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Old Mar 24, 2014, 10:13 PM
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Maranara Maranara is offline
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Member Since: Aug 2013
Location: Idaho
Posts: 928
I'm not going to cut up what you said. I know you're largely right. I'm just totally alone out here and was desperate in the way I behaved and acted. I'm just desperate for someone, anyone out here that I can trust and I thought she might provide that.
I fooled myself, regardless of whether it was dysfunctional behavior on my part of not.

Quote:
Originally Posted by cboxpalace View Post
You don't have friends, someone seemed to care and I suspect somewhere around here you began to idealize her the situation etc.


I find this whole situation on your part to be dysfunctional, just by the fact you're paying so much attention to what you perceive are traits and you're fishing for that information. You're analyzing her.

BPD traits are only relevant if they present themselves in the proper context which is a pervasive pattern of instability in relationships. I don't get the sense her relationships are all that unstable. She's been divorced twice, so has 50% + of the population. It also appears she's on relatively good terms with her ex. I'm divorced and I hate the stupid ***** with a passion.

Regardless, you're fishing for commonalities which isn't really being all that honest because there's an ulterior motive behind your questions, which I suspect is the part I underlined.

So you get home send her the dsm traits on bpd, mention that you have it, and that the two of you seem to have a lot in common. You're leading her into drawing the conclusion that she might have bpd too, kind of like manipulating the situation. It appears to have worked because she then discussed it with her therapist, as well as, her ex who is also a therapist and both reassured her that she doesn't have bpd.

I think that you need to analyze this whole situation, and your process of thought what it was that you were trying to accomplish and how you were going about it, because it is dysfunctional. It's doubtful that it will change anything in regards to this situation, but it can be used to learn from so you can try and avoid it in the future.



May be reasonable on her part. You did try and lead her to believe she might have bpd, and also hesitant because of what she had been told by therapists.


This is wrong? How? We have dysfunctional ways in which we have learned to cope and part of those dysfunctions are to seek attention (we want to be loved), manipulate situations (to get attention / love), turn on people (when we don't get those things). It doesn't have to be liked but it's accurate.


This is what you REALLY wanted.. a friend, someone who'd be there for you, someone you could rely on and call on when needed blah blah blah.



I think her need to establish boundaries for her is completely rational on her part. She needs to take care of her mental health first. Also the fact she appears to be in therapy makes boundaries even more important I'd suspect.


The fact you have no friends is your problem and not hers. You lost 1 chance to have a friend and NOT the ONLY chance. You're still hung up on the fact you think she has traits of bpd. <-- that will get you nowhere with this, but I guess it doesn't matter because you weren't that close to begin with.

Now if you choose you can think I'm mean and hateful OR you can look at what I wrote and see there may be some validity in it.

What you wanted was a friend, someone you could rely on (good). You/we don't know how to ask for what we need so our dysfunctional interpersonal / coping skills kick in and **** things up (not so good). The key, I think, for you is to look at this situation, find your patterns/motives, so you'll have a better chance to be aware of them in the future and avoid this kind of situation.
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