A Qualitative Analysis of Couples’ Experiences of Living with Borderline Personality Disorder in Marital Life

Authors

    Reyhaneh Fazeli-Moghadam * Department of Family Counseling, University of Isfahan, Isfahan, Iran r.fazelimoghadam@yahoo.com

Keywords:

Borderline personality disorder, marital life, couples, psychological coexistence, thematic analysis, qualitative research

Abstract

This study aimed to explore couples’ lived experiences of living with borderline personality disorder in marital life. This qualitative study was conducted using thematic analysis. The study population consisted of couples living in Tehran in which at least one spouse had a clinical diagnosis of borderline personality disorder or prominent borderline-related clinical features. Participants were selected through purposive sampling, and recruitment continued until theoretical saturation was achieved. The final sample included 18 participants, representing 9 couples. Data were collected through individual semi-structured interviews. After obtaining informed consent, interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using NVivo software. The analytic process included familiarization with the data, initial coding, category development, theme review, and final naming of the main themes. Data analysis resulted in four main categories: emotional instability and relational unpredictability, fear of abandonment and exhausting reassurance seeking, caregiving fatigue and erosion of the spouse’s identity, and relational reconstruction through boundaries, validation, and professional help. The findings indicated that marital life in the context of borderline personality disorder is often characterized by oscillation between intense closeness and sudden withdrawal, recurrent misinterpretations, emotional outbursts, control over the partner’s social relations, constant caregiving vigilance, social shame, and efforts to establish safer patterns of communication. Couples’ experiences of living with borderline personality disorder should not be understood merely as exposure to an individual disorder; rather, it is a relational, emotional, and interactional experience that affects the entire structure of marital life. The results suggest that couple-oriented interventions, psychoeducation, emotion regulation skills, healthy boundary setting, and improved disorder literacy may play an important role in reducing marital exhaustion and improving relationship quality.

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References

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Published

2026-02-20

Submitted

2025-12-27

Revised

2026-02-01

Accepted

2026-02-08

Issue

Section

مقالات

How to Cite

Fazeli-Moghadam, R. (2026). A Qualitative Analysis of Couples’ Experiences of Living with Borderline Personality Disorder in Marital Life. Couple Therapy Assessment, Evaluation, and Intervention, 2(6), 1-12. https://jctaei.com/index.php/jctaei/article/view/44

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