Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once one of you starts name-calling or telling the other they hate them, that is tough to come back from.
This is where I am now. DH screams and cusses at me, flips me off, calls me horrible names, etc but can't understand why I keep dwelling on that. Then the next day he tries to make up for it and get back to "normal" but I can't live like that any longer. His swings have me wondering if he's BPD...
He is totally wrong, so I want to say that out of the gate.
That said, the underlying reason for the behavior is that he likely does not feel heard by you. His milder complaints weren't getting through she he graduated to crazy. His fault, his responsibility to change, but if you are interested in trying to save your marriage, understanding the likely underlying dynamic can help.
If I were you I would obviously disengage and walk away when he acts this way. However, you might also say something like "It sounds like you are incredibly bitter and angry. If you want to talk about this calmly, let me know and I will be all ears" but you have to mean it.
I am sorry this is where you are but it might be possible to turn things around. Of course I can't say for sure not knowing you or your husband.
Is "graduating to crazy" the same as BPD? If so, then I agree. He must be mentally ill. Because no sane person can jekyll-and-hyde the way he does, and then also blame me for "making him" act the way he does.
Ok, well, it sounds like you've written off your marriage and just want to able him to make yourself feel better about it. Ok, that's your choice. He might be BPD but you might also play into the toxic dynamic. If you have kids I strongly suggest you at least try to give him the benefit of the doubt as sane - you did MARRY him after all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once one of you starts name-calling or telling the other they hate them, that is tough to come back from.
This is where I am now. DH screams and cusses at me, flips me off, calls me horrible names, etc but can't understand why I keep dwelling on that. Then the next day he tries to make up for it and get back to "normal" but I can't live like that any longer. His swings have me wondering if he's BPD...
He is totally wrong, so I want to say that out of the gate.
That said, the underlying reason for the behavior is that he likely does not feel heard by you. His milder complaints weren't getting through she he graduated to crazy. His fault, his responsibility to change, but if you are interested in trying to save your marriage, understanding the likely underlying dynamic can help.
If I were you I would obviously disengage and walk away when he acts this way. However, you might also say something like "It sounds like you are incredibly bitter and angry. If you want to talk about this calmly, let me know and I will be all ears" but you have to mean it.
I am sorry this is where you are but it might be possible to turn things around. Of course I can't say for sure not knowing you or your husband.
Is "graduating to crazy" the same as BPD? If so, then I agree. He must be mentally ill. Because no sane person can jekyll-and-hyde the way he does, and then also blame me for "making him" act the way he does.
Ok, well, it sounds like you've written off your marriage and just want to able him to make yourself feel better about it. Ok, that's your choice. He might be BPD but you might also play into the toxic dynamic. If you have kids I strongly suggest you at least try to give him the benefit of the doubt as sane - you did MARRY him after all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once one of you starts name-calling or telling the other they hate them, that is tough to come back from.
This is where I am now. DH screams and cusses at me, flips me off, calls me horrible names, etc but can't understand why I keep dwelling on that. Then the next day he tries to make up for it and get back to "normal" but I can't live like that any longer. His swings have me wondering if he's BPD...
He is totally wrong, so I want to say that out of the gate.
That said, the underlying reason for the behavior is that he likely does not feel heard by you. His milder complaints weren't getting through she he graduated to crazy. His fault, his responsibility to change, but if you are interested in trying to save your marriage, understanding the likely underlying dynamic can help.
If I were you I would obviously disengage and walk away when he acts this way. However, you might also say something like "It sounds like you are incredibly bitter and angry. If you want to talk about this calmly, let me know and I will be all ears" but you have to mean it.
I am sorry this is where you are but it might be possible to turn things around. Of course I can't say for sure not knowing you or your husband.
Is "graduating to crazy" the same as BPD? If so, then I agree. He must be mentally ill. Because no sane person can jekyll-and-hyde the way he does, and then also blame me for "making him" act the way he does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once one of you starts name-calling or telling the other they hate them, that is tough to come back from.
This is where I am now. DH screams and cusses at me, flips me off, calls me horrible names, etc but can't understand why I keep dwelling on that. Then the next day he tries to make up for it and get back to "normal" but I can't live like that any longer. His swings have me wondering if he's BPD...
He is totally wrong, so I want to say that out of the gate.
That said, the underlying reason for the behavior is that he likely does not feel heard by you. His milder complaints weren't getting through she he graduated to crazy. His fault, his responsibility to change, but if you are interested in trying to save your marriage, understanding the likely underlying dynamic can help.
If I were you I would obviously disengage and walk away when he acts this way. However, you might also say something like "It sounds like you are incredibly bitter and angry. If you want to talk about this calmly, let me know and I will be all ears" but you have to mean it.
I am sorry this is where you are but it might be possible to turn things around. Of course I can't say for sure not knowing you or your husband.
Anonymous wrote:Once one of you starts name-calling or telling the other they hate them, that is tough to come back from.
This is where I am now. DH screams and cusses at me, flips me off, calls me horrible names, etc but can't understand why I keep dwelling on that. Then the next day he tries to make up for it and get back to "normal" but I can't live like that any longer. His swings have me wondering if he's BPD...
Anonymous wrote:I've hit "below the belt" in my marriage many times in so far that I have been 100% honest about problematic behaviors and qualities displayed by my husband. I couldn't be with a man who couldn't take the truth and whose ego I had to dance around. I would feel like a fraud if I had to keep my real thoughts inside and the marriage would seem fake to me. To my husband's credit, he can take the truth. And so can I, by the way. He is also 100% truthful with me at appropriate moments as well. This approach might not be for everyone, but it works for us. I will also add that we are positive and complimentary with each other much more than we are critical, but sometimes you have to tell it like it is or else your marriage becomes stale and fake.
Anonymous wrote:Haw. Women always hit below the belt. And she always feels totally justified in doing so.