I don't think people with mental health issues are bad people. I do think that people with
unmanaged mental health issues could sometimes hurt themselves and/or others.
So my boundary is that I won't hang out with unmanaged people. Dealing with mine and my parents is plenty for me -- I don't need extra.
My father (with his MANY mental health problems, not just Alzheimer) rains down emotional and verbal abuse. My mom totally has fleas but she's determined to stay til he's dead and buried. He has BPD. He also has anosognosia -- a condition where he does not even see that he is sick.
So... if the BF is similar? BPD and cannot see it? Well, don't hold your breath that he's gonna do his therapies and management plan things. Or even go in to be properly dx'd.
Remember your friend might have "fleas" after living with all this.
http://outofthefog.website/what-not-to-do-1/2015/12/3/fleas
And carry a lot of guilt or shame.
Both of these might help you relate to your friend.
http://outofthefog.website/toolbox-intro/
That lists what it feels like, what to do and what not to do.
https://speakoutloud.net/articles
around the middle lists how to support victims of abuse in various stages of leaving or if they want to stay. With tips for friends and family of the person. What to do/not do.
She's pretty unhappy in the relationship, generally. But I don't want to tell her that it's my opinion that she should pack her bags and move along. I think she should arrive at her own decision without any such suggestion from me.
Why not? I think you could be honest and tell her this situation doesn't look so hot and if it were you? You would leave. Like...
"You don't seem happy. If it were me? I would leave this relationship. I get that leaving is a hard choice, and I'm not you. So I'm not going to harp on it. I do think you are better off leaving though. I need to say that to you at least once so you know where I stand.
I want to support you as much as I can. You need to be able to make YOUR own choices.
I am good for things like ______.
I am not good for things like ______.
I cannot and will not support any of _____.
I have a limit on ____. "
That is honest, and she can know what to expect from you. My friend Sally appreciated that from me. Because at home? She got word salad, changing goal posts, promises not kept, etc. She knew with me? I laid it out plain and what I said is what it was.
I've helped several of my friends leave situations. In my observation? One must physically leave before they can heal enough mentally, emotionally, or spiritually. But they cannot physically leave if they are mentally, emotionally, and spiritually run down. It is a weird circle thing.
So I think one must practice physically leaving "small" so the rest can start to heal when it IS NOT being harangued. So one can think about "leaving medium" and then maybe "leaving big."
I remember one time another friend (call her Jane) was really UPSET with me because I wouldn't tell our friend (call her Sally) to just up and leave.
Jane wanted to say to Sally "He's an asshole! You should leave!"
I would say things like "Well, all couples have problems. Maybe just a little weekend break would be good. Come stay over."
Really I thought the guy was taking his mental health problems out on our friend and she should get the hell out. Sally didn't cause it and could not cure it and he wasn't attending to it. He also grew verbally and physically abusive. So all she could expect there was more of same so getting OUT permanently would be best.
I told Jane to back off and leave Sally be. She was
already receiving a hailstorm of abuse at home. She did not need her friends adding a new storm. Or worse -- taking away her agency and her ability to think for herself too. He was already telling her she was stupid, she should do this or that. What would more of same from friends do? That he is an ass and she should leave and she's dumb wanting to stay? That would just make her feel
worse.
Sally was also NOT at a place to hear "leave this guy forever." She might be more receptive to "Come stay with me for a weekend. Take a little break." She had a lot of fleas, and she was mourning the relationship and mourning that it had come to this and she wasn't ready to be angry or ready to leave or imagine a whole new life post leaving. Too big.
But she might be able to imagine coming over to dinner, movies or board games, spending the night, brunch and a walk with kids in the park. Then go home. Lower key things.
So I told her I was good for an ear -- like a coffee date for an hour. (Because listening to TOO much made ME ugh.) Taking a walk. Playing board games.
I was good for weekend breaks if she wanted to spend the weekend with us.
I was NOT good for couple things because I wanted no part of being around him so don't even suggest doing a movie together.
I was NOT good for him being around my children. So when I say she could come to dinner or whatever, it was an invitation for just HER, not both.
I did NOT support him keeping her on a tight "phone leash." I had a limit on cel phone boopies. So if she was with me she had to put her cel phone on vibrate. Because I didn't want to hear phone every few minutes with him checking up on her. He knew where she was. Having coffee for an hour down the street from her house. Was an hour on vibrate so I didn't have to hear boopies a horrible request? She agreed no. So she would put her phone ringer to vibrate.
(He buzzed her pants like hell, BTW. But she'd grown SO used to the phone leash ringing and was SO trained to answer immediately she'd stopped seeing it as weird and didn't notice how often it rang in one hour. Having to sit with her pants vibrating most of an hour made her realize how ridiculous it was. It was just an hour and she was down the street having coffee!)
I remember the long process of Sally leaving and waking up. The more time she spent away from him and doing "small leavings" the more she started to "wake up" to the weird and the more she was surprised at all the dysfunction that had crept in. She eventually did a medium leave -- moved in with another friend for a lease and a trial separation. They were supposed to live apart and do counseling to work on being together healthier. Well, he didn't like the counselor and BLEW UP but by that time she'd gotten used to living in peace and what that was like so she could SEE how weird he was.
Which led to leaving big -- the divorce. She had a home, a job, etc by then. She could pay her way.
Mostly what I've been doing with her so far is to simply encourage her to accept and honor her own needs and desires and to practice self-kindness and self-compassion.
That may be all you can do at this time along with inviting her for an "afternoon coffee break" or "weekend break" or "week break." The small leavings.
And read. Starting with
https://speakoutloud.net/helping-women/coercive-control-stage-1
Pay attention to the tips for friends and family of the person.
And look out for YOUR mental health. Don't get over-involved in this situation.
Accept you can only help so much, and point her to professionals for the rest.
I used to drive Sally to "healthy relationships class" at the mall. She refused to go to a women's shelter. We were pretty sure when he stopped ringing so much he was tracking her more quietly by her phone location. I told her she didn't have to go to the shelter. But taking the women's shelter classes at the mall? Was that horrible? I could help with rides. She agreed it might help so we changed the weekly Scrabble/coffee date to a weekly Panera dinner date. She went to class in the mall community room with her Panera to go. I ate Panera at Panera waiting for her to get out of class to drive her back home. The phone showed her at the mall. Problem solved.
So... support may take on that shape too. Keep it in mind.
Galagirl