I posted in response to this too. People from normal families don't understand how destructive abuse is and how important it is to get away and stay away. Abusers will take advantage of any situation they can to inflict pain. |
Nope. No empathy here. To me, it's a lot like the difference between having empathy and sympathy for someone who commits suicide, versus someone who commits a murder-suicide. Neither are ok, but if you're struggling, just you, within you, pretty much alone in you, I can have sympathy. I feel for that. I would want to support and help a person who is struggling within. But to act out your pain on others? To abuse others? To burden others? To bring others down with you? Hell no. Not an iota of sympathy. People with BPD aren't struggling alone - it is characteristic of them to project, through abuse (not necessarily physical abuse) onto others. Manipulation is abuse. Lying to hurt others is abuse. People with BPD hurt others tremendously, with an emotional pummel after emotional pummel. I do not have empathy for abusers. |
Not all BPDs are abusers and not all abusers have BPD. |
A significant characteristic of being BPD is using manipulation, lying, and volatile anger. Perhaps a person with BPD may be in denial that these things hurt people around them. But denial is also a common characteristic of the disorder - they are only able to see the self-hurt, but totally disregard/overlook the hurt/abuse inflicted on others. It's there - they just may not see it. But I agree that not all abusers have BPD. |
PP's have asked about inner experience of borderlines, and by empathy I meant empathy in the sense of being able to imagine a borderline person's inner experience. That may or may not lead to sympathy. I don't have "sympathy" for abusers, murderers, etc, but I can (sometimes) imagine the mental state that leads a person to abuse; i.e., empathize. The alternative is to divide humans into good and evil, which distorts the reality of the human condition. But, yeah, you have to take care of yourself and others you're responsible for, even if you might be able to understand/empathize with abusive behavior. |
+100. I had a brief relationship with a man with BPD who then made my life hell for several years; I was very often in fear of my life. I finally moved out of state just to get away from him. No sympathy, no empathy, not a shred of anything but rage that this a$$hole screwed up my life for so long. |
| I don't think dividing humans into good and evil distorts the reality of the human condition. If you have experienced pain at the hands of someone for years on end, then you know there are good and bad people in the world. Clearly there are -- you shouldn't have to experience it yourself to see it's the truth. |
| Is a part of BPD the ability to appear normal to people who are not being victimized? |
For some, absolutely. Many are charming, seemingly normal, who lead active social and professional lives. A challenge for BPD is having healthy inter-personal relationships, so it is generally only those in the "inner circle" who are harmed (or most harmed) by them. |
Count your blessings you didn't have a baby with him, like I did. |
You also don't understand that their reality is different than yours. They don't/can't see things the same way as someone without the disorder. Their brains don't work the same way. I wonder if some are thinking they know people with borderline personality disorder when the actual problem is something else. Bipolar, severe depression, sociopathy even. |
That's what I think too. You people are describing sociopaths and narcissists and calling them BPDs. |
+1 Once one understands BPD, one realizes just how needy these people are. They are not consciously manipulating people like narcissists and sociopaths. Yes, they lie, but do so to protect themselves, not to hurt others like the other personality disorders do. Their state is quite pitiful and well summed up by the title of the book: "I Hate You, Please Don't Leave Me." A statement like this would not be made by a narcissist or sociopath. Many of them do go into therapy, but drive their therapists to the edge because they call them incessantly with all their insecurities and suicidal inclinations. In DBT the therapists for a BPD person must be available for them 24/7. This is hard work. Being the partner of a BPD person can be very difficult, and I agree that in many cases the best course is to just leave because the drama and upheaval can be overwhelming. That said, there are ways one can learn to manage the BPD behavior to avoid eliciting the extreme reactions. They need a lot of validation, and that can be exhausting. Parents have no choice but to do this with their BPD children, but partners are more than forgiven for just opting out. |
Yes, in my case my reality is different -- because you don't have any idea from the outside what the dynamic was within my family. You would see the abuser as a great person and member of the community. You would not see the abuse. So you would think it odd that I cut off my family "for no reason." But you would be wrong.... |
| Is it possible for a normal person be be in a long-term relationship with someone with BPD (or a narcissist or a sociopath)? Or are they also ill to stay for so long, supporting them and basically validating them as they harm others? |