Meaning from Madness
Understanding the Hidden Patterns that Motivate Abusers: Narcissists, Borderlines, and Sociopaths
by Richard Skerritt
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Borderline Personality Disorder Symptoms Can be Confusing
What is BPD?
Borderline Personality
Disorder is Driven by Fear that Others will Find Fault
What is BPD? Does the "DSM" list of borderline personality disorder symptoms
(BPD) leave you baffled? Maybe you read the diagnostic criteria for borderline personality
disorder, narcissistic personality disorder, and antisocial personality disorder
(sociopathy) and now your head is spinning, wondering if it's all three? Well,
you're not alone. They're official, but they're not the only
way to characterize personality disorders.
Here's the bottom line: A person with BPD lives with extreme fear that
others will find fault with them and then abandon them, which drives extreme, irrational
behavior.
People with borderline personality disorder live with constant and extreme fear
that others will find fault with them. And in their disordered mental process, someone
with BPD believes that if people find fault with them, they'll abandon them,
which terrifies them. As a result, their minds distort reality, doing everything
to keep them from seeing their own flaws, and when that fails, they have extreme,
unexplainable reactions. This is the core of the disorder we call borderline personality
disorder.
More on
detaching
,
healing
,
overcoming love
,
obligation
.
It's not a normal mind
Borderline personality disorder(BPD) is one of a number of mental disorders called
personality disorders. It affects a person in all aspects of their life, and doesn't
change much with time. It gives rise to thoughts and emotions that don't belong
in the present situation, and these cause a lot distress. Often these thoughts and
emotions are extreme, and lead to extreme behavior. To protect from the extreme
emotions, psychological defenses are put up in the person's mind. People with
BPD remember things differently; they percieve things differently; they place blame
on others when it belongs to them; they simply don't remember some things. These
psychological defenses are contantly at work in the mind of the person, yet the
person is unaware they are happening.
A person with borderline personality disorder lives in a distorted world; a world
that is different from the world known by the people they live with. Their mind
continually builds and sustains this distorted world, because it feels safer to
them, and it prevents the extreme terror they would otherwise feel. Part of sustaining
this distorted reality is forcing others to agree and support that reality. Those
with BPD use persistence, manipulation, rages, and abuse to force others to adopt
their reality, and they can lose control completely when another person challenges
it.
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Another way to reconize this disorder, without the confusing list of borderline
personality disorder symptoms, is this: if we live with someone with borderline
personality disorder, we see these two things happening:
- Those with borderline personality disorder unconsciously distort what they know
and percieve, to create a reality in which they are free from faults, and use coercion
to force those around them to support their distorted reality; and
- when they can't maintain their distortions; when reality breaks through,
and shows the the person with borderline personality disorder really does make mistakes,
and really does have a problem, they become despondent, jump to the conclusion that
their close people will abandon them, and become desperate to prevent that.
Both of these are driven by an intense, pathological fear that others will find
fault with the person, and then abandon him/her.
The distortions in the minds of those with borderline personality disorder are not
conscious. They are not choosing to distort; and they are not aware that their memories
and perceptions differ from what normal people know. To them, their reality is simply
what is. So if we disagree, they argue with strong conviction for what they
know. They can be very convincing because they truly believe what they say! If we
live with such a person, over time it can become hard to distinguish what we know
is real from the distorted reality we are constantly pressured to accept and support.
We can begin to wonder if we are the crazy ones.
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What is Borderline Personality Disorder?
Meaning from Madness - Understanding the Hidden Patterns that Motivate Abusers: Narcissists, Borderlines, and Sociopaths
- Do you know what drives someone with borderline personality disorder? Did you know how much borderline personality disorder overlaps with
narcissism? This book explains the simple psychological driving force that defines these diseases,
the irrational actions of borderlines and narcissists, their treatment prospects, and the impact
of alcohol abuse. It explains the overlap/relationship of narcissism with borderline personality disorder and sociopathy.
More about this book.
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This can go to an even further extent. Something is obviously amiss, because of
the differences in the reality we have vs. the person with borderline personality
disorder. The defense mechanisms in the mind of the person with borderline personality
disorder won't allow awareness that the person has a disorder. There is a problem;
it can't be possibly be mine; therefore the problem is yours! You're the
one with a personality disorder!
There's a simple enough way to sort out who has borderline personality disorder.
Ask yourself: can you see flaws in yourself? Can you tolerate if other people do,
also? Do you have extreme fears that people in your life will abandon you if they
see your flaws? If you can see and tolerate your flaws, and don't fear abandonment,
then it's very unlikely you have borderline personality disorder. If you see
the opposite in another person, then it's quite likely that person does have
borderline personality disorder. Remember, though, that to be a personality disorder,
the person must feel significant distress and the pattern of behavior must be stable
over time.
Why are Borderline Personality Disorder Symptoms so Confusing?
If you've read the diagnostic definition of borderline personality disorder,
you know to clinically identify the disorder, 5 out of 9 criteria must be present,
and you may feel that most of them are present. But then if you look at narcissistic
personality disorder, you see another different list, and again you might feel that
most of them are present. Then again, antisocial personality disorder, with another
list, and again you may feel many are present. What does it all mean?
Keep in mind, the diagnosic criteria weren't designed for casual conversation;
they were developed by committees of psychologists and they were focused on defining
all the personality disorders in way that made sense to them. They worried
about certain parts of the diagnostic process, but one thing they didn't worry
about was making the criteria unique. In fact they moved in quite the opposite way.
Most of the time, people are diagnosed with more than one personality disorder!
This comes about mostly because no one knows what the underlying causes of these
disorders are. So they defined them in terms of behavior. Well, anyone can exhibit
a behavoir; the reason for the behavior may or may not be specified in any particular
criteria. So in principle anyone could show all the behaviors for all the personality
disorders. On top of that, there is overlapping behavior among the definitions
of various disorders. So it's no surprise that people end up meeting the criteria
for multiple disorders.
As a writer and teacher, I rarely explain these disorders using criteria lists.
Over time, talking with many spouses and family of those with borderline personality
disorder, narcissistic personality disorder, and occasionally antisocial personality
disorder, I've found that there is a fundamental psychological driver for these
disorders; one that can be explained in a few sentences, and they are much
more helpful that the criteria lists.
After working with many people, explaining the behaviors of their significant others,
I wrote a short book that lays out the underlying driving forces; the psychological
defense mechanisms, the treatment prospects, and the effect of the common concurrent
abuse of alcohol in these three disorders. This book is called
Meaning from Madness
. Don't expect something to read on the beach for days. This is a short, succinct
description. It has been in print since 2006, in 2013 went into its fifth printing,
and in 2012 has sold over 12,000 copies. It works for people because it uses a simple,
practical definition and it makes sense. It also, includes, by the way, the DSM
criteria for the disorders, though you'll probably not want to sift through
them again.
Is it Borderline, or is it Narcissism?
If you've looked at the diagnostic definitions - the criteria lists - for borderline
personality disorder and narcissistic personality disorder, you almost certainly
see characteristics from both disorders.
The reality as I see it, is that people considered to be borderline and those considered
narcissistic are suffering from the same underlying disorder - a disorder based
in fear of others seeing flaws in them. The difference between these two "diagnoses"
is a different kind of coping. Sometimes such people cope poorly, falling into despondence,
suicide, substance abuse, and despair. When they show these coping patterns, they
are labeled as suffering from borderline personality disorder.
These same people, at other times, will build a functioning narcissistic defense.
In this mode, they rely on a stable predictable environment, limiting exposure to
new people, an environment where they can perform flawlessly, do all the things
they feel they're expected to do, and keep their family "in line" so that the family,
too, exhibits no flaws. People using a narcissistic defense appear "perfect" to
work, community, and extended family, but are brutal to the family in their own
home.
Those with borderline personality disorder have fragile defenses, and respond to
exposure of a flaw sometimes by fighting for their reality, but sometimes with a
loss of hope, despondence and fear of abandonment. Narcissists have strong, durable
defense, and act with crushing brutality to preserve and stabilize their defensive
facade.
But both are driven by the same underlying dynamic. Both those with borderline personality
disorder and narcissistic personality disorder live with terrifying fears that others
will find fault with them, have unconscious distortions of memory and perception,
and try to stabilize their distorted reality. The insight I offer here is that people
transition between high and low levels of defense. At times in their lives they
are able to maintain their reality within a stable narcissistic perimeter.
At other times, because of job changes, relationships changes, illness or other
uncontrollable changes, their perimeter defense breaks down, and they drop into
a despairing mode with behaviors that are more borderline. Yet,with time and support,
they usually rebuild a new narcissistic system and return to narcissitic functioning.
Meaning from Madness
is my book that lays all this out.
How do I Cope?
If you live with someone who fits these descriptions, you need some idea of "What
do I do now that I know this?" For most people, there are important values, beliefs
and obligations that have to be carefully thought about. Because abuse is so damaging
to a relationship, significant decisions have to be faced and then resolved. My
first book,
Tears and Healing
, holds a light up in this dark place. Written from the inside perspective of someone
who has been through the hell of being emotionally and verbally battered by a spouse,
this book addresses the major issues that we all must wrestle with.
Tears and Healing
begins with the most difficult issue: abusive partners constantly work to
distort our perception of what is happening and what is right and wrong, until we
doubt our own judgment so much we can't make decisions. It then addresses the process
of detaching to find safe space and to regain a sense of right and wrong, and searching
to understand what we, as people, need in our lives - needs that often must be simply
put aside to survive in these brutal situations. It deals with love, and the conflict
of being in love with someone hurtful to us. And it addresses the intense feelings
of obligation that many of us have, which keep us locked in situations that are
beyond what any person should endure. Tears & Healing is an intensely
personal and validating guide through this maze of thoughts and emotions.
But I'm so in love with him or her...
It's a common situation. You meet someone. In the beginning it seems you've
found your dream, the perfect person for you. Strong emotions rise quickly, soon
you are really in love. But as the relationship progresses, things change. The ideal
person you met is not what you find now. Behavior becomes irrational, demanding.
Blaming and accusations grow. Over time, a wonderful relationship sinks into misery.
Yet you're still in love the person!
Our feelings of being "in love" are designed to help keep us together.
But those feelings shouldn't keep us in a situation that is toxic to us. But
often, that's just what they do. And because we are taught to have almost magical
thoughts about falling in love - when and why and who - we feel really trapped.
Well, you can't choose feelings. They arise from a combination of your natural
needs and your life experience in your memory. But you can set the stage for the
kind of feelings you want. And that's where my book
In Love and
Loving It - or Not!
comes in. It explains how and why we fall in love; what we can do to get out
of love with someone hurtful to us; how we can make choices so we are more likely
to fall in love with someone good for us; and how being in love relates to the different,
chosen actions of loving. Many of the people I help to deal with their abusive situations
need this kind of guidance.
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Are you in love with someone
hurtful?
In Love and Loving it - Or Not! - A User's Guide to Love and Being In-Love
explains not just why we fall in love, but why we fall in love with the
people we do, the difference between love and being in-love. You can't choose your
feelings, but you can set the stage for them to develop with a healthier,
happier person. This book explains how.
More about this book.
Get it in the
Light Bulb Pack,
the Relationship Pack, or
the Big Storm Pack.
Books are available in
packages at a savings.
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Most of the people I deal with need help with with all three areas: understanding
their partner's disorder; learning how to deal with the difficult emotions and decisions
they face; and dealing with love and attraction to someone who is hurtful. For these
people, I have a package of three books, the
Triple Pack
, that includes Meaning from Madness, Tears and Healing, and In Love and Loving
it - or Not!. Check it out and see if it might be right for you.
Altogether I have five books dealing with disorders and relationships with people
with disorders. You can get them all together as well in the
Skerritt Pack.