So here it is.
I’m doing it.
I’m just going to come out and say it.
I have borderline personality disorder. One of the most stigmatized mental health disorders that there are. (In short called BPD or borderline.)
Why am I telling you this? Especially because there is such a stigma, and it may make some of you permanently change your perception of me? Read on to find out why.
I remember the first time I heard of the concept of BPD. A friend had a book in her house called “Stop Walking on Eggshells” and she told me it was about people that you have to be so careful around them, like walking on eggshells, otherwise they will blow up and bite your head off. Honestly? It sounded like two of the abusers in my life, that one second they’d be fine but if you took the wrong step they’d snap and become violent, often directed at me. In my mind, the concept of BPD became synonymous with “abuser”.
I have a Facebook friend who is very public about the fact that she has BPD and I never understood why she didn’t keep that a secret. Why wasn’t she ashamed to out herself as being an abuser? Because in my head, that was what having BPD made you.
About 7 years ago something happened that blew my mind and made me rethink every assumption I ever had about BPD. I found out what the diagnostic criteria were (and no, being an abuser is decidedly not one) and realized that I fit them.
This sent me spiraling so badly. If I have BPD what does that make me? Does it mean I’m like my abusers? I fell apart so much, and felt so unstable. I crashed down to the worst mental state I’d ever been in in my life. I knew therapists often hate clients with BPD and so I was afraid that my therapist would want to dump me once she found out that I had it. But when I brought it up with her, instead of confirming or denying it, she more wanted to explore with me my feelings about it. That was how she worked, she helped me figure out things on my own and guided me there, but I felt I needed someone to tell me things, give me advice, teach me skills, and I didn’t feel she could do that. Not to mention I wanted someone who I knew, from the get go, was happy to work with a borderline client.
I learned that the gold standard of treatment for someone with BPD is DBT, dialectical behavioral therapy, which is very tool-oriented. So I asked around and looked for a therapist who had experience working with BPD and did DBT.
During my first session with that therapist, I told her that I thought I had BPD and she said that whether I do or I don’t doesn’t matter to her- if I have symptoms that make me think I have it, then she’ll work with me on those symptoms, regardless of the label. She said I can go to a psychiatrist for an official diagnosis if I want it for my own knowledge, or if I wanted medication. Within a few days of that initial appointment, I realized that my anxiety was so bad that when I would get a notification of a text message or email, especially from my new therapist, I’d have panic attacks and my legs felt like they were about to collapse under my body. I was not functional at all, and needed to change something desperately. Despite my initial hesitancy for psychiatric medication, it was what I needed. And so I made an appointment for the psychiatrist.
Because I’m always afraid of not being taken seriously, and of having my issues minimized, I went through the list of borderline personality disorder diagnostic criteria and wrote down how they applied to me so I could present my case to the psychiatrist.
You need at least 5 of the following 9 to get a diagnosis.
1. Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment. This is one of the criteria that causes the most stigma, because people with BPD have a reputation of being manipulative in relationships (sometimes with threats of what they’d do to themselves if they were abandoned) because of the threat of abandonment. But for me it wasn’t like that at all. I was constantly afraid of being rejected and abandoned, and because of that, I decided to hide my true self from most people so they wouldn’t know enough about me to reject me. And when I was worried someone was rejecting me or would reject me, I made sure to be the one to leave, to end the relationship first, so it would be me doing the abandonment instead of being abandoned.
2. A pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal relationships characterised by alternating between extremes of idealisation and devaluation. This is called splitting or black and white thinking, and doesn’t just affect relationships, but comes up in life in general, having a hard time seeing shades of gray. When someone does something nice for you, you might think they are the most awesome person in the world and if they do some things that bother you you might see them as all bad, and not a nuanced individual. And often this view of people can flip-flop pretty quickly. I had this but I’m really improving a lot in this way.
3. Identity disturbance: markedly and persistently unstable self-image or sense of self. This is a little hard to explain but there’s a chronic sense of uncertainty about who you are as a person and your core identity. There can be frequent changes in goals, values, and beliefs, feeling like you’re not the same you used to be, or a tendency to take on the traits of others in an attempt to define yourself.
4. Impulsivity in at least two areas that are potentially self-damaging (e.g. spending, sex, substance abuse, reckless driving, binge eating). I did not have this symptom.
5. Recurrent suicidal behaviour, gestures, or threats, or self-mutilating behaviour. I didn’t have this symptom either.
7. Chronic feelings of emptiness. Yes. Or as I called it, depression.
8. Inappropriate, intense anger or difficulty controlling anger. I think this was one of my symptoms but don’t remember exactly.
So I had 6 or 7 of the criteria needed for a diagnosis when you only needed 5.
The psychiatrist I went to agreed with my self diagnosis. Yes, I had borderline personality disorder. Interestingly, he asked if we had any family history of bipolar disorder, and when I said I did, he said that BPD is often misdiagnosed as bipolar disorder, and that the biggest difference is that the mood swings, ups and downs, in the fastest cycling bipolar, type 2, is a week up and a week down, but BPD the swings are multiple times a day. Additionally, BPD has abandonment issues that bipolar doesn’t.
My psychiatrist recommended 2 things for me. Psychiatric medication to help, at least temporarily, so that I could be functional enough to be able to actually get helped through therapy. I started on Seroquel, an atypical antipsychotic that is used as a mood stabilizer.
It was really expensive but I needed it, so I asked for charity to help me cover it.
That DBT course changed my life. It taught me so much about Borderline Personality Disorder and how to deal with it. As I mentioned in my previous post about BPD, DBT was created as a therapy for BPD by Marsha Lineham, and it is comprised of 4 parts- mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotional regulation and interpersonal effectiveness.
It is supposed to be so effective that statistically up to 75 percent of people diagnosed with BPD no longer fit the criteria after a certain amount of years doing DBT. Google is telling me after 1 year but I remember originally hearing it after 5 or 10 years, but maybe these are new statistics.
I learned that borderline personality disorder is caused by the combination of being emotionally sensitive by nature and growing up in an invalidating environment.
I learned that complex PTSD and borderline personality disorder are so similar that some professionals want to even rename BPD as C-PTSD. But at its most basic, borderline personality disorder is a result of trauma. Yes, growing up in an invalidating environment is a trauma. And yes, I got an official diagnosis of CPTSD as well.
Stigmas
I tried talking about it online in some anonymous forums and I was told the most horrible things.
- People with borderline personality disorder are unfixable
- We’re impossible to deal with, and that’s why even therapists often don’t want to work with us as clients
- We are abusers, cruel and manipulative
- That we destroy the people who we are close to
- That we create chaos in everyone’s lives around us
- That we are in denial of the issues we have
- And that we aren’t willing to work on ourselves and get better
- And probably the worst of all was this person who was saying that BPD isn’t a mental illness, but a disorder in our personality and who we are, and there is “no person hiding underneath waiting to come out once the medication kicks in” since the essence of who we are is the problem.
People with BPD can be very emotionally fragile and as brittle as one of those delicate glass figurines but that doesn’t mean we make people’s lives miserable.
One of the most problematic things I ever heard from a so called “professional” about BPD (her name is Doctor Ramani… and maybe I’m splitting by saying I hate her with a passion over this, but I’m not willing to hear anything else she says because of that) is that people with BPD are very similar to narcissists in that we both lack empathy. I can’t even tell you how wrong this is. I know so many people with BPD and if anything, the trait that probably unites them is their empathy and how much they feel for others. So many people with borderline personality disorder end up becoming therapists, and some of the most empathetic people I know are those with borderline. That stereotype is as far from the truth as it can get. In fact, people with BPD often enter relationships with and are abused by narcissists.
I kind of get why some people have a very negative view of people with BPD. One word.
Refuse to get help? Yes, ditto. Because they don’t have flaws.
Unable to show empathy? Yes.
And when you have issues like a temper, mood swings, etc… and you think you are flawless, you won’t apologize if you hurt someone when you lost it, and will blame the other person for making you be that way, and you definitely won’t try to make things any better. And that definitely can be abusive.
The more I learned about narcissism and about BPD, the more I realized that the people that abused me that had BPD also had NPD, and that was the biggest issue of all. It all made sense once I realized that.
And I realize the irony in writing a post trying to break the stigma against BPD while “reassigning blame from BPD onto NPD” but… people with NPD aren’t evil people. They are suffering from trauma. And it’s essentially a deep seated insecurity which comes out as narcissism. And they need help. But because they’re suffering so much from this, they can’t admit they need help, and so they suffer. And unfortunately others suffer with them. And it is so hard to treat NPD because it goes against the very nature of what NPD is.
In my year with my first therapist, I had no idea that my “floating off into space” when I was stressed was called dissociation, and the therapist never gave me that name. Had I had that name, I could have learned tools to use to stop dissociation. After doing DBT, and many years of therapy, I have so many tools in my arsenal to help me come back from dissociation, many of them from the crisis management section of DBT, but also ones I learned in somatic therapy, etc…
I would not have gone to DBT had I not figured out I had BPD.
I know people that had BPD but because they didn’t know it was BPD, they were just being treated for anxiety, which was helping only slightly, but not enough. However, once they got that diagnosis, they were able to get on the right meds and get much better.
What is validation? It is acknowledging and accepting feelings without judgment.
But we need, by nature, to feel seen and heard, and not shut down.
Validating someone’s emotions does not mean that you are giving them a pass to behave how they want.
One of the ways of healing that cycle is through validation- also external validation, via therapists and loved ones, and self validation, which therapy teaches you, and the DBT tool of radical acceptance helps with that.
Because of how much I learned about the importance of validation, I try to incorporate that into my parenting, especially because some of my kids have more intense emotions by nature, or as I call it “big feelings”. I want to make sure that what happened to me doesn’t happen to them, and I teach them that they are allowed to feel however they want, that all feelings are welcome in our house, and all feelings matter. Again, all feelings doesn’t mean all actions- you can be angry but you can’t scream at someone or hit them. You can be sad but that doesn’t mean you can wail into my ear.
Honestly, right now, almost 8 years after starting therapy, and 7 years after my BPD realization and diagnosis, 7 years of using DBT skills and having gone through trauma therapies, and 7 years on medication (currently 2 different mood stabilizers and one antidepressant/antianxiety), I am in the best place mentally that I’ve been in my life. I can’t even begin to tell you how much improved I am.
- Fear of abandonment and black and white thinking in relationships- I thought I didn’t really have this anymore, but recently it did come back to bite me in the behind and I almost ruined an important relationship over this. Healing isn’t linear, but I’m mostly better there.
- Splitting and black and white thinking in general? I can’t say I don’t do this, but at least I’m often able to notice when I’m doing that and try to reign myself in. But if I can’t, I often am receptive to hearing that I’m doing that, even if I can’t automatically stop doing that.
- Unstable sense of self? I think I no longer have this.
- My mood swings are mostly better, but I’m on mood stabilizers, so I don’t know if I can write this one off.
- Same with the chronic feelings of emptiness.
- Intense, inappropriate anger… Sometimes, I’ll admit. And my therapist is giving me tools to deal with this when it comes up.
- Dissociation, yes. But at least I know how to handle it when it comes up.
So yes, I still have a BPD diagnosis. But I’d recon that by far I do not look like what people think of when they think of when they hear BPD.
I’m coming out as having BPD because I want to challenge what you think of when you hear the words borderline personality disorder. I don’t mind becoming another face you think of when you hear the phrase, so that maybe you can realize that empathetic, loving, compassionate friends that you love might have borderline and you didn’t even notice, because BPD is not the horrible “synonym for abuser” that people think it is.
But those that love me, that I wouldn’t want to leave me, already know this about me. And they don’t care.
You explained this brilliantly. I consider myself an expert on bpd but you made me understand it even better!
I have long suspected you have bpd but seeing how you figured it out yourself and went onto healing and owning it – touches my soul.
I’m a child of bpd/npd and love how you get the difference between bpd by itself.
Many people don’t have the full diagnosis but on some level have a disorganized attachment and they struggle mostly with self regulation and less with splitting and identity.
You explained this brilliantly. I consider myself an expert on bpd but you made me understand it even better!
I have long suspected you have bpd but seeing how you figured it out yourself and went onto healing and owning it – touches my soul.
I’m a child of bpd/npd and love how you get the difference between bpd by itself.
Many people don’t have the full diagnosis but on some level have a disorganized attachment and they struggle mostly with self regulation and less with splitting and identity.
I learnt a lot reading this. Thank you for being open about this. It's so important for people to be able to get the right help for any mental health issue and be able to live the healthiest lives they can. Stigma is so harmful. We all deserve love and respect. Thank you for your courage!
I learnt a lot reading this. Thank you for being open about this. It's so important for people to be able to get the right help for any mental health issue and be able to live the healthiest lives they can. Stigma is so harmful. We all deserve love and respect. Thank you for your courage!
This is an awesome post and I think it may help many people
This is an awesome post and I think it may help many people
I found this a very informative, well written and thoughtful post. I think personality disorders in general are still quite unknown conditions for most people — with a lot of misinformation and misunderstanding surrounding them. Anything that helps educate people and raise awareness is a great thing — especially as well written as this was, thanks for sharing…
I found this a very informative, well written and thoughtful post. I think personality disorders in general are still quite unknown conditions for most people — with a lot of misinformation and misunderstanding surrounding them. Anything that helps educate people and raise awareness is a great thing — especially as well written as this was, thanks for sharing…
I am a long time reader but I haven't been on your site for a while because I lost all my subscriptions, and now, on a pretty bad day, in the midst of a pretty shitty summer, I remembered to come and check out what's new with you. I applaud your openness and bravery to write about such a personal and delicate subject. I think of it as a form of activism! The information you gave on BPD was very interesting and clarified a few things for me, so thank you. And, also, my opinion about you hasn't changed a bit: any mental health diagnose is nothing to be ashamed of and if someone is going to therapy, I see it as a green flag. That person is taking care of themselves (not to mention, there are so many people that don't have a diagnoses solely because they never bothered to get one or are ashamed, or afraid…it doesn't mean they are better than the diagnosed folks). Sana