In the past, people thought that someone with borderline
personality disorder (BPD) was “on the borderline” between psychosis and
neurosis (anxiety/depression). Today, we know much more about BPD, and there is
more research on BDP than any other personality disorder.
Borderline personality disorder is a mental illness that affects the way to relate to other people and the way you relate to yourself. If you’re living with borderline personality disorder, you might feel like there’s something fundamentally wrong with who you are or you might feel ‘flawed’ or worthless, or you might not even have a good sense of who you are as a person. Your moods might be extreme and change all the time, and you might have a hard time controlling impulses or urges. You may have a hard time trusting others and you may be very scared of being abandoned or alone.
BPD is made up of five groups of symptoms: unstable behavior, unstable emotions, unstable relationships, unstable sense of identity and awareness problems.
Unstable behavior means that you often act on impulses or urges, even when they hurt you or other people. Some examples of impulse control problems are:
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Thinking about or attempting suicide
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Hurting yourself on purpose, such as cutting or burning your skin (self-harm)
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Risky behaviors like spending a lot of money, binge eating or problematic substance use
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Extreme depression, anxiety or irritability that might last for
only a few hours or days, usually in response to a stressful event
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Intense anger or difficulty controlling anger
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Intense boredom
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Doing anything you can to avoid being abandoned or alone
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Feeling like you don’t know yourself or having very unstable sense of who you are and how you feel about yourself
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Intense relationships where you often impulsively shift between seeing the other person as ‘all good’ or ‘all bad’
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Feeling like you don’t know yourself
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Having a very unstable sense of who you are and how you feel about yourself
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Feeling “empty” much of the time
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Feeling like you’re separated from your mind or body (dissociative symptoms) or losing track of time.
http://www.heretohelp.bc.ca/factsheet/borderline-personality-disorder
http://www.amazon.com/Broken-Minds-Healing-Youre-Losing/dp/0825421187/ref=tmm_pap_title_
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