The concept of BPD (Borderline Personality Disorder) therapy is an attempt to provide treatment that helps the patient deal with emotional issues and the difficulties caused by a difficult childhood. Borderline Personality Disorder is characterized by intense feelings of anger, aggression and instability and frequent mood swings. It is also common for people with BPD to experience self-isolation and feelings of intense shame and guilt. The feelings of worthlessness, the need for control and helplessness can actually paralyze the patient and prevent them from leading a normal life.
Patients suffering from BPD (Borderline Personality Disorder) are desperate to quit their dangerous behaviors, but they often feel powerless against their disorder. This often leads to the belief that their condition is out of their hands, and they will just have to live with it. This kind of thinking is typical for people with BPD, as is the fear that if they seek treatment they will lose all they have worked for and be labeled as a failure. In addition to these fears, many patients are reluctant to seek help because they believe they deserve to be treated harshly or wrongly. These feelings often lead to a delay in getting treatment, and in some instances, the disorder gets worse. Treatment should not be delayed simply because you fear what treatment might do to you.
In order for you to benefit from BPD therapy, you must first understand what it is and what it does. The first ten steps of CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) work to help you learn how to recognize your own patterns of emotional reactivity, which is the core cause of all your problems. You will then learn how to change your reactions to your environment and how to manage your thoughts and feelings so that you do not continually alienate yourself to others. Once you have learned how to manage your thoughts and emotions, your therapist will teach you how to create healthy relationships outside of your intimate relationship. You will learn to cut off boundary crossings that lead to rage, how to get your emotions under control rather than letting them roam freely, and how to keep your loneliness at bay.
People with borderline personality disorder (BPD) often experience great difficulties in making healthy choices. This is because they often have unrealistic, unhelpful, and/or inconsistent expectations about how their lives should be lived. In most cases, people with BPDs also experience serious nutritional deficiencies. Because these individuals need to have a very strict nutritional diet, BPD therapy can often provide significant improvements in both their mood and their eating habits.
Those with BPDs may sometimes feel like they are not in control of their lives. CBT is often very helpful in teaching clients to take control of their emotions, feelings, and behaviors by being able to effectively communicate with themselves and with others. With this skill, clients learn to stop themselves from engaging in behaviors that are counterproductive to their goals of quitting smoking, losing weight, getting healthy, and etc., and instead adopt healthier ways of dealing with their emotions.
In addition to learning how to control themselves, CBT may teach clients to understand the relationship between emotions and behaviors. For example, if you have an emotional problem such as feeling worthless or like you are worthless to yourself or others, then it will be very difficult for you to stop acting that way. If you think about it, this makes sense. However, your inability to act in a timely manner will actually increase the time it takes for you to quit smoking or lose weight. Similarly, if impulsivity is a problem in your life, then you might think that stopping binge eating or excessively exercising on a regular basis is going to help you stop impulsivity – however, in reality, the opposite is true.
dialectical behavior therapy (CBT) addresses both emotional dysfunctions and maladaptive coping behaviors. This type of therapy is widely used in treatment for borderline personality disorder and other mood disorders. For example, one of the most common problems encountered by CBT clients is impulsivity, which can range from a minor annoyance to an impulse that causes great physical harm. Through CBT you will learn to recognize your own behaviors and how these behaviors affect others. Once you have learned how you are interrupting and undermining others, you can work on ways to modify these behaviors so that they no longer conflict with others.
While there has been much research done on how dialectical behavioral therapy can benefit people with borderline personality disorder, it is important to note that this form of therapy is very different than traditional therapy. It does not use punishment-based, rigid techniques that control or limit emotions. Rather, CBT works with you to figure out your thought processes and how they are influencing your life. If you are interested in exploring treatment options for borderline personality disorder, it is important to speak with a qualified therapist who can provide you with the treatment you need.