Monday, June 15, 2026

What I’ve Learned: A Personal Q&A After Leaving a Borderline Dynamic


This is the fifth and final piece in the “Surviving a Borderline Relationship” series.

In Part 1 I shared the behavioral patterns I observed over seven years. In Part 2 I walked through the sudden discard and the layered losses that followed. In Part 3 I looked at the larger family system and how those patterns affected the children. In Part 4 I described what reclaiming my life looked like a year later — the simple, steady return to peace, health, and everyday joy.

Now, in this closing installment, I answer the questions I have been asked most often—by family, friends, and by myself. These are honest, personal reflections on the warning signs I see more clearly in hindsight, how I found closure on my own terms, what my life looks like today, and the most useful lessons I’ve carried forward.

If you’ve been reading along, thank you for coming with me on this journey. If you’re just starting here, the earlier pieces give helpful context. My main hope with this final piece is simple: if I could make it through to the other side — lighter, clearer, and genuinely at peace — you can too.


1. What were the early warning signs you now see as part of that BPD-like pattern?

At first, it felt amazing—like I was finally someone’s rock and they really appreciated me. But over time little things started adding up. She’d go from warm and loving to suddenly irritated or down over relatively small things. She also displayed passive-aggressive behavior—indirect comments, silent resentment, or little digs instead of saying things directly. There was this constant push-pull: she’d want closeness, then suddenly need space or even ask me to leave the house so she could be alone. Those mood shifts and perspectives would create tension because they often came out of nowhere and didn’t fully make sense to me at the time. I was trying to figure out where she was coming from and why certain things became her focus. I had this growing sense that she felt slighted, unappreciated, or misunderstood—even when I was doing everything I could. Once I understood the bigger pattern, it finally stopped feeling like my personal failure.

2. How did the sudden discard and the layered losses hit you emotionally in those first few months?

It happened very abruptly one evening — she announced she wanted a divorce. Two weeks later, the movers came and took her things. Then, about two months after the movers, my longtime dog passed away while I was caring for him. And two weeks after my dog died, I lost my stepdaughter, who I had grown really close to through music and whom I loved. The grief felt layered and overwhelming. I was dealing with the shock of the relationship ending, betrayal trauma, and this deep sense of disenfranchised grief because I was basically shut out of the family’s mourning. For the first three or four months, everything was a blur — lots of rumination, anger, sadness, and spinning in my head trying to make sense of it all. All of that loss eventually pushed me to look deeper at what had really been going on in the family system.

AI Data Centers Are Evaporating Your Drinking Water — And It Won’t Come Back for 100 Years

In this eye-opening clip from Man In America, Hakeem Anwar details how AI data centers are guzzling millions of gallons of water daily to cool super-hot chips, only to evaporate it into the atmosphere as steam that can take a century or more to naturally return to aquifers. The consequences are dire: dropping water tables that dry up private wells and farms, sinkholes from collapsing ground support, shrinking rivers and lakes that destroy riparian ecosystems and wildlife habitats, plus localized “heat island” effects raising urban temperatures by up to 16°F. While environmentalists obsess over minor global temperature shifts, this massive, under-discussed industrial water theft and heat pollution gets a free pass in the rush for AI progress.

9 Forms of Disrespect You Should Never Forgive (Protect Your Peace)

In this straightforward self-respect video from PROACTIVELY, viewers learn to identify nine toxic behaviors that erode dignity and should never be tolerated, even by kind-hearted people. The list includes deliberate lies that shatter trust, public embarrassment disguised as jokes, repeated boundary violations, one-sided relationships where generosity is exploited, being contacted only when convenient, dismissing your feelings as overreactions, breaking trust through disloyalty, ignoring your efforts without gratitude, and constantly interrupting or devaluing your opinions. The message is clear: while mistakes happen, recurring patterns of disrespect signal unhealthy dynamics, and prioritizing your self-worth often means walking away to preserve emotional well-being and build healthier connections.

9/11 Brother Demands Truth on Dancing Israelis and Building 7 Collapse

On The Kim Iversen Show, Matt Campbell — whose brother Jeff was killed in the North Tower on 9/11 — shares his years-long fight against the official narrative. Campbell highlights anomalies like the tiny bone fragments his family received, the five "Dancing Israelis" arrested after filming the attacks (with foreknowledge, per reports), and the suspicious free-fall collapse of Building 7. With Roger Waters publicly backing him, Campbell is now taking his case to the UK Supreme Court in October to force a new inquest, fundraising urgently to cover legal costs while arguing that governments have lied and covered up critical evidence about what really happened that day.

Oliver Tree’s Brutal Exit from Atlantic Records: The Music Industry Trap Exposed

In this video from The Truth IS, Oliver Tree’s raw announcement about parting ways with Atlantic Records takes center stage as a cautionary tale. After generating tens of millions for the label with hits and massive streams, Tree revealed his upcoming album Love You Madly Hate You Badly was canceled due to lack of support—no marketing budget, forgotten song uploads, and executives who “forgot” his contributions once the money flowed. The breakdown compares his experience to legends like TLC, Prince, and Michael Jackson, explaining how standard record deals function as high-interest loans where artists recoup advances from tiny royalty shares while labels keep ownership of masters and the lion’s share of revenue forever. It’s a clear-eyed look at why so many successful artists end up broke, frustrated, or in endless cycles of conflict with their labels.

Trump's "Anal Sphincter": Ex-CIA Analyst Ray McGovern Blasts Israeli Influence on US Policy

In this sharp interview on The Katie Halper Show, longtime CIA veteran Ray McGovern pulls no punches on Israel's deep sway over American intelligence and foreign policy. He recounts how Marco Rubio acts as a bottleneck ("anal sphincter") controlling information to the president, explains the U.S. strike on Iran as largely driven by Israeli pressure and preemption fears, and shares personal stories from his career—including suggesting an arms embargo on Israel in 1974 that shocked colleagues and a recent confrontation highlighting the "51st state" dynamic. McGovern draws from decades of experience to expose the refusal within the Deep State to challenge this influence, framing it as a persistent, unchecked force shaping U.S. decisions.

How Primus Turned “We Suck” Into Platinum Success

Guitar Meets Science delivers a fun, fast-paced history of Primus, the band that refused to fit any mold. Les Claypool—a carpenter in a blonde mohawk and mismatched shoes—got kicked out of a Metallica audition for being “too weird,” then built a career on bizarre funk-metal bass riffs, underground tapes, and sheer oddity. The band sold records out of car trunks, turned crowd chants of “We Suck” into a badge of honor, headlined Lollapalooza, stole the show at Woodstock ’94 (mud and all), and scored the South Park theme for $74 and a VHS tape—proving that staying unapologetically strange can still conquer the music industry.

10 Subtle Signs Your Body Is Actually Healthy (No Gym Required)

Forget six-packs and green smoothies—this video from “This Guy Explained” reveals the real, everyday signals of a truly healthy body that most people overlook. From waking up refreshed without multiple alarms and rarely getting sick, to smooth daily digestion, steady energy after meals, clear skin with minimal effort, strong nails and hair growth, pain-free movement, and a calm nervous system even in chaos, these 10 signs show your sleep cycle, immune system, gut health, metabolism, and overall balance are firing on all cylinders. It’s a refreshing reminder that genuine health shows up in quiet, consistent ways rather than flashy fitness metrics.

Jim Breuer Reveals the Tragic Reality Behind Chris Farley's SNL Days

In this candid clip, comedian Jim Breuer shares his eye-opening experiences with Chris Farley during their time on Saturday Night Live. Expecting a fun, larger-than-life collaborator like the one everyone hyped, Breuer instead encountered a deeply troubled Farley battling severe drug addiction—marked by erratic behavior, cocaine use in the writers' room with strangers, and a heartbreaking late-night phone call where Farley questioned if he was truly funny or just "the stupid fat guy." Breuer highlights the contrast between Farley's kind soul (volunteering at church, lighting up rooms) and the destructive forces of fame, pressure, and substances that ultimately consumed him, painting a raw picture of the dark underbelly of SNL stardom.

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Trump Team's Epstein Files Meltdown: New Book Exposes Situation Room Panic and Infighting

In this episode from Due Dissidence, the hosts break down excerpts from the new book Regime Change by Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan, which details the Trump administration’s internal chaos over the Jeffrey Epstein files in 2025. Top officials, including JD Vance and Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, held multiple high-stakes meetings in the Situation Room—typically reserved for national security crises—to manage the growing scandal, with Vance appearing panicked and pushing for more transparency while others scrambled to bury or spin the story. The video highlights Trump’s resistance to releasing the files, explosive outbursts (such as Dan Bongino’s volcanic reaction toward Pam Bondi), leaked internal tensions dividing the MAGA base, wild PR ideas like having Tucker Carlson interview Ghislaine Maxwell, and the overall sense of paralysis as the issue refused to go away despite public dismissals. It’s framed as a revealing look at how the administration’s handling created self-inflicted wounds and finger-pointing among insiders.

Your Phone Fires 30,000 Invisible Dots at Your Face Every Unlock — Here's the Full Story

In this clear, beginner-friendly breakdown from Explaining Tech Like You're Five, the video demystifies Apple's Face ID by walking through exactly how the TrueDepth camera system works every time you pick up your iPhone. A flood illuminator first detects a face with invisible infrared light, then a dot projector blasts 30,000 infrared dots onto your features, creating a precise 3D depth map of your skull's unique geometry in a fraction of a second. This mathematical blueprint (not a photo) is compared in the secure enclave chip against your enrolled data, making it vastly more secure than fingerprints and immune to flat photos or simple masks. The video also covers the "attention aware" features that track your gaze for screen dimming and notifications, noting that the same hardware quietly watches your face dozens of times a day — all while keeping the raw data locked away from Apple and the OS.

Every Argument Is With a Ghost: The Hidden Childhood Wound Fueling Your Fights

In this insightful video from behavior expert Chase Hughes, he reveals that most arguments—especially with loved ones—aren't truly about the dishes, tone, or minor slights in the moment. Instead, your nervous system pattern-matches the present event to old emotional "files" created in childhood, before you had defenses or perspective, triggering oversized reactions as if the original wound is happening right now. Using the example of a husband exploding over a casual comment from his wife, Hughes peels back the layers: surface-level "present" issue, deeper pattern of feeling inadequate, and the root childhood memory (like a disappointed parent's silent look at a report card). The key signal to watch for is when the size of your reaction doesn't match the size of the event— that's your cue it's a ghost from the past. He offers a simple tool: when you feel that disproportionate surge, ask yourself, "When was the first time I ever felt like this?" to trace it back and break the cycle.

The Hidden British Architectural Invasion Hiding in Plain Sight Across America

In this episode from the CONSPIRACY-R-US channel, the host explores an earlier “British Invasion”—not the 1960s music phenomenon, but the mysterious Tudor Revival architecture popping up in unexpected American locations like the Higgins House in Worcester, Massachusetts, and the Salisbury House in Des Moines, Iowa. Officially built in the 1920s as replicas of 1500s English structures, these grand homes feature authentic-looking Tudor details, dolphin-and-anchor printer symbols from Venice, hidden Tudor-era artwork behind modern AC units, and coats of arms with dates (like 1677 for Worcester) that clash dramatically with mainstream history claiming those places only became cities centuries later. The video questions the official timelines, construction photos, and sudden “gifting” of these mansions after the 1929 crash, while highlighting recurring symbolism (XO patterns, green men, dragons, stars) and suggesting these buildings may be far older than we’re told, pointing to a deeper Old World English influence embedded in America’s landscape.