Borderline personality disorder affects nearly 1.6% of adults in the United States.
Borderline personality disorder is a type of personality disorder in which a person experiences periods of tension, unstable mood and behavior, and an altered "sense of self."
Genetic predisposition and environmental influences.
The disease can be inherited, but more often borderliness occurs as a pattern of behavior and reaction to external stimuli that is unconsciously borrowed from parents or loved ones.
Patients with this disorder have difficulty controlling their anger and often behave inappropriately and become very angry.
They express their anger with caustic sarcasm and bitterness or angry tirades, often directing it at loved ones as retribution for neglect or abandonment.
A person with BPD does not know what it is like to live normally.
It seems to him that stress comes one after another, he lives in constant negativity, overcomes breakdowns and obstacles.
This is a vicious circle - distorted tunnel thinking and devaluation of one’s own achievements “confirm” that the whole world is against him and there is no way out.
BPD is not a disease that can be cured once and for all.
This is a special mental structure, and therapy is aimed at reducing and subsequently controlling symptoms.