Skip to main content

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST

thank you @Former-Member, yes I can see my husband doing things like that xx

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST

I would call it something different and really want to educate a lot more professionals in a large number of settings about it not just mh/health care.. courts/fmaily courts/teachers etc. I have had the label used against me without any knowledge of what it actually means for me or how it affects me. One distinguished person wrote that 'it is highly unlikely that someone with bpd can be an effective parent' without having any knowledge of me/my parenting and was shown to be very wrong but it was incredibly damaging at the time...

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST

Hi @Treve

 

It's true that people generally only show the parts of their personalities that will please most of the time

 

My opinion is that when two people interact that one might be manipulative but the other person may resist that manipulation

 

Eg - my son tried everything to manipulate me - I learned Tough Love and as hard as it was I refused to be manipulated but yes - my behaviour did change with whatever his behaviours 

 

Dec

 

 

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST

I'm sorry I wasn't able to contribute to this convo - WA time difference meant I couldn't make it. I see I've got ten pages to catch up on!

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST


@NikNik wrote:

 

How can a person be doing so well with their BPD and then, out of the blue, they’re on a downward spiral again?


Observation from a carers perspective here for what it is worth...

After a really bad year in 2014 (2 hospital admissions) my darling was actually doing ok. Then the last 8 or 9 months she has been the worst she has ever been with 5 admissions to hospital. I believe that this has been triggered by loosing contact with so called friends. (She was no longer at their bec and call after bub arrived and they have basically avoided her for no reason). This has brought to the surface fears abandonment and she basically imploded. So life events specific to individual fears can cause a relapse. 

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST


@bookish wrote:

All the more reason for me to try, @Phoenix_Rising.  Smiley Happy

I guess manipulative behaviour could be defined as negative deliberate behaviour to make another person react in a certain way.

Standing at the counter of a shop so that someone will serve you is not manipulative.

But if you were standing at the counter, saying in a really loud voice ‘Wow, the service here is SO SLOW!’ so that someone will come and serve you—that would be manipulative.

Or another example:

You’re waiting in the queue at a taxi rank so you can go home. Not manipulative

But if you pretend to limp like you’ve got a really sore leg so that other people will let you jump the queue—that would be manipulative.


@Former-Member...but then we come right back to the clothes alight example. If a person accidently sets their clothes alight, they may run into the street screaming - a negative deliberate behaviour to make a person react in a certain way. If a person is in extreme emotional pain, they may engage in a deliberate act of self harm and then run into the street screaming - a negative deliberate behaviour to make a person react in a certain way. Help seeking or manipulation? I am strongly leaning towards @NikNik's suggestion that we are using different terms to describe the same thing.

Standing at the counter complaining about the slow service is less socially acceptable than standing there quietly, but both are equally actions engaged in to elicit service. One is an appropriate help-seeking behaviour and one is a maladaptive help-seeking behaviour...but they are both help-seeking behaviours. Pretending to limp so you can jump the cue is lying. In this instance the person is pretending to be in pain when they really aren't. But haven't we established that people with BPD engage in the acts that others call "manipulative" due to genuine pain/distress/fear of abandonment? Thus I think this example is disanalogous.

Yep, I am really leaning towards @NikNik's idea. Smiley Happy

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST

How does the title 'borderline personality disorder' sit with you? Would you call it something different or are you comfortable with it?

Unfortunately, I don’t think it matters what it is called. There will still be a huge amount of stigma attached to the diagnosis—especially from ill-informed health professionals.

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST

Got to run, children need me

Thank-you @NikNik and everyone for tonight, will go back over everything again tomorrow with interest. 

D

 

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST

Yes, @Phoenix_Rising — I think @NikNik is spot on. Smiley Happy

Re: Topic Tuesday // Living with BPD - your questions answered // 3 Oct. 7pm - 9pm AEST

Observation from a carers perspective here for what it is worth... @Determined, I am very interested in hearing from you about this from you as a carer point of view xx