“People with Borderline Personality Disorder are like people with third degree burns over 90% of their bodies. Lacking emotional skin, they feel agony at the slightest touch or movement.” This quote was voiced by Marsha M. Linehan, the creator of one of the most successful therapies used to guide individuals with BPD to the light of hope. Problems such as chemical imbalances and early childhood experiences, like abuse or stress, could have stunted brain development. Also, BPD sufferers usually have extremely impulsive and unhealthy thoughts, some involve black and white thinking, dissociation, fears of abandonment, and self-loathing. Being in a relationship with someone thats diagnosed with borderline personality disorder can be a rollercoaster …show more content…
Borderline personality disorder tends to drop a bunch of negative traits onto the barer. Some of these traits include thoughts of dissociation, which is a psychological term used to describe a mental departure from reality. From the website called Out Of The Fog (2015), the author says that “The thinking and behavior of a person with BPD includes more departures from reality and emotional thinking than actual facts.”( ) This can lead to the more impulsive acts during episodes of dissociation or mood swings. Another trait is the intense fear of abandonment. According to Clearview Treatment Centers (2016), they say that “These fears of abandonment are usually related to an intolerance of being alone,” (Paragraph 3) These fears of abandonment can lead to more severe cases of manipulation or blame games with their partners to force them to stay. Impulsive and self-destructive behavior can also be a response to being left alone or abandoned. Self-loathing leads a major role when living with BPD. The author of “What is it like to have BPD” (2011) explains that “Everything is scanned for rejection. When someone with BPD is rejected, or feels as if they are, they will think that ‘this is my fault, I’m an awful person’.” (Paragraph 4) If felt rejected, the sufferer of BPD will either blame themselves fully or blame the other person. This can also lead to a type of thinking called “splitting”, where the person with the disorder basically thinks in a all good or all bad