Nick Comstock said:
In reply to Antihero (Forum Supporter) :
I know I've painted her in a bad light here. But she's a really good person. She's thoughtful and empathetic. She's not in any way sociopathic or narcissistic. She has some demons but she's not the devil.
I don't think she's sociopathic, or narcissistic, or malicious, or anything like that. That's what makes this hard.
If I had to guess, I'd assume she has a mix of mental illness and developed coping strategies growing up that offered a short-term path of least resistance, but that fall apart in the longer term. She's alcoholic. That's a disease. It may also be masking other mental illness. She's figured out how to use being likeable to ingratiate herself on people. It's not malicious. I don't think it's conscious. I think she grew up with problems she didn't know how to handle, other people wanted to help her, and so she was always able to use other people to handle the things she couldn't, until eventually she used them up. Then she probably held herself together long enough to find another person who could help her out as she fell apart again.
Someone is liable to think this is predatory, but I don't think it is. It's a learned and established pattern. She's not evil, she's sick and stuck in adolescence.
Thing is, all those people who stuck around and helped her until their capacity to help got used up, *chose* to stick around. They perpetuated the cycle.
If you truly care about her, the best thing to do, is to NOT become another one of those people. If you stay all in and stick it out, you will probably hit your breaking point where you don't care anymore. If you want to help, you will need to step back, evaluate what you're capable of putting up with in perpetuity, and establish boundaries to not let her push past that.
Even if you do that, you won't solve her problems. Only she can decide to solve her problems. She's not going to make that decision as long as her established pattern is more comfortable. All you'd be doing is giving her an opportunity to make that decision which she might or she might not.
I know you're feeling hopeful that she's saying things that make you think she might be open to help, but I can pretty much guarantee that's part of the cycle she's learned. She can tell that she's pushed things to a breaking point. She's aware of that and doesn't want things to break. Again, that doesn't make her evil or manipulative. She may very well want to genuinely have a healthy relationship with someone who she cares about and cares about her. But that doesn't mean she knows *how* to have a healthy relationship.
Let's assume she is legitimately well meaning and does want a relationship with someone who cares about her. The only way to have that would be to establish firm boundaries where you're not constantly giving, and not enabling her self-harmful behaviors. You need to get yourself into that position. It may or may not be that she understands an accepts that. That's not in your power to decide.
I'm loathe to give definite advice of specific things to do or not, but I think you absolutely should end the romantic relationship with her. Romance complicates things. You can still care about her. You can still help her. You can still love her. But I don't think you should be romantically involved. It makes it harder to keep the clarity to firmly assert the boundaries you both need.