GiantHockeyFan wrote:
My first Girlfriend was beyond any doubt someone with a severe case of Borderline Personality Disorder. Her therapist even said as much even though he never mentioned the clinical name it was obvious what he was pointing to. The good times were fantastic but when she 'split' or had a mood swing, WATCH OUT!
I foolishly stayed thinking that a)she can't help it and b)I can rescue her. Big mistake. Sometimes when someone is drowning (due to their irresponsibility) you have to let them drown to save yourself. I had to accept she was broken, it wasn't my job to fix her and if she refused to get help there is nothing to do but walk away.
I know some people say someone with an illness deserves love and affection but would you say that if their disease was they could easily murder you or ruin your life?
My situation was the opposite. I had gone to a monthly local meeting of a shared-interest group I had just joined, and a young woman (28 although 6 years older than me, so an "older woman") approached me, told me her name, and said she had schizophrenia (although she called it "dementia praecox" a term I was familiar with as it turns out). She had recently moved into town for a temporary assignment related to her graduate studies. After we spoke for a while, she invited me to her place. After some more talk at her place (and possibly drinks although I don't recall) she invited me to have sex with her. She and I then dated for several months.
@GiantHockeyFan it seems as though you diagnosed this person's mental illness yourself, whereas in my case the person in question had been diagnosed years before, and hospitalized for, hers. At the time I met her, her condition seemed to be under control by means of psychiatric medicines. She was a very nice person with a stable personality, in fact my parents actually liked her, even though she was a smoker (something they would have normally criticized). Of course they didn't know about her diagnosis. She did exhibit eccentric behaviors that I believe are typical of schizophrenics, but none of this was in the least bit threatening to me.
I won't go into how the relationship ended but it was certainly not anything you'd read about in the paper. My original point in posting though is that in retrospect (although I didn't really consider this at the time) I can understand that some people might criticize me for having gotten into a relationship with somebody who had that sort of problem, to which I have to say that if it hadn't been me, then whom should she have dated without the stigma of being taken advantage of by the other person? I have no doubt she approached me because she didn't want to be alone at night (I can see how someone with schizophrenia might feel that way), she found me attractive, and yes she wanted sex. None of that made her or me bad people, in fact she was a lovely person (not sure I can make the same claim about myself, at least not at that time).