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Poohbah
Member Since Jul 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 1,114
16 |
#61
BPD .... is an illness or not? I'm confusing by everyone's statement that BPD is part of mental illness while others isn't. Could you put my mind at ease asap?
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Legendary
Member Since Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
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#62
It is a disorder of development, to my thinking.
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lou99pop, shezbut
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Poohbah
Member Since Jul 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 1,114
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#63
so it is not an illness as to develop a disorder?
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Legendary
Member Since Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
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#64
Well, that is hard for me to answer because I view few mental health issues as 'illness'.
To me, BPD is the result of missing out on early experiences of attachment, or experiencing trauma. Something needed in development was somehow missed out on for some reason. The term BPD to me is a way to describe the difficulties we have in relationships, work, and also the intense emotions and intense moods we experience... because of our perceptions formed early in life. That's why I like the term 'disorder' rather than 'illness'. Just me |
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lou99pop
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Member
Member Since Nov 2009
Location: South Australia
Posts: 167
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#65
Quote:
You more likly to have BPD when you've been a victom of a negative role models, or victimized by main caregivers ect. BPD is more to do with the way you really are as a person rather than a chemical imbalance changeing your personailtyu hench why its called a personailty disorder. |
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gopycrad, lou99pop, lovelylovely
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Member
Member Since Jan 2010
Location: Nowhere. Just alone.
Posts: 184
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#66
wow. im kind of speechless. that seems to fit me pretty well.
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ECHOES
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Poohbah
Member Since Jul 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 1,114
16 |
#67
many thanks to ECHOES and mum2four for clear explanation and it does make sense to me at last.. I would rather disorder than an illness because of the upbringing in society issues but the term of relapses, does that mean its part of an illness?
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Legendary
Member Since Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
Posts: 14,352
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#68
I think relapses are to be expected was we learn, like any other learning.
Doing something differently takes practice. It's all something to explore and learn from |
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lou99pop
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Poohbah
Member Since Jul 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 1,114
16 |
#69
ECHOES, in conclusion that BPD is definitely not mental illness but a disorder, meaning we'll have to learn from it and to practise whatever it throws at us. Last question that bothers me much, do BPD people need a medication as part of the treatment or not? (Currently I'm taking meds and wondering if I'm not illness but still taking meds for disorder?)
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Member
Member Since Nov 2009
Location: South Australia
Posts: 167
15 |
#70
Quote:
I would not call it a chemical illness and you can make steps to change what is making like hard for you in your personailty. I would say it can be slightly helped with anti-D's but more that you at hight risk of developing mental illness due to struggling with friendships ect. |
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Member
Member Since Nov 2009
Location: South Australia
Posts: 167
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#71
Quote:
My recovery has been basicly due to medication this if why my new T say no I dont have BPD like my last T said I had. My personaity problems were due to OCD rather than what I truly beleaived I was trying to do. I ruined friendship cause I thought I was protecting people from me by keeping them at a distance. My OCD made me feel like I was dangerous to people physiclly, mentally, emotionally. |
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psyco123
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Legendary
Member Since Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
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#72
Think of meds as something to take for symptoms, maybe. With BPD we have intense anxiety and/or depression and there are meds for that. For the causes, there is therapy.
To me, BPD is like a stunted development. We do reach adulthood, but we haven't developed fully. We have immature spots in our development that affect our perceptions which in turn affect how we deal with things like being alone, being in a relationship, speaking up for ourselves, so many things. We can feel hopelessness and anger intensely and easily and that can lead to depression and anxiety. I can only tell you my history about meds. I feel it is up to the patient to take or not take meds; others feel differently and it might depend on the level of functioning the patient has at the time meds are considered. I took meds for depression for many years. I decided to see what I was like without them because I felt emotionally numb. I wondered what I was like underneath the meds after all these years, so I went off them. I quit smoking and anxiety became unmanagable. I found my way back to therapy (this time researching and finding what kind of therapy and therapist I wanted) and shortly after beginning I read "let me out of here" by rachel riland, her experience with BPD. I thought the diagnosis fit and asked my therapist; she had already decided that BPD fit me although she hadn't yet shared that with me (she doesn't want patients to get too hung up on diagnosis). By sheer coincidence I had chosen a therapist who not only was psychoanalytic, but also specializes in BPD. Lucky me She introduced me to the idea of attachment disorder and that BPD is a disorder of early development. We discussed meds and she is neither for nor against, and stated that they are often helpful during difficult periods of therapy. Anyway, as far as meds go, if they are suggested and are helping, then that's good. If you are not sure about the role of meds in your treatment, I really encourage you to talk to those who provide your care. |
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lou99pop, Psyched
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Member
Member Since Nov 2009
Location: South Australia
Posts: 167
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#73
Quote:
Exactly and thats why started to compleatly disagree with the BPD diagnosies. because for me on I never had intence anger or hoplessness, the mood swing I did have were controled by adressing my OCD issues with the situation or thoughts i was dealing. My last t said BPD need intence group therapy and can take 10y to over some min as it not a chemical imblance causing the negaitve thoughts its the way you were rasied the beleifes that you have in side you the foundations of beleifs I call them from where you really base all you other choices on. Where as me I never wanted to listen to my OCD thoughts I wanted to so badly ignore them and do what I wanted that once the med's had eased the OCD thinking I was able to do what I was alway trying to do in the first place. |
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Poohbah
Member Since Jul 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 1,114
16 |
#74
many thanks for your explanations and everything is answered to my questions. Keep up with your support and sharing too
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ECHOES
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Legendary
Member Since Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
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#75
Dr. Marie Hartwell-Walker (on the ASK page here on PC) answers a question: "What is the best medicine for Borderline Personality Disorder".
http://psychcentral.com/ask-the-ther...lity-disorder/ |
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lou99pop, shezbut
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Member
Member Since Jan 2010
Location: montreal
Posts: 66
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#76
i like the discription,its exaclty me
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Legendary
Member Since Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
Posts: 14,352
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#77
Me too Me too
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Legendary
Member Since Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
Posts: 14,352
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17 1,021 hugs
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#78
Bumping this up because I need to read it today. I think this is such a hopeful description, maybe because it helps me understand it. Hope you have a great day today. |
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Poohbah
Member Since Jul 2008
Location: UK
Posts: 1,114
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#79
Is it possible to diagnose both BPD and Bipolar Disorder at the same time? (I was diagnosed at both different times)
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Legendary
Member Since Aug 2007
Location: West of Tampa Bay, East of the Gulf of Mexico
Posts: 14,352
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#80
lou99pop,
I don't know. I think diagnosing can be confusing and those two diagnoses especially. |
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lou99pop
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