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How To Cope With Your New Borderline Diagnosis

May 25, 2016 Emily Eveland

How do you cope with a new borderline diagnosis? Read this helpful guide about accepting, and coping with, a new borderline personality disorder diagnosis.

Coping with a new borderline diagnosis can be challenging. Here's a step-by-step guide on how to accept your borderline diagnosis and start healing.

If you’re anything like me, you probably left your intake appointment feeling a mix of confusion, resentment, anger, and sadness. In fact, I think most of us go through a grieving process every time we’re presented with a new diagnosis.

But a diagnosis isn’t a death sentence, especially not in the case of borderline personality disorder (BPD). Remember that your symptoms were already present. The only thing that’s changed is the name.

A New Borderline Diagnosis Guide

1. Take a Deep Breath

When I was first diagnosed as borderline, my emotional intensity was through the roof. I hated the therapist who gave me the diagnosis. I hated that I would have to join a dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) program. I hated that I wasn’t normal.

In retrospect, it would have done me a lot of good to take a few deep breaths.

After receiving your borderline diagnosis, give yourself a day or two to practice self-care in whichever form feels best. Take a bubble bath, read, go for a long walk, or bake some cookies. Try repeating the mantra, “I am okay. I am safe. Nothing bad is happening in this moment.”

It’s true. Nothing bad is happening. Your diagnosis is just a name.

2. Educate Yourself on Borderline Personality Disorder

So you’ve been diagnosed with borderline personality disorder (BPD). How do you cope with that new borderline diagnosis? Take a look at this.BPD is not a disease, but a name for a cluster of symptoms that typically arise in sensitive people with trauma histories. Knowing this has been extremely helpful for my own process. Understanding the parallels between trauma and BPD can alleviate some of the shame around the latter diagnosis and reiterate that the symptoms are not our fault.

Diagnoses are given to us for insurance purposes and as a way to figure out the best treatment options. You are not your diagnosis. Try replacing the thought, “I am borderline" with “I have been diagnosed with BPD, but it doesn’t define me.”

3. Stay Away from Books and Websites that Perpetuate Borderline Stigma

There’s a lot of harmful information about BPD in the world. People who have had bad experiences with borderlines are often very vocal and tend to make sweeping generalizations about the lot of us. It's not fair and it's not right, but it's our current reality.

As with any illness, people hone in on only the most extreme cases of BPD. Have you ever run a Google image search for a standard skin rash? You're usually met with photos of oozing skin, swollen blisters, and peeling scabs. Obviously, not everyone with hives looks like they just waltzed with a swarm of bees. Similarly, not everyone with borderline personality disorder acts like Angelina Jolie in Girl, Interrupted.

Turn to people who understand and empathize with the diagnosis. A DBT therapist is a good bet, or you can check out one of the many blogs or memoirs written by borderline sufferers.

4. Look into Treatment Options for Borderline

Though the symptoms of BPD aren't your fault, seeking help will, ultimately, be your responsibility. It's a bummer, but it's worth it.

The most popular treatment for BPD is dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT), which is broken into four distinct modules: mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotion regulation, and interpersonal effectiveness. Each module targets specific elements of borderline personality disorder.

If DBT doesn’t feel right, you can check out its cousin, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Those who have acute or prolonged trauma can opt for a trauma-specific therapy, such as somatic experiencing (SE), eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), or exposure therapy.

The time it takes to recover depends on both the severity of your symptoms and your dedication to your specific treatment program. I graduated DBT within a year, but some are in the program for two to four years. Everyone is different, so recovery processes naturally vary in length.

5. Have Hope

Have hope to cope with your borderline diagnosis. If you're willing to look at yourself, make some adjustments, and proceed courageously, your life will continue to improve. Trust me.

Find Emily on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Google+, and at her blog.

APA Reference
Eveland, E. (2016, May 25). How To Cope With Your New Borderline Diagnosis, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, November 21 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/borderline/2016/05/how-to-cope-with-your-new-borderline-diagnosis



Author: Emily Eveland

Rachel
July, 23 2019 at 8:32 am

I just want to say thank you for some positive and hopeful research and experience sharing of BPD. You are are real pioneer and warrior and I was so pleased to hear all your kind words. I now want to be part of the new wave of educated, humanistic, kind people who want to turn this awful stigma around BPD around. More power to you.

jane
December, 27 2018 at 12:04 pm

thanx for ur article, i just wanted to point a small note. The character that has BPD in Girl, Interrupted is played by Winona Ryder, not Angelina Jolie (who is a sociopath). Even though Winona's character is not a good portrayal of BPD it is also not as off as it is in other Hollywood movies. Just thought you should edit it so people dont confuse sociopathy with BPD!

sammy surimal
April, 13 2017 at 10:00 am

I have been diagnosed with BPD,I was watching some YouTube videos about my illness and I watched one by a guy who was very aggressive and hurtful and generalised all BPD sufferers the same,these kind of videos are harmful and hurtful,and nonsense.but I'm learning about it by going on sites like this helpful one here.

Rontgen
June, 30 2016 at 12:35 pm

I have this and many other things, try to just take one minute at a time and find something to be proud, happy, accomplished, pleased or grateful for. I find my dogs are my main saviours in my darkest moments although I have family too. My dogs never judge me, they are always loyal and loving no matter what happens.

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