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Borderline Personality Disorder - BPD

Name: 【Roots】

Inspired by【边缘性人格】

【Borderline Personality Disorder】

Flower Bouquet

边缘性人格和边缘人类似没有朋友独来独往的概念是两回事…边缘性人格指的是一种不能调节掌握自身情绪并做出各种极端对立的行为和情感的人格特质…之所以被称为边缘,是因为这类型的人的症状非常特殊,他们会有强烈的抑郁情绪…但又不符合忧郁症的标准,说它有焦虑症恐惧症,它却又非常开朗的状态…精神分裂人格分裂也不是,因为它也有和一般人一样健康的部分…所以边缘性人格就是在健康, 忧郁症, 思觉失调症和精神官能症的四者边缘…不在这些症状中,却和这些症状沾上边…

BPD属于三大型人格障碍里的B型…(A type: 妄想症…孤僻症…精神分裂症, B type: 反社会人格障碍…边缘型人格障碍…戏剧化人格障碍…自恋型人格障碍, C type: 畏惧型人格障碍…依赖型人格障碍…强迫型人格障碍)…

主要特征: 不稳定思维+不稳定情绪+不稳定行为+不稳定人际关系...

不稳定思维:

强烈的自我认同障碍,他们对自己形象或者感觉混乱,不一致。e.g. 她是个美丽女子,尽管大家公认了她是个美女,但依然不能坚定自己的长相…当一天看到一个比自己好看的女生时,就会认为:我原来很丑…又或者是想:我是个好人…但转念又一想我这么情绪化爱生气,我其实是个坏人…有时候搞不清自己是个怎么样的人…

不稳定情绪和行为:

往往是非黑即白的极端思考模式…他们会过于高看和理想化一些人…另一方面又会贬低和异常对其厌恶…而且对同一个人可以来回交替摆动…这个情况会在关系密切的人身上才会发觉,在寻求帮助下,认为关系密切的人或者治疗师才是边缘型人格的他们最好的依靠,有时候当这个依靠无法满足要求时,又会把身边的人贬低的一文不值…同时,边缘型人格的人对被抛弃,分离有着强烈的恐惧…就算实际上没有被抛弃,还是会不时的去幻想自己被抛弃的心理,所有进而会出现不稳定情绪,绝望,恐惧和不恰当的愤怒等等…

情感敏感度极高,因为对一些事物事情有着极端的恐惧害怕感,进而产生的一些不恰当不适合的突发频率高的负面情绪…而且没办法自我调节…也就是容易被一点点的小事波动…根据Marsha M. Lindhan博士的描述,边缘性人格就像全身烧伤的病人一样,表皮已经没了,剩下极度敏感的肌肉,一旦有小小的触碰,都会让他们跳的非常高…e.g. 小孩不听他不按时吃饭就会极度生气,不必要的破口大骂到发抖…情绪的极度不稳定可以因为一些事情极度兴奋,也可以因为一些事情感到无比愤怒,焦虑和抑郁…一般持续几个小时,又会从烦躁状态变回正常状态。情绪转变特别迅速令人难以琢磨…

Peonies

一般情绪上来时,人们都会想做出某些行为去发泄情绪,就好像伤心的时候想哭泣,焦虑时候想要逃避,生气的时候想摔东西。正常人一开始还是会试图保持理智和冷静,边缘性人格的人情绪一旦触发,没有任何东西可以阻止不断上涌的情绪了,很快整个人就会被情绪所淹没,口无遮拦,攻击,自残,滥用药物等…做出各种冲动的行为…

情绪退潮后明知刚才的事情是不对的,但又无法控制而感到自责,过度自责导致自残自杀举动的倾向,因此边缘型人格患者的自杀率比普通人高出50倍。

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边缘性人格有时不时的会有强烈的空虚感和孤独感,突然感觉自己掉入了一个巨大的黑洞,身边一个人都没有,同时当情绪失控的时候,可能会用自残方式发泄,肉体上的疼痛减轻心理上的痛苦。等清醒过来后会心痛的抚摸伤口。

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世界上大约有1~3%的人患有边缘型人格障碍,因为他们时常也与其他疾病一起合并,尤其是忧郁症,所以常常被误会和忽略,在精神疾病的门诊中也高达20%...男女比例大约是1比3…

诊断边缘型人格有九项症状:

1. 害怕被抛弃,做出强烈行为避免被抛弃

2. 非常不稳定的人际关系模式,非黑即白,对他人极端理想化或者极端贬低…之间来回交替的想法

3. 自我认同障碍,明显而持续不稳定的自我想象和自我感觉

4. 至少有两个潜在自我伤害的冲动性: 例如疯狂购物,不安全性行为,滥用药物,鲁莽驾驶,暴食等

5.反复发生自残或者自杀行为,或者用自残或者自杀威胁他人

6. 情绪失控时候,会忧郁,焦虑,烦躁,通常持续数小时,很少超过几天。

7. 经常有空虚的感觉

8. 不合时宜的愤怒,或者对愤怒难以控制 例如经常发脾气,持续发怒或者不断打门行为…

9.出现压力有关的妄想或者严重的解离症,忽然突然消失了,突然不知道自己是谁等…

当中至少要符合五项以上才算数…同样是要从童年早期开始。

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形成原因是幼年时期遭受家庭暴力和极大的伤害, 或者童年与家人的分离或者被忽视等等…

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References from [維思維]

Still Life

If you have borderline personality disorder (BPD), you probably feel like you're on a rollercoaster—and not just because of your unstable emotions or relationships, but also the wavering sense of who you are. Your self-image, goals, and even your likes and dislikes may change frequently in ways that feel confusing and unclear.

People with BPD tend to be extremely sensitive. Some describe it as like having an exposed nerve ending. Small things can trigger intense reactions. And once upset, you have trouble calming down. It's easy to understand how this emotional volatility and inability to self-soothe leads to relationship turmoil and impulsive—even reckless—behavior.

When you're in the throes of overwhelming emotions, you're unable to think straight or stay grounded. You may say hurtful things or act out in dangerous or inappropriate ways that make you feel guilty or ashamed afterwards. It's a painful cycle that can feel impossible to escape. But it's not. There are effective BPD treatments and coping skills that can help you feel better and back in control of your thoughts, feelings, and actions.

The 9 symptoms of BPD
1. Fear of abandonment. People with BPD are often terrified of being abandoned or left alone. Even something as innocuous as a loved one arriving home late from work or going away for the weekend may trigger intense fear. This can prompt frantic efforts to keep the other person close. You may beg, cling, start fights, track your loved one's movements, or even physically block the person from leaving. Unfortunately, this behavior tends to have the opposite effect—driving others away.


2. Unstable relationships. People with BPD tend to have relationships that are intense and short-lived. You may fall in love quickly, believing that each new person is the one who will make you feel whole, only to be quickly disappointed. Your relationships either seem perfect or horrible, without any middle ground. Your lovers, friends, or family members may feel like they have emotional whiplash as a result of your rapid swings from idealization to devaluation, anger, and hate.


3. Unclear or shifting self-image. When you have BPD, your sense of self is typically unstable. Sometimes you may feel good about yourself, but other times you hate yourself, or even view yourself as evil. You probably don't have a clear idea of who you are or what you want in life. As a result, you may frequently change jobs, friends, lovers, religion, values, goals, or even sexual identity.


4. Impulsive, self-destructive behaviors. If you have BPD, you may engage in harmful, sensation-seeking behaviors, especially when you're upset. You may impulsively spend money you can't afford, binge eat, drive recklessly, shoplift, engage in risky sex, or overdo it with drugs or alcohol. These risky behaviors may help you feel better in the moment, but they hurt you and those around you over the long-term.


5. Self-harm. Suicidal behavior and deliberate self-harm is common in people with BPD. Suicidal behavior includes thinking about suicide, making suicidal gestures or threats, or actually carrying out a suicide attempt. Self-harm encompasses all other attempts to hurt yourself without suicidal intent. Common forms of self-harm include cutting and burning.


6. Extreme emotional swings. Unstable emotions and moods are common with BPD. One moment, you may feel happy, and the next, despondent. Little things that other people brush off can send you into an emotional tailspin. These mood swings are intense, but they tend to pass fairly quickly (unlike the emotional swings of depression or bipolar disorder), usually lasting just a few minutes or hours.


7. Chronic feelings of emptiness. People with BPD often talk about feeling empty, as if there's a hole or a void inside them. At the extreme, you may feel as if you're “nothing” or “nobody.” This feeling is uncomfortable, so you may try to fill the void with things like drugs, food, or sex. But nothing feels truly satisfying.


8. Explosive anger. If you have BPD, you may struggle with intense anger and a short temper. You may also have trouble controlling yourself once the fuse is lit—yelling, throwing things, or becoming completely consumed by rage. It's important to note that this anger isn't always directed outwards. You may spend a lot of time feeling angry at yourself.


9. Feeling suspicious or out of touch with reality. People with BPD often struggle with paranoia or suspicious thoughts about others' motives. When under stress, you may even lose touch with reality—an experience known as dissociation. You may feel foggy, spaced out, or as if you're outside your own body.

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