‎19-12-2014 04:21 PM
‎19-12-2014 04:21 PM
I am known to be a stress head and other traits that i thought were just my personalities.. I used to take off and travel for years on end, party, drugs and drinking. Being the wild one!! In between trips I would work, get stressed and leave again.Being 33 now and out of visas I have had to deal with it.
I started to cry lots, not want to wake up, getting into trouble at work, lost lots of weight and was getting advice all over the place that it was a phase and will snap out of it. Then doctors, then anti depressants and the therapy.
2 years on started to feel like i could no longer manage and got drunk all the time and self harm..Things were getting out of control. Well in my head!!!!
Now Im seeing a physchiatrist and and have been diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder and it stems from a lack of emotional development from my mum as a child. Those traits after reading the info seems to fall into place and my relationships are all over the place and if I feel they are going well.. then I'm ok.. Its early days, full on confusion as I'm trying to read and learn as much as possible.
Worst of all my mum knows a litle and she thinks this whiole thing is crap, that the doctors are making me worse and its a waste of money.. People say they have a support system and I know some would have been through trauma.. But not having your mum on your side is a killer.. I keep cutting off friends. Im hoping this support forum helps my world a little and when I know more.. Help others
‎19-12-2014 07:04 PM
‎19-12-2014 07:04 PM
Dear @shanc
Welcome to the forum and thanks for having the courage to join the conversation with such honesty!
I have bipolar, so I don't know that I can be of much help to you specifically at this point - but I'm glad you're here! I do recognise the thread of avoidance, including self-medicating and self-harm. This is so common to many MI sufferers, regardless of diagnosis. The things we do to try and cope are many and varied (and quite understandable). There is a lot on the forum about BPD, you might like to try the search function to help you locate some - here are one or two links to get started.
I wonder if some of the others can relate better to your journey than I can at the moment - via common experiences or diagnosis? @chemonro @isabella @BlueButterfly50 @Ellie @kato @Angel ?
With regard to your mum, I can only suggest that if your diagnosis is BPD that would be terribly confronting for her. That doesn't make it an incorrect diagnosis. (I don't know whether it's right or not, but perhaps it feels right to you - makes sense?) I'm saying this as a mum and as an adult survivor of childhood abuse and neglect. I think if one of my kids was so unwell and diagnosed with BPD I'd be utterly devastated. But I'd also want to do everything I possibly could to help and that would include looking very hard at myself to see whether I had contributed to the illness.
We're here - you can download onto the screen anytime. Sometimes it will take a few hours before getting posted, but if it helps to get it off your chest then go for it. Looking forward to hearing from you again soon. Take care.
Kindest regards,
Kristin
‎19-12-2014 07:40 PM
‎19-12-2014 07:40 PM
Hello @shanc
My name is Rick and welcome to our little hidey hole.
This is an excellent place to be real. Not needing to hide who we are or how we feel at any given time.
Good or bad it's all accepted here. And so are you.
It's always a difficult time when diagnosis is forst made. Many people in our lives including ourselves may struggle with it. Often there is a feeling of blame attached whether tis or not. And there can be unwanted guilt as well.
Humans all very complex creatures. Add challenges and it more complex.
People who have to manage a mental illness are a subgroup unto themselves, in some ways. The strength that I have witnessed and the courage I have seen in people with MI is enormous. Heroic even.
It takes a lot of cojones to go to a forum like this and lay it all out as you have done.
Not simply talking about the condition itself but the other somehow more personal factors as well.
I myself do not try to offer panaceas. There is, as far I know , No magic wand. But I have found a comfort here that I hope works for you too.
Keep posting
Keep talking
Hope endures
Rick
Below are two links. the first is a link to a page concerning your diagnosis
The second is a Govt web page about a suport service who can give you more info regarding your condition, options, family issues , support.
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/mental-pir-about
‎20-12-2014 08:59 AM
‎20-12-2014 08:59 AM
Hi Shanc and welcome to the forum.
Certainly the things you mention strongly indicate BPD. If you have a good psychiatrist, then you're lucky. Firstly, you got a diagnosis and that major issue for those with BPD. For some, it seems to happen quickly, however I belong to a Melbourne based group of BPD sufferers that hold monthly meetings and practically all our members have been very slow to be diagnosed. It's a common thing because of the stigma. I had to practically scream at my GP to tell me what was in the report from my psychiatrist and even then he asked what difference it made to know and went further to add........"You can't change your personality!"
He's old school and obviously doesn't know a lot about BPD. Modern thinking has the personality as a more fluid thing than was first thought, so it may be possible to alter a poorly functioning personality. The woman who runs our group is a classic example of someone who was told they'd probably spend most of their life in locked wards, only to get her life together with the help of an amazing friend and DBT. She's not perfect, but the transformation has been profound. If you're interested, you might like to use a search engine to look up the group. I'd post a link here, but it would probably break the community rules We also have a BPD forum which you might like to join.
Your mum sounds unfortunately typical of the same "old school" thinking as my sister, who is ten years older than me. Mention anything to do with psych and I see the shutters go down behind her eyes. She just doesn't want to know because she thinks all I have to do is get a grip and soldier on. All the while, she has her own set of problems and refuses to recognise them.
As to cutting off friends, yes, that's something I do quite freely. It's the old love/hate thing for me. They only have to say the wrong thing and I go from great admiration to total disdain in a heartbeat. Their words, even though they might not be meant at hurtful, wound like a white hot sword. People just don't think, but then again they're not trained to talk to people suffering BPD. The don't realise that a simple little gesture or word can set of an emotional avalanche.
Oh, one thing too you may not be aware of, your BPD symptoms probably won't match everybody elses in text book fashion. Using a combination of the 9 criteria for having BPD, there are 256 variants, so rarely will you find two sufferers with exactly the same set of symptoms.
Some of the above is probably out of context, but it's the best I can do at present.
Kind regards,
Ellie.
‎21-12-2014 02:43 AM
‎21-12-2014 02:43 AM
‎21-12-2014 09:25 AM
‎21-12-2014 09:25 AM
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