Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a book about this: Stop Walking on Eggshells. It's about living with a Borderline Personality Disordered wife. The fact that you can't answer her honestly is proof that she is BPD.
actually I had the opposite thought. the fact that she would even ask this question suggests a level of insight and objectivity that makes me think she is not BPD.
It depends. My mom has BPD and would ask questions like this. It was really just a set up. If you said yes, you unleashed hell. If you said no, she would either be happy or turn it into a "then WHY do you do X,Y,Z if you don't have to walk on eggshells" it's kind of one of those "pity me" questions. If you answer yes, instead of realizing she needs to change or that behavior is wrong, she takes it as an opportunity to do the whole "sob I'm such a horrible person" crap so that you then have to make her feel better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've asked this to my husband, and I definitely don't have bipolar or any other mental illness.
BPDs are never mentally ill. It's all the people around them who are crazy.
You know who is crazy? Someone who responds to something as mundane as "is being with me like walking on eggshells"...which is a very normal feeling when interacting with someone under high stress...and suggesting its bipolar.
I don't think anyone around me is "crazy".
It's okay to have stress and be someone who is tough to be around without immediately assuming there is some "diagnosis".
I've chatted about this feeling with tons of my girlfriends who are working in heavy responsibility jobs and managing families, and its a very normal feeling to feel as if you are just incredibly tense all the time. Thats what causes it to feel like walking on eggshells around them. It's not uncommon.
And suggesting to a husband that is where his head should go, is certainly not helpful to a wife who could just need some help managing an impossible workload.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is a book about this: Stop Walking on Eggshells. It's about living with a Borderline Personality Disordered wife. The fact that you can't answer her honestly is proof that she is BPD.
actually I had the opposite thought. the fact that she would even ask this question suggests a level of insight and objectivity that makes me think she is not BPD.
Anonymous wrote:There is a book about this: Stop Walking on Eggshells. It's about living with a Borderline Personality Disordered wife. The fact that you can't answer her honestly is proof that she is BPD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've asked this to my husband, and I definitely don't have bipolar or any other mental illness.
BPDs are never mentally ill. It's all the people around them who are crazy.
Anonymous wrote:I've asked this to my husband, and I definitely don't have bipolar or any other mental illness.