Featured
Article
Borderline
Personality Disorder
Contributed By Family Tools
This
video about Borderline Personality Disorders
deals with a common, serious and chronic disorder
that may be best described as a person who is
"stuck" developmentally and has never been able
to establish a basic sense of trust. A pattern
of thinking results and behaviors develop which
are self-destructive, childish tactics to cope
with life.
The
cause of this disorder is not fully understood,
but most of the time, childhood experiences
of domestic violence, abandonment, abuse or
molestation are part of the patient's history.
These traumatic experiences prevent the child
from learning how to self soothe and therefore
block the development of basic trust. With damaged
trust, as the child becomes an adult, he or
she is unable to form trusting, authentic, emotionally
gratifying and moral relationships.
The
name of this disorder is confusing; it would
much better be described as "Self-destructive
or Emotionally Unstable" disorder.
The
"Borderline" personality functions very poorly,
with impulsive and unpredictable behavior based
on a distorted view or "prism" of one's self
and of others. The unstable behavior patterns
of this person attracts then repulses others
and creates a self-fulfilling prophecy of chronic
rejection.
Common
characteristics of someone with this disorder
include:
-
Frantic flights from loneliness
- Intense
idealization, then equally intense devaluation,
of others;
- Unstable
sense of self;
-
Impulsive behavior (no moderating "dimmer"
or "off" switch) in at least two areas, such
as spending, sex, substance abuse, reckless
driving, and/or binge eating;
- Repeated
suicidal thoughts, threats or acts;
- Intense
mood swings, usually of short intervals -
a few hours to a few days;
- Chronic
feelings of unbearable emptiness;
- Inappropriate,
intense, irrational, uncontrolled anger; and
- Paranoia
or "spacing out" -- cognitively impaired with
an inability to think clearly.
Five
or more of these characteristics are necessary
for a diagnosis of this disorder.
Treatment
can be helpful, but it is difficult and slow.
The person experiencing this disorder must enter
a long-term psychotherapeutic growth process
to change. The treatment challenge is to remove
the self-destructive patterns of thinking about
life and replace them with a healthier, balanced
sense of self and of efficacy in relationships.
This
video program provides an overview of Borderline
Personality Disorder with definitions and common
examples, and it describes the process of understanding
and getting help for people experiencing this
disorder. It is part of the Family Tools series
developed by Dr. Jerry and Deborah Meints of
Village Counseling in Palm Desert, California.
These
programs are presented in a cable television
series called It's a Family Affair which airs
weekday mornings at 6:30 am and weekend evenings
at 10 pm on Time Warner Channel 18 in the Palm
Springs, CA area, and at 9:30 pm Saturdays on
Cox Cable Channel 31 in Orange County.
© Copyright 2004 Family
Tools.
No
unauthorized duplication without written consent.
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