I’ve heard that depression can change your brain. I wonder if Borderline Personality Disorder does too? I read this article at NIMH (National Institute of Mental Health) that says studies have shown that the grey matter functioning in BPD patients is impaired in an emotion regulation circuit (I can vouch for the fact that mine is faulty!). Since I’m a believer that our upbringing causes this disorder, then I have to assume that the trauma we under went caused changes. Either that or we were born with this shortcoming which in turn caused our caregivers to be so totally annoyed with us that we ended up with BPD. I have to give that theory some weight because I was surely more intense and high-strung than anyone else in my family. My problems go back farther than my memory does so I have no way of really trying to analyze that. Not that it makes any difference in the fact that this is something we have to live with but maybe it gives me a sense of legitimacy. Maybe I can let go of some of the shame of having such an untreatable, horrible disorder that even the mental health community looked at me with disdain.
While I’m at it I’ll mention (sorry, that one is gone)another article just to show that untreatable myth is slowly changing. Age is supposedly on my side too. I wouldn’t really know since for the most part I live the life of a recluse. It’s not Borderline problems that cause me to isolate, it’s my complete loss of confidence in myself. I can tell you that is a hard thing to get back. When I was in my twenties and bouncing from one problem to another, I still tried. It took a huge toll, having to project the image that I was okay and had things under control (when I clearly didn’t). I used to be so much gutsier than I am now. I am not flighty like I was when I was young, I am more stable in some ways. As far as emotion regulation? I spent over two years in DBT (Dialectical behavioral therapy) supposedly learning how to regulate my emotions, and I still have no clue how to actually do that. What sends me off the deep end? Well, the DSM-IV-TR puts it this way “Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment.”, I say rejection (or perceived rejection) pure and simple. Some times it’s real, many times I believe it’s only in my head. I don’t frantically try to avoid it, as I did in my youth, I avoid getting close enough to risk feeling that way in the first place. Not a great solution but it does keep me stable and out of the hospital and even non-suicidal. That makes it worth it to me because I hate it with a passion when I get that traumatized, out of control, awful feeling.
I believe the day will come, if we don’t manage to destroy ourselves first, when they not only will know which areas in the brain cause or contribute to certain mental illnesses, but that they will know how to treat them much like they treated my brain tumor. In fact, I’d volunteer now to have those faulty areas rewired or removed!
😉
I don’t like real or imagined abandonment either 🙁 It is somewhat of a complex for me. Interesting, eh?
Maybe it’s hereditary 😀 You do have a personality much like mine, without all my neuroses of course!
I was listening to Watson, of Watson and Crick for discovering DNA structure, tell Charlie Rose in an interview a while back that if he were starting out today he would want to study the connection between DNA and personality. I thought that was fascinating because in my youth the prevailing view was how much we were influenced by environment/nurture as opposed to what was in those genes. I can tell my my own kids and even by all the cats that I have had, that we are born with certain “stuff.” So you are right, one day they will figure out how to remedy lots of things that are mysterious to us today – not to mention, painful.
Yeah, we are definitely born with certain innate traits, I see it in my kids too.
See, its people like you and websites like this that inspire me to think we will one day find a guaranteed cure for borderline personality disorder. Knowing that individuals have to grow up and deal with a disease as draining as this one breaks my heart, Im glad people like the ones that run this blog are making a legitimate effort in educating the public and attempting to make a difference. Thanks again.
i not sure that you can change whats inside with BPD i dint think it will work and also do i really want to change completly does this not just make you more like a robot or the same as everybody else
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