If this does not fit, maybe you have been misdiagnosed.
No, I haven't been misdiagnosed. Not one bit. But this is how generalized statements aren't true as it may been true for your daughter and those you have known but it isn't true for all as I belong to all and it isn't true for me.
She often catches herself when being unreasonable and steps back and cools off before reacting.
I do that as well but you also stated:
A great book "Walking on Eggshell" says a lot about living with a BPD person. It is impossible to have an equitable relationship with a BPD untreated.
So now I am confused. Are we speaking of treated or untreated? The OP in the thread isn't specific and most of your posts you are referencing untreated but now advise she is treated.
When untreated I was a tornado in the night. Treated and that isn't the case. My emotions are much more stable, explosions much less common if done at all, DBT being worked. I am like two different people.
However, I still qualify for the diagnosis.
My point is that we either have to stand up for mental illness and deal with others reactions, or keep it to ourselves.
Stand up for mental illness, all of them but mostly the ones that I have, is what I am doing. Here and everywhere else.
What I don't get is where this came from. And your last statement didn't say we need to stand up for or keep it to ourselves, it is stated to keep it to yourself and those you know well unless i wanted to take a hard stand for the cause. To me, that feels like taking a stand is being discouraged.
Just how it feels to me. What you meant may be a different story.
See, the issue with all of this is education. "Perception is reality", meaning that how we see something becomes what is real, reguardless if it is or not. Reguardless if it is true or not. Change perception and you change reality.
I will not keep BPD to myself. I will not excuse bad behavior but I will explain and educate. BPD has been literal hell for me. It has felt 100 times worse for me then it did for those around me (per their account). To always feel emotions at their most extreme isn't fun. To be sent into such an extreme tailspin over something so small isn't fun. To explode at the drop of a hat isn't fun. Then to cut because there is "something wrong with me" and because I made yet another person leave. I made yet another upset isn't fun. And to be seen as a bad person because I have BPD (something I cannot help and got because of trauma done to me. Much like PTSD) isn't right.
Stripped down, BPD is no different then PTSD. They are both mental disorders and I have them both due to trauma. PTSD causes a lot of symptoms that make me hard to deal with. Head on over to the supporter section to see that. So my question is, what makes them any different? Why the understanding for PTSD but not for BPD? Why is BPD the "monster of mental illness"? I have yet to get a satisifactory answer to that. One that I cannot counter anyway.
BPD is talked about, even earlier up on the thread, like ALL BPDers are to be avoided, like we are psychopaths or something, though many of us are treated and manage the symptoms well. Not to the point of being undiagnosable yet but stable and managing. But yet, once I say I have BPD, even though my symptoms are now being managed, people run for the hills. Why?
Anyway, I am writing for more food for thought and education.
When getting treatment and practicing skills, who needs to know you have this label at all.
Everyone as being so stigmatized, being silent, most especially if you are being treated and are actually great to be around, is adding to this "monster" stigma. I can be fun to be around but have BPD. The person I am around thinks (like earlier in the thread) "oh I avoid everyone with BPD because of XYZ" but you don't meet XYZ. So silence keeps the person in that mindframe when education doesn't. Education helps them to see "oh, maybe not
everyone with BPD are like XYZ and should be avoided". Thus why there are so many BPD education videos on youtube.
I don't go around telling everyone and anyone but I don't make it a point to keep it to myself because it may make people uncomfortable. Perception is reality and so if I can change perception and then thus reality for one person, I will do so.