Skip to main content

Supporting A Partner With Borderline Personality Disorder

 


        Borderline personality disorder is characterized by unstable interpersonal relationships, unstable sense of self, and a marked fear of abandonment that displays in numerous contexts: interpersonal relationships, romantic relationships, feelings of emptiness, anger, reckless behavior, and identity crises.

        Borderline Personality Disorder is caused by both nature and nurture. Borderline personality disorder is associated with genetics and biology, suggesting that some people are simply born with highly sensitive nervous systems, making them more susceptible to exhibiting extreme personalities. However, BPD is exacerbated by invalidating environments and traumatic experiences.

        Below are some common questions answered about Borderline Personality Disorder and how it can manifest in and affect interpersonal and romantic relationships.

1) How does borderline personality disorder affect relationships?

        There are a few ways borderline personality disorders affect relationships. The most prominent way is that people with BPD often anxiously try to avoid abandonment. Thus, they may cling stronger than the average person, require more attention, and be more emotional or theatrical in order to receive that attention. People with BPD also experience more intense emotions – thus if they are angry, sad, lonely, or irritable - this will often be placed onto their partner.

2) How can you support a significant other with borderline personality disorder? What are some do's and don'ts when it comes to being in a relationship with someone who has borderline personality disorder?

        An individual with borderline personality disorder has a real or perceived fear of abandonment. Thus, partners of people with BPD can be supportive by affirming and supporting their partner through clear communication.

  • Do be supportive, don’t rescue them  

  • Do validate their experience, don’t feed into the drama

  • Do provide love, don’t cross your boundaries

3) What are some signs you might have borderline personality disorder?

        Are you constantly struggling to maintain interpersonal or romantic relationships? Is this due to perceived threat of abandonment? Do you react to this fear of abandonment by lashing out in anger? Do you have an intense feeling of loneliness, emptiness, or loss of sense of self? Do you engage in reckless behaviors such as substance use, unsafe sex, road rage, or gambling? These may all be signs that you may have BPD. If you are struggling with any of the above or would like more information on Borderline Personality Disorder, seeking therapy is a good first step - please don’t hesitate to reach out!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

When the Weight Starts To Feel Too Heavy

Hey.... I've been sitting here staring at this blank screen for longer than I want to admit. It's funny - well, not funny - but strange, how I can feel so full of thoughts and yet have no idea how to begin putting any of them into words. My mind feels like a room filled with laundry piles I keep meaning to fold, but every time I turn around, more clothes are thrown aside. Eventually you stop trying to organize them, and you just sit in the middle of the mess, hoping no one opens the door.  That's kind of where I'm at right now.  Sitting in the middle of the mess.  Tired. Overwhelmed. A little bit numb. and very, very human.  The truth is... Life has been really rough lately. I mean the kind of rough that makes you wake up already exhausted, like you ran a marathon in your sleep.  The kind where your chest feels tight for no clear reason, and every day you're just trying to convince yourself you're fine enough to function. I've been moving on autopilot - resp...

You Are Not Too Much — You’re Carrying A Lot

If you’re reading this, I want you to pause for just a moment. Unclench your jaw. Drop your shoulders. Take one slow breath in—and let it out gently. You don’t need to be strong here. I know how easy it is to believe you’re “too much.” Too emotional. Too sensitive. Too intense. Too broken. Too complicated. Especially if you’ve spent your life being misunderstood, dismissed, or told that your pain makes other people uncomfortable. But I need you to hear this clearly: You are not too much. You are someone who has been through a lot. There is a difference. When you’ve lived through trauma, your nervous system learns to protect you in ways that don’t always look pretty. When you live with mental illness, your brain processes the world differently—not wrong, just differently. When you’ve had to survive instead of being cared for, your reactions make sense, even if others don’t understand them yet. Nothing about that makes you unlovable. Healing is not a straight line. S...

Borderline Is Loving Like a Wound and Being Punished For Bleeding

Living with Borderline Personality Disorder feels like being born without skin. Everything touches you too hard. Everything hurts deeper than it should. Everything matters more than you want it to. And then people look at you and ask why you’re “so dramatic,” why you “overreact,” why you “can’t just calm down.” As if you wouldn’t give anything to feel less. BPD isn’t a personality flaw. It’s not being manipulative. It’s not being toxic for fun. It’s not attention-seeking. It’s a nervous system that learned, very early on, that love is unstable and abandonment is inevitable. It’s what happens when attachment and trauma collide and set up permanent residence in your chest. It’s loving like your life depends on it—because somewhere deep inside, it always has. People love to describe BPD from the outside. Mood swings. Fear of abandonment. Intense relationships. Impulsivity. Emotional dysregulation. Cool. Clinical. Neat. That tells you absolutely nothing about what it’s li...