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Borderline Personality Disorder Today MENU
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Story #35
I feel like I've come home.
I've struggled all my life with being different. I'm 56 and finally, I
think I've discovered what is wrong with me.
I've always been different - still am - and I could never figure out why
people hated me on sight. I try to be nice, but the only people who were
nice back were those who pick up stray dogs and stray people and "love"
them for their own selfish reasons "See what I did, I saved you and
now look what you've done to me" - I had lots of those kind of "friends."
I finally cleared them all out of my life and now I'm left alone most
of the time, but at least free of the hassles of "friendship."
When did this all start? I'm not sure, but I had a very high fever when
I was a child and I when I remember that illness, it's always from somewhere
near the ceiling. I can see my parents working over me trying to get my
fever to break. I survived, but I think my life changed in those moments.
Lets go down the criteria for BPD:
1. Frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment - my ex-husband
was the worst possible mate for me, yet I pursued him long after he left
me and long after he had established a relationship with someone else.
I made all kinds of excuses for my behavior, and he (probably BPD also)
would feed me just enough line to keep me coming back. I had many "imaginary"
lovers as well, and I fanaticized them finally joining me in reality and
then leaving me. Ah the agony! I always felt left out - when I was about
7, a girl from school offered me a ride with her mother. There were 4
other girls in the car too. The mother stopped at an ice cream stand and
bought all of them a cone, but not me. I knew in that moment that I was
crap. I still feel the sting 50 years later. I died a bit inside every
time I was the last one picked for baseball or when Santa called my name
last.
2. A pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal relationships characterized
by alternating between extremes of idealization and devaluation. Where
do I start. I don't recall any relationship, whether it's the paperboy,
the coffee lady at work, my husband, kids, siblings, parents, that I didn't
idolize one day and despise the next. Well maybe not the next exactly,
but it never took long. When I first saw the book, "I Hate you, Don't
Leave Me" I didn't need to read it, I already knew I could have written
it. (It's on my book list by the way)
3. Identity disturbances: markedly and persistently unstable self-image
or sense of self. I don't even know what this one means - in order to
understand it, I would have to have some concept of its opposite. How
can I describe the "fractured" image I've had of myself. Until
I started reading this stuff on BPD, I didn't know that how I always thought
of myself was different. I thought everyone had this same disjointed sense
of themselves. I had no sense that I could influence my own life. I've
been accused of being arrogant - thinking I was above the law or the rules.
Not so. I thought so little of myself that I didn't think I mattered enough
to have the rules apply to me. Does that make sense?
4. Impulsively in at least two areas that are potentially self-damaging
(e.g. spending, sex, substance abuse, reckless driving, binge eating)
Does all of them count? Let's see.
Spending. I declared personal bankruptcy 12 years ago, I refinance every
few months trying to keep ahead of the bills. So far, I've managed to
keep them all paid, but my whole paycheck goes to paying bills. Then I
have to scrape to eat. I'm probably going to be offered retirement in
a couple of years - if I work the rest of my life, I still won't be able
to pay it all off - and no matter how hard I try, I can't seem to will
myself to stop spending.
Sex. From a very early age, I remember having the need to pleasure myself
and when I finally got a man to screw me, I was hooked. I'd sleep with
anybody who would have me. Sleeping around wasn't self-destructive enough,
I had a twisted moral sense that using protection meant that I had "planned"
the episode (this was in the early '60's remember) Well, my moral sense
was satisfied, but by not planning, I gave birth to 4 illegitimate children
by 4 different men. I gave 2 of the children up for adoption and raised
the other two. Except for the last one who later became my husband, all
the men disappeared pretty soon when they found out I was pregnant. After
my husband left me and moved in with someone else, I still encouraged
him to share my bed whenever he could get away. My lovers rarely wanted
my company in the early part of the evening but would call me when they
realized they weren't having any luck in the bar. If I'd had a better
sense of myself, I would have at least charged them and helped with my
spending (that was a joke)
Substance abuse. I drank like a fish - I never tried to stop because I
like being drunk. It gave me a bit of freedom from my ugly personality
and made me more acceptable. Probably the fact that I was always willing
to buy the liquor helped with my acceptance (see spending above) I finally
quit drinking when my youngest child was a baby. My husband would no longer
share his liquor with me (he needed it all to feed his own hunger). After
stopping drinking, I turned to prescription drugs. Drugs were free under
our government drug plan and my doctor never caught on that I was in his
office nearly every week with some complaint or other. The pills that
had some effect I took, the rest I threw away. The government's free drug
plan eventually ran out of money - I feel a bit of guilt for the part
I played in it.
Reckless driving. Does chasing a car at high speeds through a residential
neighborhood with my sister and our three children in the car count? The
other driver cut me off at an intersection or I imagined he did. Space
doesn't allow me to describe all the reckless driving that I've done.
Binge eating. Well, I haven't binged and purged, but I've sat and eaten
a whole chocolate cake by myself. I used to buy some odd flavor of ice
cream so nobody else would eat it and I could have it all for myself.
I would keep baking in the freezer and then eat it frozen not wanting
to wait for it to thaw out. I can't stand to eat in front of others because
they would be aghast at what I'm eating, and I would be ashamed to show
them. I've kept shoveling food into my mouth when my stomach is protesting
and unswallowing it. I was once caught with a bag of chocolate on my desk
and a co-worker reached for a chunk. I reacted and slapped her hand. I'll
never forget her stunned reaction. I get anxious if it's my "snack"
time and someone else is here - that means I have to eat sensibly and
can't have a triple serving of ice cream or cake.
5. Recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures, or threats, or self-mutilating
behavior. Suicidal. Constant thoughts of suicide and two serious attempts.
Once after a couple of years on some anti-depressant when I had surgery
and had to go off them cold-turkey. I came home from the hospital, had
a row with my father-in-law and then locked myself in the bedroom and
swallowed a whole bottle of pills. When I asked my husband why he didn't
take me to the hospital, he said "you were trying to kill yourself,
why would I try to stop you." He left within a week. I never tried
again, but the thought was always with me. Eventually I realized that
I didn't want to be dead, I just didn't want to live like that any more.
6. Affective instability due to a marked reactivity of mood (e.g. intense
episodic dysphoria, irritability, or anxiety usually lasting a few hours
and only rarely more than a few days) Well here's where I deviate from
the "norm." If that said "rare episodes of happiness rarely
lasting more than a few minutes" I'd fit right in. I once told a
doctor that I'd been depressed all my life and he said that was impossible
- hah! what does he know. I've also been diagnosed with Bipolar and chronic
depression, so that could account for some of the dysphoria.
7. Chronic feelings of emptiness. Words fail me. I don't know how to describe
this gut-wrenching feeling. We recently had a mini family reunion of my
siblings and as I sat with them listening to them reminisce, I had the
oddest feeling that I was eavesdropping on some other family. I couldn't
relate to them at all. They all seem to love and admire each other - I
don't even know them. Love? what's that.
8. Inappropriate intense anger or difficulty controlling anger (e.g. frequent
displays of temper, constant anger, recurrent physical fights) It would
take less space to tell you about the few times when I wasn't angry. I
can get in a rage over the slightest thing and it lasts for hours and
sometimes days. Just the other day, I had a fight with a manager and had
to take a couple of days off work to cool down. Even after a few days,
I found myself in such a rage that had he been present, I would have ripped
his face off. I used to feel justified in this anger, but now it scares
me. Does that mean I'm getting better? Only fear and common sense have
kept me from physical fights, although I had my share when I was younger
and more agile.
9. Transient, stress-related paranoid ideation or severe dissociative
symptoms. Paranoid I can sure relate to. My name was omitted from the
invitation list for an important meeting and I raised such a stink about
it, that I'm not sure I have a job to go back to. Even now, I'm sure it
was a deliberate slight, even though I also think that none of the individuals
involved are capable of forming a plan, let alone conspire to deliberately
harm me. Dissociative symptoms - not in the sense of having other personalities,
but I often just "disappear" sometimes for several minutes.
I think my body stays where it is, but I'm not in it. I once blacked out
during a job interview for a promotion. I was too embarrassed to ask what
I said, but needless to say, I didn't get the job and from the snickers
of my co-workers, I gather that I put on quite a display. I often black
out in meetings, and when I come too, I create some kind of disturbance
until I can once again wrap my mind around the topic at hand.
Well that should convince my pdoc. As I said earlier, I've been diagnosed
with bipolar and on meds for it. The meds seem to be working, but I still
think I could be doing better than I am. It's been about a year and a
half on these meds. I think it's time for a change - and I need to pursue
this idea of BPD. As Dr. Heller says, we need all the diagnoses and we
need to have them all treated.
Writing this all down has been very therapeutic for me. Having the diagnostic
criteria to refer to has made it easier and all your stories gave me the
courage to attempt it. Thank you for being here.
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