Thank you for clarifying.
Polyamory is challenging all on its own without adding bipolar issues to it. If you stay together, I hope you each strive to bring out the best in each other. Not the worst. I hope you both strive to exercise self control when angry. Tearing each other down is not the way to go.
If she's not been keeping up with her management things (meds/therapies), then I hope that she gets more on the ball with that and things get to a more manageable place for both.
Do seek a marriage counselor if you need help having the conversation.
Sounds like you have a plan then. Make sure you articulate what "enough progress" is to you. Define how it is measured. With counselor help if necessary.
If you are already at quota for bipolar WHOOSH, and are plain burned out? Accept limit reached. You cannot be the endless fountain of patience and tolerance... esp if it's taking a toll on your own well being. You also have to take care of you and your son.
Taking meds and attending appointments for x months is measurable. Maybe your boundary is "I do not hang out with 'unmanaged, not trying' type people ." Whether at all or for longer than X months. Define the time frame.
If she's gone into unmanaged space past your time frame, you bow out. With regrets, but could bow out all the same. Stick to your time frame. Could not let your soft feelings for someone tempt you to keep ON participating in unhealthy things for you.
Everyone is responsible for their own stuff. If she's not taking care of her stuff? And it is turning her into an unpleasant person to be around? You cannot make her do her stuff, but you can remove you from the line of fire. You have to be taking care of your stuff.
I hope for your sake it works out, but I am glad that you are prepared to leave if it's just "same ol' song, different day."
I think something has to change in your approach before your well being can have a chance to improve.
GL!
Galagirl
for those of you asking yes my wife is bi polar and on medication. I'm gonna talk to her this weekend about it when i'm home from work and see if we can resolve the issues we've had.
Polyamory is challenging all on its own without adding bipolar issues to it. If you stay together, I hope you each strive to bring out the best in each other. Not the worst. I hope you both strive to exercise self control when angry. Tearing each other down is not the way to go.
If she's not been keeping up with her management things (meds/therapies), then I hope that she gets more on the ball with that and things get to a more manageable place for both.
Do seek a marriage counselor if you need help having the conversation.
i still think there is a chance to save our marriage and i'm gonna go for it. if i feel we make no progress then i think its best for all involved that her and i divorce. i work too hard for her to treat me that way. i'm not without flaws but it would still be nice to be talked to in a calm and decent manner.
Sounds like you have a plan then. Make sure you articulate what "enough progress" is to you. Define how it is measured. With counselor help if necessary.
If you are already at quota for bipolar WHOOSH, and are plain burned out? Accept limit reached. You cannot be the endless fountain of patience and tolerance... esp if it's taking a toll on your own well being. You also have to take care of you and your son.
Taking meds and attending appointments for x months is measurable. Maybe your boundary is "I do not hang out with 'unmanaged, not trying' type people ." Whether at all or for longer than X months. Define the time frame.
If she's gone into unmanaged space past your time frame, you bow out. With regrets, but could bow out all the same. Stick to your time frame. Could not let your soft feelings for someone tempt you to keep ON participating in unhealthy things for you.
Everyone is responsible for their own stuff. If she's not taking care of her stuff? And it is turning her into an unpleasant person to be around? You cannot make her do her stuff, but you can remove you from the line of fire. You have to be taking care of your stuff.
I hope for your sake it works out, but I am glad that you are prepared to leave if it's just "same ol' song, different day."
I think something has to change in your approach before your well being can have a chance to improve.
GL!
Galagirl
Last edited: