Borderline Personality 101: The Essential Guide to Understanding, Coping and Living with BPD
(Write a Review)
Paperback
$8.99
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is identified by a constant, long-term pattern of chaotic relationships with others - whether they be with your parents, significant others, children, friendships, or relationships with a spouse. The condition is distinguished by a persistence to avoid abandonment (no matter if it is merited or simply imagined) and rash decision-making. People with BPD often experience a roller coaster of emotions easily and abruptly, and their self-image usually accompanies these changes.If there's an uncanny solidifying characteristic of a person who's living with BPD, it's that they live in a constant vortex of going back and forth between everything that's put in front of them. Self-image, emotions, and relationships alternate as much as the weather, usually as a response to an event that happened around them, such as bad news, stress, or a perceived dig. Very seldom do they feel happiness or satisfaction in life and are often depressed and filled with a feeling of emptiness. Due to these feelings, many of those with BPD might attempt to commit suicide or frequently have suicidal thoughts. Therefore, evaluation of suicidal intent on a regular basis is recommended for those with BPD.The term "borderline" means somewhere in the spectrum between two things. At first, the term was how physicians settled on a label for a symptom that they were unsure what the correct diagnosis would be, usually as a result of a mix of psychotic and neurotic symptoms. Many physicians described these patients as being somewhere on the border between psychotic and neurotic; thus the term "borderline" was coined.Unfortunately, the stress and lack of support that come with being a person afflicted with BPD can have drastic consequences on yourself and your family. Parents of individuals with BPD describe the overwhelming stress that being a caregiver for a person with BPD can induce on the family.Additionally, siblings also bear the consequences in various ways. Some siblings might also be forced into the role of a caregiver, while others may choose to exclude themselves from the family altogether if they find the emotional distress involved with being in close contact with a person suffering from BPD too much to deal with.Familiarizing yourself with the causes is the best way to prevent the continuation of BPD, in particular for those with a biological or genetic susceptibility to the disorder. It's also important for adults who are being emotionally invalidated to be able to notice those same invalidating remarks once used on them and properly respond to shield themselves from further damage.
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is identified by a constant, long-term pattern of chaotic relationships with others - whether they be with your parents, significant others, children, friendships, or relationships with a spouse. The condition is distinguished by a persistence to avoid abandonment (no matter if it is merited or simply imagined) and rash decision-making. People with BPD often experience a roller coaster of emotions easily and abruptly, and their self-image usually accompanies these changes.If there's an uncanny solidifying characteristic of a person who's living with BPD, it's that they live in a constant vortex of going back and forth between everything that's put in front of them. Self-image, emotions, and relationships alternate as much as the weather, usually as a response to an event that happened around them, such as bad news, stress, or a perceived dig. Very seldom do they feel happiness or satisfaction in life and are often depressed and filled with a feeling of emptiness. Due to these feelings, many of those with BPD might attempt to commit suicide or frequently have suicidal thoughts. Therefore, evaluation of suicidal intent on a regular basis is recommended for those with BPD.The term "borderline" means somewhere in the spectrum between two things. At first, the term was how physicians settled on a label for a symptom that they were unsure what the correct diagnosis would be, usually as a result of a mix of psychotic and neurotic symptoms. Many physicians described these patients as being somewhere on the border between psychotic and neurotic; thus the term "borderline" was coined.Unfortunately, the stress and lack of support that come with being a person afflicted with BPD can have drastic consequences on yourself and your family. Parents of individuals with BPD describe the overwhelming stress that being a caregiver for a person with BPD can induce on the family.Additionally, siblings also bear the consequences in various ways. Some siblings might also be forced into the role of a caregiver, while others may choose to exclude themselves from the family altogether if they find the emotional distress involved with being in close contact with a person suffering from BPD too much to deal with.Familiarizing yourself with the causes is the best way to prevent the continuation of BPD, in particular for those with a biological or genetic susceptibility to the disorder. It's also important for adults who are being emotionally invalidated to be able to notice those same invalidating remarks once used on them and properly respond to shield themselves from further damage.