can’t let that injustice go.

    I write that as it’s almost my experience too – I can’t let anything go and I can’t get into a situation where I might have to. Funnily enough, remembering the Catholic element – an “immaculate” conception – it’s as if my record must be immaculate. I can’t have any risks or anything like that hovering in my life. My boyfriend made mistakes, as anyone does, but I can’t seem to forgive him even as time marches on. I have to sort of deconstruct everything he does to make sure there isn’t a sign of this or that in his behaviour, so that there is no risk of betrayal or upset.

    #430524
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Ben:

    Yesterday I could tell in the call with him he was starting to bear some resentment towards me because of my constant gloominess as of late… He said sometimes its like trying to fill in a hole that is impossible to fill. Or leading a thirsty man to water yet he refuses go drink“- yes, reads true, he has an accurate understanding of the situation.

    Like, as you said, a part of me refuses to accept love“- I think that you’ve been projecting your father into him, angry that he didn’t love you (when you were growing up), and refusing his love, as in protesting: Now you love me? TOO LATE!

    Projection is tricky. The unloved child within us lives in the past.

    Yet with this guy who I love and has shown he wants to commit etc… I’m constantly trying to pick it apart. Like when a cat gets stuck in something“- I typed the above before reading this part, and this part here fits with what I typed above. You are indeed stuck in something: the past. The child within you, that is.

    “allergic to just going with the flow“- I think that the child within you (a dominant part of you) refuses to go with the flow until such time that he is loved back there-and-then. It’s an impossibility, of course.. but he is stuck there. He doesn’t know that time has moved on.

    But whenever was love about protecting yourself from it?“- never. We protect ourselves from hurt, not from love. You anticipate hurt (in the future), so you protect yourself from it. Only again, it’s tricky: you are already hurt, and have been hurt for many years.

    Me living with my parents probably doesn’t help… my mother constantly acting as if my father is trying to undermine her/outwit her or take advantage… My mother has a lot of baggage – she holds on to receipts from supermarket shops from years ago“- I didn’t know this about your mother, she’s suspicious, untrusting. I am going to add a post in regard to this part after I submit this one.

    I’m constantly creating resentments too – reminding myself of ways I could be being taken advantage of or how I could be pulling cotton wool over my eyes… my mother constantly acting as if my father is trying to undermine her/outwit her or take advantage“- suspicion passed on by your mother.

    My boyfriend made mistakes, as anyone does, but I can’t seem to forgive him even as time marches on. I have to sort of deconstruct everything he does to make sure there isn’t a sign of this or that in his behaviour, so that there is no risk of betrayal or upset.“- I think that it can be a great help for you if you express the betrayal and upset that you experienced growing up (which you still experience because your child-within is living in the past). If you express thoughts and emotions involved in context of the then-and-there (the people and situations of the past), you’d be less likely to project the past into the present.

    You can express it here, in your thread, if you want to. You can look at my thread, Fear, Anxiety and Healing. I submitted a post there yesterday about what I am suggesting that you do (the red wine is optional, of course, it’s not a recommendation, lol).

    anita

    #430525
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Ben:

    Does the following (quote from an online source) fits your mother?

    “individuals who have a pervasive, persistent, and enduring mistrust of others, and a profoundly cynical view of others and the world…  hypervigilant to physical, verbal or social attacks, and do not trust others, and therefore tend to have few if any close or intimate associates. They tend to be aloof, cold, distant, argumentative, and frequently complain. They may appear guarded and secretive, very rational, logical, and unemotional, but at times will be sarcastic, hostile, and rigid. Generally they have a difficult time getting along with others..  tend to do poorly with group activities and collaborative projects. They will be highly critical of others, but will respond to criticism of themselves with hostility or defensiveness…

    “will believe others are using, lying to, or harming them, without apparent evidence thereof… have doubts about the loyalty and trustworthiness of others… will not confide in others due to the belief that their confidence will be betrayed… will interpret ambiguous or benign remarks as hurtful or threatening, and Hold grudges.. In the absence of objective evidence, believe their reputation or character are being assailed by others, and will retaliate in some manner and.. Will be jealous and suspicious without cause that intimate partners are being unfaithful.”

    Coming to think of it, how much of the above fits you (and what doesn’t fit)?

    anita

    #430653
    Ben
    Participant

    Definitely is a good fit for my mother, and for me. I think her constant suspicion of my father, and blaming almost everything on him, did do a number on my ability to trust people. It seemed he was constantly betraying her, undermining her and by extension, me. I think only in the last couple of years have I seen both of them objectively – my father included.

    Profoundly cynical view of others and the world – me and my mother – in different ways. Her’s is much more deeply suspicious,  I try to forgive the world or “bite the bullet” and dive in to see if it really will betray me. But I think sometimes the hypervigilance mentioned in the next line after this kicks in and i’m creating the betrayals.

    They tend to be aloof, cold, distant, argumentative, and frequently complain – I think this perhaps fits me better than my mother. In social contexts I was constantly like this for many years, my only lines were complaining about my father, or how bad everything was/is. Frequently complaining – unfortunately a large number of people have told me I do this, including my boyfriend (where I think it extinguishes his very optimistic attitude and leaves him feeling almost depressed after “talking to me” – where sometimes it’s just me on a tirade against petty little things).

    They may appear guarded and secretive, very rational, logical, and unemotional, but at times will be sarcastic, hostile, and rigid – yes, again. For me this is 100%, I am guarded with him, when I think about it. I still don’t fully consider myself to be in a relationship with him, almost regarding it as a cynical ploy – something might happen (not will, but might, based on the past) – therefore, act like you don’t care. This means I make sarcastic jokes all the time with him, almost mocking his commitment to me. Rather than it being the odd poke in the ribs about something, it’s nearly everyday a “joke” reminding him of his past errors. Rational, logical – yes, these too. I wonder sometimes if I’m autistic in someway with the sort of coldness I treat him and others. I empathize with them, but sometimes outright say that this idea someone has is stupid. Not with friends or acquaintances – but with my boyfriend, yes.

    They will be highly critical of others, but will respond to criticism of themselves with hostility or defensiveness… Again, yes. Since I was a child, criticism was a hurtful experience, I could barely take any – it still hurts to do so even to this day. And of course, I am very critical of others, in certain contexts. I managed to let some of it go and don’t care as much about people in general (as in, caring about criticizing them), but again, I can easily criticise my boyfriend to his face.

    will interpret ambiguous or benign remarks as hurtful or threatening – yeah, very often. I think i’ve had to actually learn that often it’s not the case and people are just joking.

    Grudges, goodness! I hold them against anyone. I have ammunition to fire away at anytime. I never let it go. Sometimes I manage to, in the conversation perhaps, but then it will reappear the next time my temper is raised.

    Knowing this, I wish I could let some of it go, but how? I should be making the changes to remove these. I’ve spent an awful lot of time alone – especially after the pandemic, and I think these unfortunate habits haven’t been properly challenged. My previous therapist never said anything in sessions other than hello and goodbye (another waste of money!). When it was just me it was fine but I can’t treat someone i’m in a relationship with this way – especially how I am now, acting as if it’s his problem!

    #430669
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Ben:

    First, a note about personality disorders: I was diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) 13 years ago, a diagnosis that fit me since my beginning adulthood. Following therapy and a lot of work, I no longer fit the diagnosis (what a relief for me and the people in my life!). So, personality disorders are not permanent if you work on healing persistently and for some time.

    The quotes I submitted to you 3 days ago (which appear in your reply italicized), are quotes from the ravive. com on Paranoid Personality Disorder (PPD). It so happens that you and I have more in common than I previously thought: our mothers are similar. I know that my mother fit the PPD (as well as the BPD diagnosis), and her PPD led to me fitting some of the PPD diagnosis myself.

    I am not a medical doctor, nor am I a health care professional of any kind, so I am not diagnosing you or your mother. Even if I was a professional, it would have been unprofessional of me to diagnose anyone online in the context here. But this does not mean that the information on personality disorders, information available to everyone, offered to everyone without preconditions (such as prefacing the information with this information is meant only for professionals). Therefore, it is okay for you and for me to responsibly use the information offered to all.

    Living with my PPD-mother robbed me from the ability to trust people. She kept expressing to me her suspicions of other people (and of me, at different times), again and again, on and on. Growing up, I couldn’t maintain any friendship/ good feelings toward people because I was often angry at them for allegedly mistreating my mother. Her ongoing expressed suspiciousness/ PPD isolated me from her, from myself and from everyone else.

    A PPD mother presents the world to her child as a very hostile world, betrayal of trust is just around the corner, a matter of time. No exception. How can one possibly have a trusting relationship in a world where trust does not exist..?

    “… Frequently complaining – unfortunately a large number of people have told me I do this, including my boyfriend (where I think it extinguishes his very optimistic attitude and leaves him feeling almost depressed after ‘talking to me’– where sometimes it’s just me on a tirade against petty little things)“- the beginning of my healing was to Notice that I was just about to act (say or do something) based on my BPD tendencies, and then Pause, and most often, I would resist doing the damaging BPD behavior. I would feel the tendency, the need, the compulsion to (accuse a person of this or that, etc.) but I didn’t act on it. Over a long time of practicing this discipline, the compulsions weakened.

    This can apply to you in this way: you feel like you are about to complain to your boyfriend, you Notice the feeling/ compulsion, and you put the compulsion on Pause. You don’t complain to him.

    For me this is 100%, I am guarded with him… almost mocking his commitment to me… it’s nearly everyday a ‘joke’ reminding him of his past errors“- reminding him of his past errors, real or imagined, is also a compulsion that you can put on Pause.

    Knowing this, I wish I could let some of it go, but how?…When it was just me it was fine but I can’t treat someone I’m in a relationship with this way – especially how I am now, acting as if it’s his problem!“-

    – it’s not your fault that you grew up with a PPD-ed mother any more than it is my fault that I was brought into the world through a PPD-ed mother. Yet, it is our personal responsibility to heal, best we can, for our ow sake  and for the sake of the people who deserve better from us.

    As I close this post, I am very curious about what you think and feel about all this, hoping that although it’s difficult to process (?) it gives you hope..?

    anita

    #430707
    Ben
    Participant

    They do resonate, I had wondered sometimes if I had BPD. A friend of mine knew someone diagnosed with it, and she (the friend) said how they were talking about people in a very positive way, then something happened and instantly they were untrustworthy, horrible, a snake etc. I think I can see some characteristics of me doing that too, perhaps more so than my parents. Not that I’m not in control of such behaviours, but the emotional forces behind them overwhelms me easily. Rather than have a reaction, let’s say, and simply choose to act on that or not, I become overwhelmed with vengence, or betrayal or some such emotion.

    At the same time my reactions remind me of that of a child, where they in a way can’t handle their emotions/reactions and get into a bit of a state.

    I think my mother never had these behaviours towards me, however, and so in that way, it was lucky. We’re all on the spectrum for some disorder, maybe she is a bit further up than others. I think a strong dividing line is that she didn’t have this towards everyone all the time. She was fiercely protective of me rather than involving me in the great betrayal – along with my sibling, and her close friends – they were “in the circle”. I think her having a tough time when I was around 10/11 (a great deal of family issues amongst other things) led her to be this way. My father says she never used to be like this. Indeed as a young child I don’t even remember her saying stuff like that. It was only when I was a teenager that it really got worse – those years where my view of the world is formed, but some more important relationships are formed. Just as her view and experience of the world was worsening, mine was being cemented, and I was alone with her an awful lot. I maybe have a decent base but a lot of this paranoid thinking sprinkled on top. Nonetheless, I think seeing it in a frame of a disorder helps. At least to see it as “disordered behaviour”. I remember doing the same with myself previously – seeing, thinking and feeling when my behaviour (anxiety, let’s say) was perhaps leading me astray.

    I think it can give me some hope, certainly in trying to recognize these thoughts as they arise. I keep remembering my therapist saying about how we “reproduce” the behaviours of those we live with (I think I said it a couple days ago). I can see more and more it’s a sort of hangover from that. I remember a time, when I was happy and at university, when I could be a good steward of my thoughts, and tell unpleasant/unneeded ones to go on their way. But now i’m a little more unstable/unsure of myself and that process is much harder. But, I think, to know that these thoughts that are so thoroughly unpleasant fundamentally don’t need to be acted/thought upon does help.

    Returning to the relationship with my boyfriend, I have entered a sort of paranoia, but not over his trustworthiness, but over the impacts of my behaviour. I can sense he is a little more distant, sharing less with me. We reconciled mid-way through this week, then had an argument, over the stupidest, minor thing, on Friday. We sent audio messages after, I said i’m sorry and that in a way these don’t mean much to me. He sent one back saying the same, and that these things won’t kill his love for me. But gosh, I feel such a fool. I regret so much all the guarded behaviour, gatekeeping to my feelings, rolling my eyes at his attempts to create closeness – ignoring his calls when it wasn’t convenient for me, for example. He still calls of course.

    Again, thoughts deceive me, I dont know if it really is water under the bridge for him, and now it’s an anxious attachment phase that i’m stuck in, going “is he really more distant?”. Even if he was, it would be understandble, and the best way for us to return to a normal baseline is for me to reduce the intensity of my emotions and let it come back naturally. I can’t just constantly seek reassurance after causing a minor rift.

    I’m writing this and remembering what you said a couple days ago, that the inner child is dominant in me. I see some sort of childish behaviour here too. I remember sometimes I could be very insistent as a child, determined and willful, but this clashed with my parents who were just the same. Sometimes it would annoy them, but they would also react like a child – they wouldn’t ignore me, but they wouldn’t offer reassurance sometimes, it would be something that haunted (haunts) me to this day. This seeking reassurance from my boyfriend reminded me of this. But it’s like i’m determined to hear him say it again and again until I feel better. If I don’t here it, it means I have killed out relationship and all those bad things will come true.

    But in reality, maybe just acting like normal, waiting for the daily call etc, is fine. Maybe I don’t have to try and ring him as soon as he is free, desperate for reassurance. But then, he was always so communicative and now he’s quieter, which he says is because he’s studying. I worry if I give him space this will become the norm and I will have lost a part of him, so instead i’m desperately trying to explain myself to him…

    #430719
    anita
    Participant

    Dear Ben:

    I had wondered sometimes if I had BPD… Not that I’m not in control of such behaviours, but the emotional forces behind them overwhelms me easily… I become overwhelmed with vengeance, or betrayal or some such emotion“- I relate. This is why my therapist back in 2011, after diagnosing me with BPD, went by the book, as far as therapy designed for BPD (Dialectical Behavioral Therapy, DBT), and started with teaching me emotion regulation skills. This beginning part of the therapy is about lessening the intensity of the emotions you listed, so that they don’t overwhelm you. It makes pausing between emotion (ex., feeling vengeance) and behavior (ex., passive-aggressive talk) possible.

    At the same time my reactions remind me of that of a child, where they in a way can’t handle their emotions/reactions and get into a bit of a state“- yes, like a child throwing a temper tantrum, this is the gist of the BPD explosive rage: a adult throwing a temper tantrum.

    We’re all on the spectrum for some disorder, maybe she is a bit further up than others“-yes, personality disorders are indeed a spectrum thing. Not all people who are diagnosed with a particular personality disorder are.. the same person.

    She was fiercely protective of me rather than involving me in the great betrayal – along with my sibling, and her close friends – they were ‘in the circle’“- unlike my mother in this respect. I was outside her circle.

    My father says she never used to be like this… It was only when I was a teenager that it really got worse – those years where my view of the world is formed…and I was alone with her an awful lot… a lot of this paranoid thinking sprinkled on top. Nonetheless, I think seeing it in a frame of a disorder helps“- the idea behind the professionals who place combinations of symptoms in groups, creating mental health diagnoses, is to design a specific therapy for each category.

    I regret so much…  rolling my eyes at his attempts to create closeness – ignoring his calls when it wasn’t convenient for me, for example“- passive-aggressive behaviors, having enough control to not be fully aggressive..?

    The best way for us to return to a normal baseline is for me to reduce the intensity of my emotions“- yes: emotion regulation.

    I can’t just constantly seek reassurance after causing a minor rift… I’m writing this and remembering what you said a couple days ago, that the inner child is dominant in me… This seeking reassurance from my boyfriend reminded me of this. But it’s like I’m determined to hear him say it again and again until I feel better. If I don’t hear it, it means I have killed out relationship and all those bad things will come true“- asking for/ reaching out for his reassurance has become a compulsion. When you receive it, you feel better for a short time, then you need it again.. and again. His reassuring words are like a drug for you, isn’t it?

    anita

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