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."
How does a person with borderline personality disorder behave
Patients with borderline personality disorder feel intense fear or anger when they believe they have been ignored or rejected.
For example, they may feel panicked or angry when someone significant to them cancels a meeting or is a couple of minutes late.
Personality disorders are long-term, unhealthy patterns of thoughts, emotions, and actions.
In addition, of all of them, the one that tends to be the most misunderstood is borderline personality disorder (BPD).
At what age does BPD appear
Indeed, a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder can occur during adolescence or early adulthood.
As early as 12 years of age, if symptoms persist for a year, a teenager can be diagnosed with BPD.
Symptoms reach their peak at the age of 18-19 years.
What does borderline personality disorder look like
The inner world of a person with borderline disorder People are exhausted by a feeling of emptiness for a long time.
Sometimes it is replaced by anxiety or impulsive outbursts of anger, and then by remorse for one’s uncontrollable behavior, self-flagellation and a long depressive episode.
How to distinguish BPD from neurosis
The main symptomatic difference of this type of disorder is the patient’s prolonged abnormal behavior.
While in many other psychopathy periods of instability alternate with remission, in the case of BPD the patient behaves destructively over a long period of time.
Previously, we talked about the signs of emotional burnout.