Out of the FOG

Coping with Personality Disorders => Common Behaviors => Topic started by: tommom on January 17, 2019, 01:34:26 PM

Title: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: tommom on January 17, 2019, 01:34:26 PM
Talked to a young woman recently who recounted the story of her marriage to an abuser. She said "On our wedding day, right after the reception, he took me on a romantic helicopter ride. After we got out and were standing on the tarmac, he grabbed my arm and said 'You're mine now, b$tch!" She left him that day. Another dear, dear friend of mine, was remarried after twenty years marriage to, and a divorce from, a man who I now realize was probably PD. She met me and another friend for lunch after coming back into the city where I live to tell us....she had, after six weeks, divorced her second husband. "On our wedding night, he just changed...into someone else!" (There was always something off about him, just couldn't put my finger on it back then.) We spent an hour telling her what she did was okay, bless her sweet heart.

So the question is: was it this quick for you? My PDh seemed pleasant and fine for really, about 14 or 15 years. I remember the first day I complained about how he had changed. I remember thinking "Am I going to have to be divorced at my age?" so I really remember all too well.  I don't feel sorry for those two friends, they were lucky IMHO. So did your pwPD show behaviors immediately? Or like my H, did it take a long time? And do you have any idea why?

I can't say if he held me on the 'white hat' side or if his disorder was still being purposefully hidden. Or maybe, since his parents (I found out years later) always gave us money during this time, so that he was always financially comfortable limiting his stress. Of course, it doesn't really matter why, I know, but it is a little curious. Anyone else have any thoughts?
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: NoVoice357 on January 17, 2019, 01:54:46 PM
Hi tommom,

Quote from: tommom on January 17, 2019, 01:34:26 PMSo the question is: was it this quick for you?
When Cluster B PDs start to treat their partner differently and become manipulative and abusive, it means that the Golden Period comes to an end and the Devaluation Period begins. The Golden Period usually lasts from 6 months up to 2-3 years (no more than that), starting from the day the relationship began. Sometimes there is no Golden Period at all, especially when the PD is physically aggressive.

There are partners who do not realize they are being manipulated and controlled by the NPD (that is, they have just entered the Devaluation stage) because their PD's behaviour seems so natural to them. It is what they knew from their FOO.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: limechevron on January 17, 2019, 02:17:41 PM
I think it's rare for it to lay dormant for a decade or so - unless as you say, external circumstances change leading to stress which could trigger PD manifestations. I feel like they may manifest more as quirks or normal "flaws" before then. It wouldn't look or feel like PD until the triggers awaken the monster. That's extremely confusing because every normal relationship, each person has quirks and flaws. So how can you predict or now if it's something else - PD?

My interactions with PD, usually looking back, there was always something off, red flags in retrospect - near the start. But the more covert types, those seem to be just more quirks or no one would really think of them as red flags until later in light of everything else.  Like I said above. And it was usually the mid 20s when their symptoms starting looking PD. Which I think is the normal range for when these things might start manifesting more seriously. Or life stressors/externals bringing out their PD full force, or a combination of the two.

I think it depends on the covert or overt nature of someone's PD, stress, etc. As well. I have gotten to a place where I can more easily spot the overt types - more so follow through without second guessing or feeling guilty about putting up immediate boundaries or distancing or removing myself from a person or situation. The covert types - I never know or struggle with whether I'm being paranoid or have serious trust issues (which I do). And then of course what's covert to me and my relationship - they may be overtly or immediately abusive/act differently to someone else or change from covert to overt depending on the social situation or relationship.

Romantic relationships that lead to a legal commitment (marriage) - It does seem that the day and week of the wedding the person will flip, I have seen and heard this a lot. The legal or finalization of sorts gives them the green light to put down the act and be free to be who the really are. That stuff is really scary. I hope people give themselves grace and understanding when this occurs - you couldn't possibly know.

I don't think people become experts or experienced with PDs and abuse until after it happens to them. I think our society is starting to change where we have more preemptive knowledge and awareness - but generally all this is learned after the damage is done or is in the process of happening.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: 11JB68 on January 17, 2019, 02:59:23 PM
I think I'm right there with lime chevron,
For me looking back there were red flags that I didn't pick up on. Or ignored.
Then didn't realize it was likely a pd, thought I could fix it or needed to fix myself.
Now I 'know'. Wish I knew sooner.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: tommom on January 17, 2019, 03:02:10 PM
NoVoice, not meaning to question your statement, but can you tell me what is behind your "No more than 2 to 3 years"? I did come from a family filled with PDs, but simply not recognizing the behaviors doesn't seem likely to me. I was, as a child, aware of my mother's unacceptable behaviors - although I didn't know exactly what they were. When they appeared in my H (in my 30s, and I had been married quite a while by then) they were quite outstanding and quite disturbing.

Heard that 11JB. But it is what it is. Sadly. 
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: NoVoice357 on January 17, 2019, 04:44:27 PM
Your questions and feedback are welcome, Tommom. I am still learning.

Quote from: tommom on January 17, 2019, 03:02:10 PMcan you tell me what is behind your "No more than 2 to 3 years"?

During this first stage, also called Golden Period, NPDs hide their true nature from their victims. They are kind, respectful, considerate. The victim is treated well. If NPDs showed their true colours quite overtly from the very beginning, victims would run.
This period lasts about 6 months - 2/3 years. It is not possible to last longer because of different reasons. The most important one is that the victim's narcissistic supply goes stale with time. This is from the NPD's perspective, not from ours. Another reason why NPDs will take a couple of years until they start devaluing their victims is that they want to make sure they have total control over their partner and that she/he will not leave so easily (marriage, pregnancy, isolation from friends and family, financial control and so on).

5 Reasons why the NPD devalues you
https://narcsite.com/2018/12/15/the-5-reasons-the-narcissist-devalues-you-3/

Quote from: tommom on January 17, 2019, 03:02:10 PM
I did come from a family filled with PDs, but simply not recognizing the behaviors doesn't seem likely to me. I was, as a child, aware of my mother's unacceptable behaviors - although I didn't know exactly what they were. When they appeared in my H (in my 30s, and I had been married quite a while by then) they were quite outstanding and quite disturbing.

I come from a dysfunctional FOO too and I wrongly thought that I had seen it all. Unfortunately, there were manipulative, abusive behaviours I was not able to see clearly, especially the subtle ones. I put up with different kinds of abuse from my IL's, friends and acquaintances. :doh: I could not always recognize when they were putting me down, demeaning me, taking advantage of me and so on until I read about it in books, blogs and boards like this one.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: blunk on January 18, 2019, 10:51:17 AM
There were definitely a lot of red flags at the beginning of my relationship with bpdxh, starting with the fact that I was 17 and he was 27...but of course it's easy to see all of that now looking back.

However, I specifically remember the anger and name calling ramping up after an external event. The first time was about 5 years in when we had money seized from our bank account because of unpaid rent when he was with his first wife, he claimed he moved out and asked the landlord to take him off of the lease. He threw and broke some items, claiming that he was angry because this bi%^h was still affecting his life and now mine too. I believed him then, but in hindsight I'm not sure any of it was true.

The next escalation was around 8 years when he had a heart attack. In this case a lot of the hatred was directed inward, him saying he was useless, I deserve someone better...of course with the connotation that I should run off with whoever it was that he assumed I was seeing at the time.

It started to become unbearable when his brother and mother passed away within a year of each other, around the 17 year mark. By then it was full blown rages, spewing filth and hatred that I never imagined a person could say to someone they claimed to love. This was around the time he started to make suicide threats and had to be hospitalized, unfortunately they only kept him overnight. This was also around the time that he finally told me that he had been diagnosed with BPD (then referred to as EDD) more than 20 years prior.

So yes, I think the signs were always there, but he was definitely worse after something particularly upsetting occurred. The problem was that after all of those years what upset him could be as benign as me taking longer that he thought I should at the grocery store.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: tommom on January 18, 2019, 11:05:38 AM
blunk, sorry you have had to experience all of that. I also agree that stress seems to bring out the worst in people with, it seems, particularly BPD. My uPD mother  used to come in from work and tell us "Let me have (x number) of minutes" - usually 20 or 30 - and she would drink coffee, eat the same snack every afternoon and lie down on the sofa in the den. If we left her alone, she would get up in a little while in a reasonably manageable emotional state. If not....well, we tried to never bother her, she was highly unpleasant, shall we say. You know what I mean.

I do think stress - in both her and my H- and it sounds like in your ex - is such a contributing factor to dysregulation, especially in people with BPD or tendencies toward it. Why DBT works for them, I suspect.

And finances really seem to affect my H, too, particularly. If there is money stress, it sends him over the top. Other stresses bother him, but not like money problems.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: irkmandu on January 18, 2019, 12:02:28 PM
I'm still not sure if my ex has a PD or schizophrenia or something else, but her openly abusive behavior didn't start until we had been married for 13 years (and friends for 7 years before that). She was always somewhat manipulative, and looking back I now see that the devaluation started about 4 years into the marriage, but the switch to verbal and physical abuse was sudden and jarring.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: 11JB68 on January 18, 2019, 12:56:39 PM
Stress as a trigger yes!
In fact my sil once told me that updh can't handle any stress.
She was right!
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: CoffeeCup2 on January 18, 2019, 06:43:21 PM
Looking back, I suppose early behaviours should have been massive red flags for me. However, uNPDx was also a master manipulator, so he cleverly made it look as though I was the one at fault, or he was the poor victim of circumstance.

He wanted to enter into a serious relationship very quickly. He moved fast. I did not want to move fast because I was in a new city with a new job and a new place of my very own and I wanted to enjoy my new life!  He basically said I was absurd and immature and did not understand adult relationships. He yelled at me so many times before we even moved in together (again, happened very quickly). Should have known. But, he scared me and manipulated me.

I think it's really easy to look back and say we should have known. Sure, I was being idealized, and I thought that this was the greatest man I've ever met who truly cared. But, it was all the other things he did in addition to the idealization where I should have made that realization.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Whiteheron on January 18, 2019, 07:43:16 PM
I honestly don't know. There were plenty of red flags. I even remember telling myself after stbx had treated me poorly "that right there is a red flag." But I wasn't confident in myself so I made excuses. Over time - I'd say a period of 3-4 years, red flags were still popping up - but they were new ones, and again, I made excuses (he tells me he loves me, so he didn't really mean it when...). After we married, I don't remember a big shift in his behavior. We were already living together and he was in complete control. But things did begin to snowball as life progressed - new jobs, moving, kids. He became unbearable.

I can say I noticed a huge change in his behaviors right towards the end of toddlerhood for the kids - when they were starting school. Before then, lots of bad behaviors and red flags I tolerated, but nothing like what was to come.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: NoVoice357 on January 19, 2019, 06:42:40 AM
Hi tommom, Whiteheron, Coffeecup, irkmandu, limechevron, blunk and 11JB68,

I would like to add that abusive and manipulative people test their potential targets' character and boundaries from the very beginning.
Depending on the type of abuser,  their manipulations may be too subtle to notice (Present Silent Treatments and other forms of passive-aggression). If they see that their targets accept them without complaining, they go to the next stage and so on. Coming from a dysfunctional FOO, I have a high tolerance for abuse too. Since I am aware I am not perfect, I do not like to judge people immediately without knowing their intentions first.

Quote from: Whiteheron on January 18, 2019, 07:43:16 PMI made excuses (he tells me he loves me, so he didn't really mean it when...).
We pay too much attention to words, Whiteheron. When words and actions do not match, they are not trustworthy.

Quote from: tommom on January 18, 2019, 11:05:38 AMI do think stress - in both her and my H- and it sounds like in your ex - is such a contributing factor to dysregulation...
And finances really seem to affect my H, too, particularly. If there is money stress, it sends him over the top. Other stresses bother him, but not like money problems.
The article Any Excuse, written by an author with an NPD, explains why nons cannot (or doesn't want to) notice that we are being manipulated and controlled and tend to find excuses for abusive behaviour.
https://narcsite.com/2017/06/24/any-excuse-2/

One of HG Tudor's books is called Black Flag – 50 warning signs of abuse. He says that some manipulative techniques are so subtle that the victim does not notice. These flags not only apply to NPDs but also to any type of abuser.

Reading as much as I can about Passive-Aggressive Behaviour has helped me detect very subtle forms of abuse I was not aware of.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/what-mentally-strong-people-dont-do/201509/9-things-passive-aggressive-people-do
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Associate of Daniel on January 19, 2019, 06:57:58 AM
I'd say somewhere between 4 and 12 months. Before we were married.

Stupid me.

AOD
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: tommom on January 19, 2019, 10:07:08 AM
Oh, AOD, not stupid! You aren't stupid, no, no, no! Young and naïve, maybe, but those kind of go hand-in-hand, right? I find most of us here are...hopeful. Maybe trained by our FOOs, but still, most of us here seem to be so...hopeful. And resilient too. Hoping to understand. Hoping to change, ourselves, our lives, our situations, things for our kids, for others here.  We're kind and loving people who don't understand (and I do NOT) how or why people can be so.....whatever you want to call it. Disordered, demanding, unkind (oh yeah, NoVoice) passive-aggressive...what a list we could draw up!

Since MLK day is coming up, have you ever read the letter King sent to his wife when he was arrested and put in prison in 1960? He told her he had faith that what was happening to him would make our state (I'm from Georgia, too) and our country a better place. He said he didn't know how, but he believed "our suffering is not in vain." How right he was! Look at how he changed not just our state, but the entire world, and changed the lives of millions...maybe billions, forever. Somehow, I believe, in some small way, that is true as well for us here. Has what has happened to us made us better, stronger, wiser? I suspect none of us will never be an MLK now, but does sharing our similar experiences help others? Are we helping each other here or does it even go beyond that? Are we helping break through the model of the dysfunctional families we came from? Maybe in some small way helping others understand that? Maybe we, all of us, are shining a little light on something terrible that has been long ignored. Sure, we are all here hoping to understand what happened to us, but most people wouldn't begin to understand what you have been through - what anyone here has. They only see it from the outside, so they don't know. Not now, at least. But you are helping, in your own way, change that.  Everyone here is helping. That's not stupid at all. You have taken something painful and difficult (maybe an understatement) and are - in a small (or not so small) way - helping make it into a force for good, as best we can, one painful step at a time, for ourselves, and for others here and beyond. When we, in the smallest way, talk about our experiences, we are changing things. When you "speak" here, you are helping others who may not understand what is happening to them, help them build a boundary or work out a problem or maybe even help someone else avoid it. You are reaching out a helping hand to others suffering. I wouldn't even begin to call that stupid. Anything but.

And whiteheron, I understand completely, not because I had children myself, but because my PDm also had difficulty once we - me and my sisters- began to develop autonomy. I think especially those with BPD can't handle the loss of that. That need to control.  :sadno:



Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: clara on January 19, 2019, 11:18:42 AM
The consensus seems to be that the red flags are there from the beginning, we just don't see (or refuse to see) them.  I don't think it's fair to reprimand ourselves over not seeing what is, in retrospect, pretty obvious, because I think most people can be easily fooled by a PD.  The difference is, we seem to stay fooled for a longer period of time.  And this is what the PD is looking for--someone who keeps tolerating the PD behavior.

For example, after I left my uNPDexh, he immediately jumped into another relationship and was apparently pressuring her to marry ASAP same as he did with me (we were still in touch at the time so naturally he told me all about this new relationship).  The difference between me and her was, she didn't fall for his act.  I don't know when they broke up but I suspect it was shortly after he asked her to marry him, since I saw her about 6 months later out with another guy.  It took me 7 years to do what took her just a few months. 
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: 11JB68 on January 19, 2019, 01:52:49 PM
No voice...that excuses link is great! And scary.
I didn't see my own updh as passive aggressive...but boy those excuses hit the nail on the head
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Blackbird11 on January 23, 2019, 10:45:16 AM
This thread is very eye opening. Thanks for the links I'm going to dive into those today.

I saw red flags early on but he is so well liked by literally everyone who comes into contact with him - I brushed it off. See, I'm an introvert. It takes me a very long time to become friends with people. I also used to (and sometimes still do) have social anxiety. So I am used to people loving him (extrovert, and he's actually funny when he's not using it as a jab or abuse) and not initially liking me. So I had A LOT of shame about my disposition and how I'm not a people person. So I dismissed the red flags and thought the problem was all me - not him.

Fast forward to getting engaged: I almost broke it off at one point. I couldn't put my finger on it. I just didn't feel right. He hoovered me into moving forward.

Fast forward to a year or so into marriage: crazy train has arrived. Verbal and emotional abuse starts. My confusion begins because after diving into therapy, I realize that maybe - just maybe, there is nothing "wrong" with me (and he was reinforcing this story that I was also telling myself...that I was the problem).

I left for a few days to clear my head. He had refused therapy at that point so I was going to leave. He decided therapy was ok after all. He actually did really well with it, but I was still ready to leave. Then I got pregnant. He stayed with therapy during that time, kept doing well. I think I've written on here that at that point, I thought he was "cured."

Kid comes, back to the verbal/emotional abuse. Highly stressful time seems to have triggered it. It's not as overt as before. A few months ago I gave the ultimatum: get back to therapy or I'm leaving. He's currently in therapy and doing Ok. I am not keen on waiting around for the next round and currently thinking about what I want to do.

TLDR: Verbal and emotional abuse began about a year into marriage.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: logistics on January 23, 2019, 11:12:58 PM
6 months after the wedding spouses behavior was different. I wasn't aware what it was.  Full blown by 3 years after the wedding. I should have left after three years but still didn't have a name for it. I spent to much time trying to fix him and the marriage.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: 11JB68 on January 24, 2019, 10:53:10 PM
 :yeahthat:
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: musttryharder on January 27, 2019, 01:07:33 PM
For me it seemed like 10+ years of "normal" at first (and then 18months of what I'm reasonably convinced is abuse). It's only when I thought long and hard about the preceding years that I noticed some subtle clues, and behavior in her relationships with others. I think that we had mostly wanted the same things up until then, and it was when I stood my ground that things really began to get ugly, but then again I'm not even sure that was the trigger.
When I get confused from trying to diagnose and understand, I try to remember that it's as simple as this - they know it's abuse and choose not to stop, and in my mind that's unforgivable.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Cascade on January 31, 2019, 01:45:11 AM
My situation was more like yours. The first ten years of our marriage was pretty good, though now I see that there were red flags that even went back to when we were dating. I thought the ups and downs we had were normal, but now I know that they were never normal.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Summer Sun on January 31, 2019, 08:10:02 AM
Oh my.  With uNPDx, there were a couple red flags.  We lived in different counties, about a three hour commute so initially it was a weekend affair.  He kept pressuring me to move in with him, which meant giving up my job.  I finally gave in.  Bang.  The first night.  I. Knew. I. made. A. big. Mistake. But I had given up my job and flat. I had moved my possessions. I didn't know anyone in this new city, new county. Going back wasn't an option.  Isolated. Vulnerable.  I endured five yeArs of abuse before I left.

Wow.  I read the link about 5 ways of devaluing that NoVoice provided.  This described my Unpdb perfectly.  Right down to hoovering a predecessor.  The abuse was all so covert and subtle and occurred over a period of ten years.  And oh, so very painful at the end. 

And so, we learn.  I choose, like Tommom to believe there is purpose in the pain.  What others intended for harm, God intends for good.  It is just difficult to see the manifestation of the good and directions of growth without hindsight. 

Summer Sun
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: StayWithMe on January 31, 2019, 09:46:21 AM
QuoteReading as much as I can about Passive-Aggressive Behaviour has helped me detect very subtle forms of abuse I was not aware of.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/what-mentally-strong-people-dont-do/201509/9-things-passive-aggressive-people-do

This article annoyed because it written in a tone that, perhaps, PA people either don't know what they're doing or that they are emotionally weaker than we are and we need to help them.

I spent -- and wasted -- most of my life assuming that others needed the benefit of the doubt.  It's a waste of time.

I know now that people who "forget" or pretend to be underskilled at something are people that I should avoid.  And I am glad to know that those tactics can work against them.

I was once in a plodding relationship.  I got the feeling that he was sort of stalkerish so I wanted him to end the relationship, not me.  But then he said something to me that was so offensive (of a sexual nature, no less) and I told him to GTFO. 

His response?  "I didn't know what I said was offensive."  He was all of 49 when he said it.  I told him that this was one of the many reasons that we shouldn't be together.  We did not agree on a lot and I had neither the time nor inclination to teach him.

Let him take that PA behavior elsewhere.

these days I am much quicker at dealing with PA behavior.  I will sooner say "maybe this does not interest you when someone is doing that "play crazy" routine.  When I can, I go elsewhere.  When I can't, I try to put as much in writing as possible and alert third parties.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: NoVoice357 on January 31, 2019, 12:06:31 PM
Hello StayWithMe,

Quote from: StayWithMe on January 31, 2019, 09:46:21 AM
QuoteReading as much as I can about Passive-Aggressive Behaviour has helped me detect very subtle forms of abuse I was not aware of.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/what-mentally-strong-people-dont-do/201509/9-things-passive-aggressive-people-do

This article annoyed because it written in a tone that, perhaps, PA people either don't know what they're doing or that they are emotionally weaker than we are and we need to help them.

I am sorry you misunderstood the article. Nowhere does it say what you mentioned in your post.

This article clearly says that passive-aggressive people often go undetected because they disguise their seething hostility with a pleasant demeanor. It also says that if we recognize signs of a passive-aggressive people, we should be willing to hold that person accountable because allowing them to use this manipulation as if nothing happened only reinforces their behaviour.

Passive-aggressive people are well-aware of what they are doing. This is why their behaviour is called passive-aggression.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: StayWithMe on January 31, 2019, 06:49:52 PM
Quote from: NoVoice357 on January 31, 2019, 12:06:31 PM
Hello StayWithMe,

Quote from: StayWithMe on January 31, 2019, 09:46:21 AM
QuoteReading as much as I can about Passive-Aggressive Behaviour has helped me detect very subtle forms of abuse I was not aware of.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/what-mentally-strong-people-dont-do/201509/9-things-passive-aggressive-people-do

This article annoyed because it written in a tone that, perhaps, PA people either don't know what they're doing or that they are emotionally weaker than we are and we need to help them.

I am sorry you misunderstood the article. Nowhere does it say what you mentioned in your post.

This article clearly says that passive-aggressive people often go undetected because they disguise their seething hostility with a pleasant demeanor. It also says that if we recognize signs of a passive-aggressive people, we should be willing to hold that person accountable because allowing them to use this manipulation as if nothing happened only reinforces their behaviour.

Passive-aggressive people are well-aware of what they are doing. This is why their behaviour is called passive-aggression.

No, you're right.  It didn't.  But here are some lines that triggered me:

1. Passive-aggressive people don't believe they have much control over the events in their lives. Maybe some do, but i don't believe all of them do.  My mother and exH are master passive- aggressors.  It's just another tool in their tool kit. 

2. Passive-aggressive people struggle to ask for what they want, and resort to manipulative tactics to get their needs met.   I don't beleive this in all cases.  If they are PA with everybody, I might agree then.

3. Passive-aggressive people don't believe they have much control over the events in their lives.  See above.

PA is just another tool in the manipulation toolkit.  I can see the smirk / wry smile when my mother engages in it.  Her selective sight, memory and hearing.  I have noticed though that more often  now instead of saying "she doesn't rmember haivng said something" she has become more adamant about saying "she never did say that."  Perhaps this a nod to the fact that you can only play PA with people for so long. 

In the long run, people don't want a reputation for being unreliable because then no one will want "to do business with them."
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: treesgrowslowly on February 08, 2019, 09:26:51 AM
Staywithme I agree with you, when the passive agressive person is accomidating with some and aggressive with others it seems obvious to me that they are basically a manipulating person I need to stay away from.

I dont know about you guys but I can see a real difference between self-help articles written by people who've been the target of PD abuse and those who have not. The former may have some helpful insights at times but targets really get it when it comes to PDs. After being targeted, the reality of what PD abuse does is something I can't ever unsee. Innocence is gone. ...the trick of it now is to replace the lost innocence with insight and self-love.

This is a super helpful thread. I'm grateful for all who posted here.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Sullenlady on February 08, 2019, 12:16:21 PM
In my case it took a year. On our wedding night to notice something wasn't quite right. We had our reception and he disappeared from the group without a word , we figured he went to get a drink, few minutes later an angry message bc I was with our friends instead of with my new husband like I should be. Looking at it now,  he was setting the stage to escalate the power, control and abuse right after he married me.

Its only ramped up from there,  now I can't even go to work without constant texts wanting attention or raging at me for ignoring him while I'm at work. Stalking my work parking lot etc.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Spygirl on February 11, 2019, 12:43:52 AM
Looking back,

I started being conditioned during the engagement. I was sooo love bombed i wrote all the antics off as pre wedding fears. My stbx even called off the wedding  5 months before, said " you'll learn all my secrets". I was devastated.  He showed up at my door the next day with the ring i had given back, and begged forgivness on his knees. I accepted him back.

The next significant episode was the wedding day itself. After the ceremony, we were getting ready for photos and he whispered in my ear " were you suprised i showed up?". I was shocked, and said nothing, but a sheepish grin.

2 weeks later he says " i get mad sometimes, but i will never hit you" out of the blue. I was confused. What was that about?

What i am getting at is that all the flags were there, and yet i persisted, because after these episodes and many, more violent ones, i was gifted the man i was dating for a period again. That man was perfect. The man i was in love with. He validated me, complimented me, loved me. Until the next episode. And so it went. It went until i had so much fear of his rage that my whole existence rotated around how to placate him so i was praised, instead of verbally abused. Even if it meant that i had no voice in anything he did. So he walked all over me, knowing i would say and do nothing. He had complete control.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Whiteheron on February 11, 2019, 07:07:29 AM
Quote from: Spygirl on February 11, 2019, 12:43:52 AM
What i am getting at is that all the flags were there, and yet i persisted

:yeahthat:
This line struck me this am...I ignored all of the red flags because they didn't match up with who I thought he was. I just passed them off as a weird 'quirk'. They were all there, and became more frequent as time went on, but I buried my head in the sand because it didn't make any sense. (cognitive dissonance??)
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Spygirl on February 11, 2019, 10:06:47 AM
Whitheron,

I think we have dissonance as time goes on, as a coping mechanissm. I certainly already had it because of my narc mom.
In my situation, i was SO in love, wanted SO much to excuse the "quirks" because the good part was so good. I wanted to keep getting the good part.  Its been such a complicated journey to understand myself, why i did things. I get it now. I honestly have a very warped idea of what love is, and how it  is expressed. I am only now learning what normal is. Ive been doing it wrong. I didnt know better. It makes me sad. My life is half over. At this point i dont know if i could ever trust enough to be involved with anyone again.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: StayWithMe on February 11, 2019, 12:43:57 PM
Quote from: treesgrowslowly on February 08, 2019, 09:26:51 AM
Staywithme I agree with you, when the passive agressive person is accomidating with some and aggressive with others it seems obvious to me that they are basically a manipulating person I need to stay away from.

This is a super helpful thread. I'm grateful for all who posted here.

But also, we have to stop giving people the benefit of the doubt.  Those who are intent upon abusing us in whatever personality quirk they employ, they are already miles ahead of us first with their intent and then with the methods and incidences that they use. 

And in fact, some will bait you.  As one pundit on TV said, it takes a whole lot of work for coincidences to occur.

We need to think of ways to protect ourselves and learn not to be cowed by those who call us rude.

For example, I have taught myself when being asked a question that I am not sure is appropriate.  I will very nicely ask "Why do you ask?"  Some people have told me that sounds rude.  I don't care.  If you have a legitimate reason for asking me how much money I make or whether I'm going to some private party (because you could just want to see if the host thought you were worthy of an invitation, then I don't see what the problem is in answering my question.

And well, that's a lot of progress for somene whose parents always admonished her for "acting all stupid" when she would demurred in the face of questioning.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: findjoy81 on February 12, 2019, 03:54:11 PM
This thread is very interesting....  for me, the signs showed up while we were engaged.  We dated for about 7 months before being engaged.  And married 4 months later. 

I didn't truly realize the extent of it, and admit to it being abusive, until after reading more about it when I finally moved out (5 years later).

This is what it boiled down to: I thought he was a good guy with a bit of a mean streak.   Later I figured out he was a mean guy, who could pretend to be good for short periods.

He can be so charming, and I remember asking him why he couldn't treat me (his WIFE) as well as he treated his clients at work.  His response is extremely telling, because it boiled down to: I can't pretend for that long.  He said he could keep it up for the short times he was face-to-face with clients, but by the time he got home for the day, he couldn't pretend anymore.

And so then comes the question many others also ask themselves: why didn't I leave? 

I think for me it was the proverbial frog in the boiling water.  I didn't realize it was so bad until I was being boiled alive.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: KFel024 on February 18, 2019, 05:41:45 AM
Dear tomtom,

Thank you for starting this thread.  I find it interesting too.

From my end, the entire relationship lasted about nineteen months.  Saw and acknowledged red flags starting with 1st date.  About three months in, began recognizing that there were some serious issues.  About six months in, starting worrying about my physical safety (I literally thought to and even told myself a couple of times that this person would kill me one day).  It took nineteen months and a catastrophic discard phase for me to finally/fully understand/accept the situation for what it was.  I feel blessed to have gotten out and even more so considering we did not have any children together.

That being said, will pose another question.  How long and/or what did it take for others to get out of a toxic relationship once they figured out what was going on or that something was seriously amiss? 

I personally started to move out on two separate occasions but ultimately decided to stay and hope for the best.  Whenever I felt hopeless, I would think of this picture she had of when she was little girl, sitting on some steps looking so sweet, sad and lonely.  I did not want to be another man in her life who abandoned her.  I thought somewhere inside of her adult body was that little girl and, with proper love, care and nurturing, could be brought back out. 

I was definitely uneducated on nPD and other PDs prior to meeting her.               
     
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: stardawn192 on February 18, 2019, 04:14:45 PM
I was only with my BPD partner for two/three months. The "golden period" only lasted about three weeks. I think I know what the issue was too, when I got stuck in traffic and showed up to their house late for something, even though I called them and told them I would be late.

It was then a mess of idealization then devaluation daily. If I hadn't talked to some people, I probably would have stayed until they had discarded me and I would have been worse off than I was. I will say, I'm one of the lucky ones because by the end of it, I thought I was seriously in love with this person after only three months of manipulation. That's co-dependency for you  :stars:.
Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: Whiteheron on February 19, 2019, 07:33:37 AM
Quote from: findjoy81 on February 12, 2019, 03:54:11 PM
He can be so charming, and I remember asking him why he couldn't treat me (his WIFE) as well as he treated his clients at work.  His response is extremely telling, because it boiled down to: I can't pretend for that long.  He said he could keep it up for the short times he was face-to-face with clients, but by the time he got home for the day, he couldn't pretend anymore.

:yeahthat:
I would frequently ask him if he treated his co-workers the way he treated me. He would answer me with silence, or blame "no, I don't treat them this way because they are smart enough to ... but you..." I once asked if he treated a female colleague at work the way he treated me. His response "no, because I respect her." I was stunned into silence. There were no words. In that moment I felt smaller than a speck of dust.

I remember telling (begging) him - "you are the only adult contact I have during the day, be nice to me!"  :blink: Who has to tell their own husband to be nice to them? Thinking back, this comment was met with a slight smirk - I guess he had me right where he wanted me. Begging him for any scrap of kindness.

This leads me to your question, KFel024 - Right around this time was when I realized he didn't care about me, that there was something seriously wrong with him and our marriage. It took me about 5 years of trying to make it work with him - for the sake of the kids- (including joint therapy sessions) before I filed for divorce...that was two years ago.

I do want to thank clara for starting this thread, and all the posters who have shared their experiences. It's helped me remember some of the things I experienced. I am in the midst of stbx trying to prove the marriage was all great and happy times because he's submitted photographs of our smiling faces to the court (therefore I'm the problem). This thread really helps to clarify, in my mind, that he's off his rocker. No good, kind, loving H tells his wife the things he's told me. No kind, loving, caring H treats his wife the way he treated me. Sometimes, in the thick fog of his forced narrative, I forget that.

Title: Re: How Long Did It Take?
Post by: findjoy81 on February 19, 2019, 11:15:24 AM
KFel024 your question....

It took about 3 months. End of December things got bad and I started to realize things were spiraling beyond our norm...
January became a wild roller coaster of the pretty typical love-bomb, devalue, discard but like the cycle suddenly sped up.  We tried counseling, he would back out or not show up, but I went either way.  I was like, if I'm paying for it, I'm going to use it!  I'd get flowers sent to me at work, and come home to be locked out of rooms of the house or have my phone service shut off because I didn't respond the right way to him during the day. 
February more of the same.
I started reading more, looking at this site, focusing on my therapy, thinking about what I wanted for my kids growing up, going to church, TALKING TO PEOPLE and realizing what was happening was totally abnormal.  (before that, I had a list of 2 of his friends I was "allowed" to talk to about our relationship)
March started the same way, but mid March I signed a lease on a rental and end of March moved out. 

The lightbulb moment happened when he was actively gaslighting me and I knew it.  And I had evidence and was able to prove it.  And suddenly it was like, "How many times have I been here before, but because I didn't have proof, I let it go?"  And I knew, deep inside, I had been many times.