Borderline Personality Disorder | POSITIVE Traits

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  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @lc72691
    @lc72691 Год назад +1767

    1.Increased empathy
    2.Flexibility
    3.Bolder decision making
    Saved you 10 minutes and 30 seconds

    • @shornsheep3118
      @shornsheep3118 Год назад +490

      Thanks, that was bold, flexible, and empathetic of you.

    • @kyliemack1131
      @kyliemack1131 Год назад +26

      @@shornsheep3118 😂

    • @joan.nao1246
      @joan.nao1246 Год назад +10

      @@shornsheep3118 🤣 yup, everyone is a damn expert huh

    • @blydnhvghn
      @blydnhvghn Год назад +7

      @@joan.nao1246 including you apparently ll

    • @LourdesGzz
      @LourdesGzz Год назад +70

      The bold decision-making has been the worst of the worst for me, always bad decisions that affects the course of my life negatively and make me live full of regrets...
      starting very young

  • @lopirobinson1991
    @lopirobinson1991 Год назад +1089

    I'm a writer. As a writer with BPD sometimes the passion the illness can bring can pull some brilliant content from my imagination. I also have a pure empathy with my characters. Also changing my personalities so much allows me to write diverse and complex characters.

  • @sarahjanecleary1801
    @sarahjanecleary1801 Год назад +639

    All the people I know with BPD are carers, nurses, therapists, spiritual, and animal & nature lovers. Their empathy and love is so deep, it truly does come with it a gift.

    • @JonahJayTaylor
      @JonahJayTaylor Год назад +19

      Thank you for the comment.

    • @mr.fettesq.7705
      @mr.fettesq.7705 Год назад +32

      To bad they are scumbags in relationships

    • @mariellenkapbela9805
      @mariellenkapbela9805 Год назад +26

      I’m sorry this is your experience. We are truly sad, and caring people. I get so sad when I see these comments she says about us.

    • @f4ust85
      @f4ust85 Год назад +35

      All the people I know with BPD cant keep a job because of fights at workplace and are gifted with such deep love and empathy that they serially cheated on their partners or terrorized them with tantrums and traumatized their kids for life.

    • @Xand3rCha0s360
      @Xand3rCha0s360 Год назад +49

      @@mr.fettesq.7705 mine with my boyfriend is stable, has been for the whole 3 years and we're still stable despite mine being severe. thanks for the fearmongering tho not like people like you make us look like monsters to even doctors or anything :) please go do something else other than spread misinformation on something you don't even have thank you

  • @penelopefp
    @penelopefp Год назад +241

    Can we please have more conversations like this?! Now that mental health is becoming less taboo to discuss, we need more conversations about the positives and less negative finger pointing. When those who support us understand more about our value, in spite of our challenges, it helps them see the investment in learning about us as a whole person.

    • @karlenelovesyou
      @karlenelovesyou Год назад +1

    • @Southghost5997
      @Southghost5997 Год назад

      There is no positive. All this bullshit about being able to love hard is nonsense, it's love bombing and they'll fall in love with anyone who gives them the slightest bit of attention. Their empathy is non-existent as they take everything to the extreme and DON'T understand what others feel. Bolder decision making means risky behaviour, like saying yes to drugs or unsafe sex.

    • @christinewarren9660
      @christinewarren9660 4 месяца назад

      Honestly people already see your value. Maybe when they exhibit boundaries it becomes harder for you to see that?

  • @amybreunig1214
    @amybreunig1214 Год назад +317

    I think the abandonment issue is the fear of feeling the overwhelming grief of losing people and losing themselves because their boundaries have been demolished by the overwhelming needs of others who didn't care about their boundaries.

    • @gaurs230
      @gaurs230 Год назад +16

      Yes exactly that is exactly how I feel so deeply the chronic shame and deep fear of abandonment

    • @amybreunig1214
      @amybreunig1214 Год назад +6

      @meri.dilkidhadkan be good to yourself. Self care help you to heal.

    • @Xand3rCha0s360
      @Xand3rCha0s360 Год назад +6

      this is very, very true
      part of that is it can also turn in on themselves if someone "leaves" so severely it just demolishes their sense of self

    • @yvonnelee8464
      @yvonnelee8464 Год назад +8

      I lost my beautiful, funny, creative daughter almost 3 yrs ago after her long-time boyfriend literally ran away and her rebound boyfriend wanted to distance himself from her. She'd also had a very recent abortion b4 rebound boyfriend wanted the break. This was all too much for her and she accidentally overdosed, leaving behind a devastated 13-yr old dtr and bereft mother, father and brother. This was all compounded by the isolation and loss of friends and employment during the covid lockdown. She tried therapy for the BPD, both individual and group (twice), but after covid she stopped seeing her therapist. We are still grieving, esp as the anniversary of her death and the holidays approach. Be good to yourself if you are suffering from a mental illness. Know that those who love and need you are just a call or a visit away and are more than willing to be there for you.❤

    • @amybreunig1214
      @amybreunig1214 Год назад +2

      @@yvonnelee8464 NY heart goes out to you and your family.

  • @traceycharlesworth2510
    @traceycharlesworth2510 Год назад +255

    I live alone with BPD and I'm disabled due to diabetes neuropathy and fibromyalgia. I have lived on my own for almost 4 years. I function with everything very well. I'm very positive about life now.

    • @Bankzsyy
      @Bankzsyy Год назад +5

      Proud of you!

    • @Schiffon
      @Schiffon Год назад +12

      I, too, am alone with disabilities and I’m very happy 💕

    • @Majotsukai
      @Majotsukai Год назад +7

      This is so amazing to read. I hope you're doing well. ☺️

    • @LurkingLinnet
      @LurkingLinnet Год назад +1

      livin inspiration

    • @bevanbuckwheatshea5520
      @bevanbuckwheatshea5520 Год назад +1

      Good on you and all the best to you.

  • @dr.florence
    @dr.florence Год назад +132

    As a non-BPD loved one, I can say my person has an immense capacity to connect to art. He can stand in front of a painting for hours and be totally
    absorbed and touched in a way that seems quite magical and otherwordly. He is also gregarious at the beginning, and asks questions and is curious about people when he feels safe and relaxed. You could drop him anywherr with anyone and he will just start a conversation. It's really beautiful to see. I would say this is connected to BPD and the ability to feel deeply.

    • @DesiGalCrochet
      @DesiGalCrochet Год назад +4

      This describes my experience very well also. Thanks for pointing this out.

    • @LostNFound432
      @LostNFound432 Год назад +6

      Very interesting! Im trying to figure out if I should get evaluated for BPD and this sounds a lot like me. Im wondering though, does he keep many long-term relationships? I make friends w everyone within minutes but then cant maintain a relationship for the life of me and idk if thats a me thing, a bpd thing or just the fact that I have kids and dont have the time to keep up w people. At this point I avoid having any friends whatsoever bc its always just a matter of time before I isolate myself anyway.

    • @Sarahwithanh444
      @Sarahwithanh444 Год назад +3

      It’s so refreshing to see someone make a positive comment about their BPD loved one ❤ I’ve seen so many negative degrading comments out there. There are still good humans out there. Thank you for being one of them 😊

    • @PhoenixFeathers
      @PhoenixFeathers 8 месяцев назад +3

      Sounds like love bombing to me. It’s a tad ott. And ‘charm’ is often associated with narcissism. I mean… standing in front of a painting for *hours*? Magical? Otherworldly? Have you put this person on some pedestal? He is gregarious “at the beginning”… When does he stop being gregarious? And the asking of lots of questions… narcissists do that to gain info about others without revealing info about themselves.

  • @busearis22
    @busearis22 Год назад +191

    i really get happy when i hear "empathy" on this video. Because sometimes i felt like i understand another's feelings like anybody cant do, i know everybody think they are empathic but we know, we has a another level of empathy, almost like our skin is transparent, we are feeling every mood changing around us. And it can be sometimes very hard like when so many troubled persons around you, you feel every feeling that they felt. So its good to hear that it's positive, from a professional's words.

    • @fancynancylucille
      @fancynancylucille Год назад +8

      Exactly. Similar to the sensory issues in autistic people, who might hear a train that is miles away long before anyone else in the room. The buzzing of an overhead light is aggravating. It is a gift that is seen as a symptom. Empathy (Jung pointed this out for introverts, so maybe there is a high rate of this problem for introverts) can have you seriously out of synch with what is going on at the group level. Having access to training to know how best to handle the gift is what is needed. Like little Hercules learning to manage his superhuman strength. Enough with the damned labels already.

    • @tnix80
      @tnix80 Год назад +1

      I see it in her, I thought I felt deeply. It's no contest.

    • @sharaepp8255
      @sharaepp8255 Год назад

      I thought I was a witch when I was a kid, looked into it when I was older and found I have bpd. And I am a cancer. The description of cancers is similar to what we suffer through with bpd 😅

    • @Unconditionalrabbit
      @Unconditionalrabbit Год назад +2

      No, you don't have extra empathy. Everyone has empathy. You just lack a sense of logic when it comes to interpreting others emotions

    • @saraschaefer8801
      @saraschaefer8801 Год назад +4

      @@Unconditionalrabbitwe aren’t born with empathy, believe it or not. It has to be taught so no, not everyone has empathy unfortunately!

  • @catherinekeddy2816
    @catherinekeddy2816 Год назад +81

    This has been so good for my self esteem. I've never heard of anyone saying anything positive about BPD.

    • @WildandFree4
      @WildandFree4 3 месяца назад +3

      There's so many good traits ❤

    • @mikehunt1528
      @mikehunt1528 2 месяца назад +1

      @@WildandFree4 Outnumbered by the bad i'm afraid.

    • @LilahGilgenberg
      @LilahGilgenberg 2 месяца назад

      @@mikehunt1528 fuck off youre spreading misinformation

    • @gadggo
      @gadggo Месяц назад

      @@mikehunt1528its interesting that its always men who are insisting in the negative instead of trying to understand

  • @TheFakeTomBrady
    @TheFakeTomBrady 8 месяцев назад +70

    I had two-year relationship with a young lady who has BPD. The time I spent with her and will forever be the most important and most transformative experiences of my life. While it was some kind of crazy roller coaster. I will never ever feel a connection to a person the way I felt her again and I don’t want . She had ways of teaching about life that nobody else could. It really led me to experience the full spectrum of being a human. The downs of the relationship incredibly painful and low. But the high made it worth it. Both of us were Pisces… We had a connection they were so deep we barely had to verbally speak to each other. Connection often felt euphoric like a drug. Not only we could see this, but the people around us also could see our connection we were eventually moved to another state together in which we would sign a lease and she would leave me a month later without notice. Gone. We eventually did talk again, but she was done.. she knew just to be a good thing for me and she was right leaving was a good thing, but I will forever embrace the time we spent together and nothing will ever replace it

    • @kevinaalders5439
      @kevinaalders5439 4 месяца назад +17

      This is so toxic . You are talking about a drug. You are talking about trauma bonding. You can have the connection without the hell. Honestly, why so many thumbs up???

    • @tentinquarantino7457
      @tentinquarantino7457 4 месяца назад

      ​@@kevinaalders5439agreed, I've just got out of one like it and it is intoxicating. Like, literally. You have withdrawals. I get where this person is coming from but oh my god it's so misplaced

    • @tentinquarantino7457
      @tentinquarantino7457 4 месяца назад +1

      RUclips deleting my comments!! :")

    • @dharma6525
      @dharma6525 3 месяца назад

      ​@@kevinaalders5439 becauqe its beautiful

    • @user-sn4ue6ex4b
      @user-sn4ue6ex4b 2 месяца назад

      ​@@kevinaalders5439yes it is totally toxic relationship , and i think he need a therapist help because he still attached to her
      BTW i thumbed up for the incredible way he described his feeling

  • @dr.najmunriyaz
    @dr.najmunriyaz Год назад +71

    Great Topic, As a mental health professional if I may say, what I have seen treating thousands of clients wiht mental illness. Many of them are in a gifted range, but due to Trauma, parental ignorance, the rigidity of the system, need to fit in the norm, many of them see a need to hide, and are ripped off of their self-esteem, hence leading to depression, anxiety, etc.,

    • @622niki
      @622niki Год назад +11

      I agree. I have been diagnosed with BPD and I have never felt that my personality was dangerous to others or manipulative. Yes I've struggled through many of the symptoms of BPD. I feel like everyone struggles with something in their life. I've also felt that I wish more people were empathetic like me because it would make the world a better place. I feel like a lot of "so called-mental illness" is just people being different from what our society deems acceptable. Which frankly, to me seems to be a worse and worse selfish person that is uncaring for their fellow human being.

    • @KimLan-gc3fk
      @KimLan-gc3fk 4 месяца назад

      😢

    • @Imperial_Lizardgirl
      @Imperial_Lizardgirl 2 месяца назад

      Suicide ideation...

    • @sylviatownsend410
      @sylviatownsend410 25 дней назад

      I can relate to that. I was very depressed and suicidal in Jr. HS especially but also in HS. If I had had easy access to a gun I might have committed suicide or tried to. I was never really gender-conforming though I tried for my mother and my husband, who was a narcissist. Thank heaven I left him after 15 years.

  • @Mischa337
    @Mischa337 Год назад +48

    What a good idea to look at positive traits of a disorder. You are so often in pain because youre told that everything about you is wrong. What a rush of empowerment and relief and it gives energy to be mindfull about alarming signs in the bad times. ❤
    Dont give up allright?

    • @earthmama9597
      @earthmama9597 Год назад +5

      At the end of the day we all are made up of "good" and "bad". No one is 100% good and no one is 100% "normal". Some people are naturally better at or quickly learn how to organize or even hide their mental/emotional clutter. Many children are taught these skills when they were young while others had to learn these skills on their own. At the end of the day what counts the most is that we are still learning how to play our best hand with the cards we have been dealt!

    • @Mischa337
      @Mischa337 Год назад +1

      So true ❤

  • @noonas1
    @noonas1 Год назад +45

    This clip was so much needed. I was diagnosed in 2014 at the age of 39 after a misdiagnosis for 15 years. 9 years ago I was at my worst, several SI attempts ets, BPD cost me so much in relation to my marriage, my home, my career etc. after intense ongoing therapy 9 years later I am I different person, yes I still have the traits but they are no where near as intense and I am able to identify things like if I’m splitting etc. My stressors and dramatically reduced and I’m not triggered as much. I have so much to give and I am proud of who I’m becoming. Thankyou so much for this video.

    • @Xand3rCha0s360
      @Xand3rCha0s360 Год назад +3

      STAY STRONG!!! Undiagnosed BPD here (going in for diagnosis soon) I struggled so much with mine through my teens and it was tough- Still struggling with mine but a far better person in relationships and eventually will be able to work and drive! Keep going, you're doing so well! You got this!

    • @AnotherTruth
      @AnotherTruth 8 месяцев назад

      @@Xand3rCha0s360 I am so happy for you and many many congratulations from my end. It’s interesting with the driving thing. It’s one of the reasons why I’m not actively driving because I am. I’ve been concerned for years about the impulsivity. However, my therapist and I are planning to come up with a driving strategy so that if I’m feeling rough in a certain way that I kinda do a checklist. I wish I could develop such an app for the phone just to calm down and stuff before I drive but I think that I am going to do some DBT around driving just so that I can be safe on the road and ensure that I’m safe as well as the other drivers are safe because the last thing I want to do is be in an emotional upheaval and acute meltdown and then would never do that anyway, but I do not wanna ever put anybody else at risk because people deserve to feel safe on the road

    • @AnotherTruth
      @AnotherTruth 8 месяцев назад +2

      I am so happy for you and excited to hear your progress. Keep up the great work.

  • @thedonzo506
    @thedonzo506 7 месяцев назад +11

    Im 29 and just realizing i have this. Always knew something was wrong with me as i dont react to situations like others do but i enjoyed listening to the lady

  • @todescove
    @todescove Год назад +16

    I have bpd and no therapist for it. These videos are a big help. Thank you for making public content like this.

  • @JustTryingToBeAGoodDad
    @JustTryingToBeAGoodDad 22 дня назад +7

    As someone who now suffers from severe C-PTSD because of the psychological abuse imposed by my BPD person, I think there should be warnings here for people potentially getting involved with a person with BPD. If the person has accepted their diagnosis and is active with their therapy, some positives can come about. Yes, I agree with the video here. I know a young woman seperate from my person who has it, accepts it, and treats it. She's handling her BPD responsibly. But, if the person is in denial - which almost makes them more like a narcissist in how they abuse others - stay as far away as possible. My life is a wreck because of the BPD person I got involved with. I now have trouble leaving the house, let alone interacting with other people. Even my body is physically altered because of the C-PTSD. I just urge caution. If they are in denial, stay far far far away!

  • @devon6623
    @devon6623 Год назад +92

    I gotta say OCD, BPD, NPD and CPTSD have a lot of overlapping symptoms. I can feel like I overreact sometimes but when I get angry or upset it’s because I feel invalidated. When someone tells you that you are too sensitive you get a confusing view of am I actually over sensitive or are they just unwilling to accept their behavior as hurtful you know

    • @jenniferdunks824
      @jenniferdunks824 Год назад +2

      Yes

    • @breadgarlichouse
      @breadgarlichouse Год назад +1

      It all comes from trauma!!

    • @iremu460
      @iremu460 9 месяцев назад

      @@breadgarlichouse You don't necessarily have to be traumatized to have OCD. And seriously what are those symptoms that overlap between OCD and BPD ? They are completely different disorders that have separate symptoms and brain network abnormalities

    • @breadgarlichouse
      @breadgarlichouse 9 месяцев назад

      @@iremu460 because every copes different with traume

    • @iremu460
      @iremu460 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@breadgarlichouse I repeat, you don't need trauma to have OCD. It is not always a trauma reaction.

  • @johnatanskyzer6152
    @johnatanskyzer6152 Год назад +44

    Hello, I've been diagnosed 6 years ago, probably had been for longer. It is so refreshing to finally hear all this. All these traits I have, and in positive periods in my life have been sooo helpful and really well received by others. This video really made my day... Alcohol and drug abuse have certainly been detrimental to my life, but these traits have definitely helped a lot!

  • @reservoirdeathcult6021
    @reservoirdeathcult6021 8 месяцев назад +7

    I know I only speak for myself, but I was kinda relieved when I found out getting better doesnt mean getting rid of my BPD. Even with all the pain and suffering, I kinda like my BPD. It feels like a friend that I just need to learn how to interact with.

  • @Bryan-nb1zv
    @Bryan-nb1zv Год назад +283

    My fear of abandonment doesn't cause me anger or devaluation. I get sadder and kinder in fear of abandonment

    • @pewdeliaweasley9623
      @pewdeliaweasley9623 Год назад +25

      Same. I have overpleased so much in my life. I try to be more mindful about that though.

    • @goblin1226
      @goblin1226 Год назад +12

      My fear of abondonment even includes my animals. I haven't been diagnosed with bpd directly tho, i have personality disorder not further specified, but i do have many bpd traits according to my psychologist. but yeah same

    • @Bryan-nb1zv
      @Bryan-nb1zv Год назад +8

      @@goblin1226 I was diagnosed bipolar but doctors thinking ADHD maybe. but my mood changes quicker than most bipolar disorders do. So I think it might be BPD unfortunately but I really think I have it and knowing I might helps me a lot more with coping. Very common misdiagnosis between the two

    • @truescotsman4103
      @truescotsman4103 Год назад +3

      I was abandoned by my parents and siblings when I was a teenager. I don't have BPD. I dated someone with it though and it was hell. I don't think she was abandoned but maybe so.

    • @goblin1226
      @goblin1226 Год назад +2

      @@Bryan-nb1zv yes, they tend to get misdiagnosed a lot. Hope you'll find out what it is soon.

  • @worthyofradness
    @worthyofradness Год назад +11

    I recently entered the mental health field and have been surprised at how many clinicians are still stigmatizing BPD to the extent that they do. Thank you so much for putting this out there. It means so much for so many people.

    • @earthmama9597
      @earthmama9597 Год назад

      What's ironic is they are not as "normal" as they like to think they are! Lol

  • @Persto1208
    @Persto1208 Год назад +40

    Love this. These positive traits are what makes me so attracted to my partner. Reinforcing the positive helps bring hope to become more grounded during the harder times

    • @williamswift2625
      @williamswift2625 Год назад +4

      Agreed! I’m likewise attracted to my partner for all of these reasons and more👏🙌

    • @Southghost5997
      @Southghost5997 Год назад +1

      For the harder times just walk away

  • @isabelapersil
    @isabelapersil Год назад +10

    Omg... I needed SO MUCH this video right now. When I stopped being afraid to look at the symptoms of BPD, even though I had been already diagnosed, I never came across a video talking about the bright side of having this disorder. I was hating myself today all day long because I knew for a fact that I could handle a situation on a way better and healthy way, but I just couldn't take off of my chest that DEEPLY SADNESS that a "little" trigger made me feel.

  • @JessopsBezar
    @JessopsBezar Месяц назад +3

    I think this is such an important aspect of healing. Once I recognized BPD traits in myself, I began to see those same traits in my father and my daughter. It made me realize how unhealed BPD traits have likely been passed down through generations in my family. Instead of labeling them as 'bad,' I now see them as 'unhealed,' which has helped me approach this journey with more compassion.
    The genetic component is so important to understand, and I’ve had to figure much of this out on my own through my healing journey. Seeing a discussion about the positive aspects of BPD is so refreshing because these have actually become central to my growth. From my experience, the deeper the wound, the greater the potential for transformation once it's healed. It’s like this: when life is bad, you just want the badness to end, but when the badness is gone, life doesn’t just feel neutral-it feels exponentially better. That’s the beauty of healing.
    Thanks making this video!

  • @louisfiol1004
    @louisfiol1004 Год назад +13

    I just found out a couple of months ago about BPD through a friend. It sounded like me. So I researched online and found these videos. I hadn't been in therapy for my depression anxiety and PTSD since before the pandemic and my life has been falling apart. I haven't had a steady job for more than a year in decades. So I scheduled an appointment with the VA psychiatrist and she said I more than qualified as BPD. I had my first appointment last week with a BPD specialist and am so excited to start DBT. I'm 56 and I have hope again. This is spot on. At 40 I went back to school and I started singing theatre and Opera. I started my dream of singing professionally for local opera companies two years ago and that fell apart this year. Mostly due to attendance inconsistency, procrastination and memorizing lyrics. I don't know if those are BPD issues but it causes so much stress in my life. Anyway, I digress. When I started contemplating suicide again I knew I needed help. Even with only 1 session last week I feel like I can conquer the world. Not sure how long that will last as I have huge highs and huge lows. But these positive traits have been very helpful in my life as a military medic, as an actor and as a singer. They are my superpower 💪. I would like a good online and or local BPD community because the group therapy at the VA will probably be 6 months before they start a new one. Any recommendations please? 😊Oh and thanks to MedCircle for these videos. They have helped me get my diagnosis and have hope again. I live you guys and have a huge man crush on the interviewer ❤😂😊

    • @WynneL
      @WynneL Год назад

      Congratulations! 🫂The subreddit r/BPD can be pretty nice; I've dropped by there a bunch of times because I think AvPD has a lot of sensitivity-overlap with BPD. I've so far never met somebody with BPD that I didn't connect with, possibly due to the fact that C-PTSD is such a link between people with PDs.

  • @girlsaroundtheGlobe01
    @girlsaroundtheGlobe01 Год назад +121

    As a diagnosed BPD patient, positive behavior we do have 1. We Care a lot, due to our sensitivity and emotional disorder we tend to see what others going through and tend to give a lot of emotional support and empathy. 2. We are very LOYAL because we are scared to abandoned and left alone.

    • @sunbeam9222
      @sunbeam9222 Год назад +7

      How does loyalty and fear of abandonment work tho, when someone fears abandonment so much they end up leaving as soon as perceived sign of abandonment is felt. How is that being loyal hence commited to someone? My bpd ex partner has had lots of relationships. He left every single one of them abruptly. He sure considers himself loyal tho, I 'm just not sure how.

    • @Southghost5997
      @Southghost5997 Год назад +3

      1. You care a lot, so you abuse people who show the slightest inconvenience or disagreement
      2. You are loyal and therefore engage in risky behaviour with strangers and are known to cheat easily (I suppose being loyal to one rando at a time counts)

    • @AnotherTruth
      @AnotherTruth 8 месяцев назад +3

      I am not loyal to anybody. However,l have a long-term friendship of over 30 years with a wonderful man. We are a bonded pair. We’re very much like brother and sister. The relationship is strictly platonic. I think that’s what makes it work because there’s no expectation of intimacy. Our love for each other is more of a spiritual bond that transcends any other type of relationship. I can’t describe it, but we don’t put each other on pedestals. I don’t think that he is without his problems. So I don’t put him on a pedestal. I care too much about him to do that.he’s not my favorite person because they say we have a favorite person. There are people I love if we don’t get along. We can’t be in the same room with each other but in a supportive capacity.

    • @danab172
      @danab172 6 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@sunbeam9222not everyone with bpd have tons of relationships. Some stay in one their whole life. When are people like you ever going to get it through your head that not everyone or everything in life is limited to your personal and limited insight or experience?

    • @sunbeam9222
      @sunbeam9222 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@danab172 chill out, I can talk about MY experience as much as I want. You're not part of it, you don't have to be rude or defensive :)

  • @Fletchers2024
    @Fletchers2024 2 месяца назад +3

    How refreshing to look at mental illness (colloq.), etc. in this way?!
    I'm already thinking differently.
    Thank you very much!

  • @assassinvishal007
    @assassinvishal007 Месяц назад +1

    Glad to here this , I have been a bpd for around 10 years now , people around me have critically benefitted by my company. When i do well I do very well. It's been a good ride .

  • @AtlantaGirl2012
    @AtlantaGirl2012 Год назад +9

    As a person would be BPD, this really made me feel better. I never realized that my pulse tivity lives have boldness, my being in tune with my emotions led to increased empathy other positive straight. I appreciate you going through this because it really has helped me and encouraged me in my journey through BPD.

    • @mr.fettesq.7705
      @mr.fettesq.7705 Год назад

      Except BPD people aren't in tune with their emotions. Not even close!

  • @haileywatson5822
    @haileywatson5822 Год назад +49

    I absolutely loved this. I would love to see this done for every mental illness.
    My heightened sense of empathy negatively impacts my life constantly.. but at the same time it’s what I love most about myself.

    • @Amy-gp7ek
      @Amy-gp7ek Год назад +6

      I could have written this 🙌

    • @LM-yn5xq
      @LM-yn5xq Год назад

      Same ❤️

  • @azorius9082
    @azorius9082 Год назад +63

    I was diagnosed with borderline about a year or so ago but it had been suspected for a while but because of my age they waited to diagnose and all throughout my life iv been told i have an excessive amount of empathy but its always episodic. If im happy with you its like my mood depends on you and how your feeling but as soon as something happens and i get mad at someone all of it disappears and i say and do the most terrible things to people i can think of and wont think twice about it. it gives me a headache sometimes constantly flip flopping back and forth between infatuation and wanting to spend my life with someone and hating everything about them and wanting to hurt them physically and mentally

    • @lesleybrown1583
      @lesleybrown1583 Год назад +2

      Jesus your maker CAN heal!Watch Randy Kay on you tube!Be blessed and saved!

    • @Ace.0.0.0.
      @Ace.0.0.0. Год назад

    • @chanel82593
      @chanel82593 Год назад +4

      This is why this overlaps with narcissism.

    • @Brian-zc2ip
      @Brian-zc2ip Год назад +1

      I've been on the receiving end of the flip flopping and I started to wonder at one point was all the gushing and what seemed like empathy, a form of fawning, a covert manipulation, probably subconscious and then when the bpd sufferer feels in doubt about the person the rage grows because they've done all this beautiful stuff... and now this!!!

    • @mr.fettesq.7705
      @mr.fettesq.7705 Год назад

      Ypu people deserve nothing short of indifference and loneliness. Those abusive traits u have trumps anything good about you. Making you horrible. People with BPD should be alone and will always inevitably be alone because of their abususive ways.
      Your "splittng" causes real harm and pain. Pain that should be reflects on you. You deserve that pain. Your partners don't and they deserve better. A lot better then you

  • @htmc2022
    @htmc2022 12 дней назад +2

    The only way to remove Mental Illness stigma is to see the Whole person - this VLog emphasizes the good sides of people with BPD - Gp’s and Medical Specialists need training in empathy for patients who have Mental Illness comorbid with the physical illnesses for which they are being treated. Most Dr’s don’t see the WHOLE PERSON, with their good & bad traits while exhibiting the symptoms of their multiple diagnoses. THANK YOU for stretching the minds & hearts of Doctors and patients.

  • @Kelli5555
    @Kelli5555 Год назад +9

    Presenting the positive aspects of autism would be greatly appreciated.
    I am neurodivergent along with two of my kids.
    It’s very healing to hear these conversations. Thank you!

  • @moonlightreveries1459
    @moonlightreveries1459 Год назад +151

    Yay 😁 stay strong borderlines. We are special don’t hate yourself. Love yourself and know your fire 🔥 is strong. Just don’t burn yourself. We are good at that. Because we are perfectionists and too hard on ourselves. We are empaths. So have some empathy for yourself too ❤

    • @leeannweiss5959
      @leeannweiss5959 Год назад

      @@Keepingitfr do you have a lot of 12th house in your natal chart? Im thinking I’m borderline. Libra sun Aries moon sag ascendant with a stellium of Scorpio in 12th.

    • @Pinkcandy777
      @Pinkcandy777 Год назад +2

      Ty means a lot

    • @moonlightreveries1459
      @moonlightreveries1459 Год назад +1

      @@Pinkcandy777 🍋 🙏

    • @deedeejones3188
      @deedeejones3188 Год назад +4

      I’m struggling with my BPD so I really appreciate reading this. ❤ Thank you! “Taking a deep breath”

    • @moonlightreveries1459
      @moonlightreveries1459 Год назад +2

      @@deedeejones3188 😎 let’s stay strong. It can feel overwhelming but only if we pay attention to it, and thinking that we will be this way forever we won’t! I’m doing DBT THERAPY soon just getting my life together as of now, new apartment and such, but hang in there! Love you !! ❤️

  • @JoshuaRosaaen
    @JoshuaRosaaen Год назад +30

    Thank you for this glimmer of hope...I have been looking for something that identifies the positive things about these conditions. In framing these things in the way you presented I felt like this was something to help identify where on the scale I was feeling at a particular moment. Please do more and thank you.

  • @ishmamnaveel2198
    @ishmamnaveel2198 Год назад +12

    I have Quiet BPD + ADHD = Huge win for the world.

    • @gemg1610
      @gemg1610 13 дней назад +2

      I've been diagnosed with both. Hard to tell them apart at times as there's so much overlap.

    • @ishmamnaveel2198
      @ishmamnaveel2198 13 дней назад

      @gemg1610 yup, I was also initially diagnosed with Bipolar disorder 1, Generalized Anxiety Disorder + ADHD. There now I believe were the symptoms of general BPD emotional disregulation and black & white thinking based manic/depressive episodes

  • @gordonmaul271
    @gordonmaul271 Год назад +9

    Seeing any of the symptoms with greater dimensions will be helpful. I have a dear friend with BPD whose 'impulsivity' was virtually always a positive force. So much so that I re-named it 'enthusiastic spontaneity'. I imagine it caused problems for him at some junctures in his life but the effect on me was always refreshing and delightful. He was a great influence!

    • @seabreeze7378
      @seabreeze7378 Год назад +1

      Thank you for your comment. Perfect example of when we can use different words in this crazy English language to put a healthier slant on an otherwise defeated negative stigma

  • @Shee-h1c
    @Shee-h1c 10 месяцев назад +4

    love this. being diagnosed both shattered my world and explained SO MUCH. it meant I could learn why I did and felt what I did, which definitely helped w my self esteem. I love that you guys are looking at the positives. and I definitely know that the right people will want to learn to understand what people w BPD experience vs shame them for their overwhelming traits which has helped give me a standard to hold people to in order to keep them around 😅

  • @FranciscoJavierSalinasLópe-s2u
    @FranciscoJavierSalinasLópe-s2u Год назад +3

    Love this shift, it is vital to know the dangers but also, recognizing how channeling positively this troubling hardhips can turn into flourishing traits. I feel like we will fluctuate as in, the negatives always being present, but we can manage it and this new paradigm where we see beyond the dangers, seems to me, like the right way to go. Truly loved this

  • @andy_mac
    @andy_mac Год назад +4

    I love this. Every person deserves the empathy, compassion, and connection with at least one person who wants the best for them. As a counsellor my focus is positive psychology and strengths-based help, so this interview has really made my day 🙂 Thank you.

  • @LauraBeatriz-te4vy
    @LauraBeatriz-te4vy Год назад +6

    I'm not sure if you're both aware of the impact videos like this can have in neurodivergent people's lives. I really, really appreciate this. Especial thank you to Dr. Ho. Really, really mind-blowing what you said.

  • @Kelli5555
    @Kelli5555 Год назад +9

    When I was studying social work in college I focused on strength based work.
    I find labeling to be so limiting. Human beings are complex and we all operate on a spectrum.
    I love this presentation. Thank you so much!

  • @cfhtx3295
    @cfhtx3295 Год назад +7

    Once I became "self aware" of my actions and thoughts and started thinking about thinking in a sense it has allowed for less impulsive reactions and sometimes me just literally doing the opposite of my first instinct in some cases. For example walking away from a fight took me 34 years but I finally turned the cheek and it felt both disgusting and great at the same time. Having been told way back by my a school counselor I'm broken beyond repair I find turning the cheek a significant win. Never actually said that out loud

  • @ilja7127
    @ilja7127 Год назад +4

    Amazing. Thank you so much for making this content. Was bit nervous to watch it first after seeing one-sided/low quality BPD related content on yt honestly speaking (from channels other than this). You guys seem to never dissapoint when it comes to this, even very complex subject matters you seem to nail and you leave us feeling de-stigmatized. Perhaps people can become opening up to seeing the disorder much more wider and realisticly. This would not only help people with the disorder but the people who suffer along; people can not accept what they do not understand about this illness. If they dont, they will never have full awareness of what they are disclosing as "untreatable". This made me very happy

  • @monicasusaeta8116
    @monicasusaeta8116 Год назад +2

    I appreciate positive information, about a disorder that overshadowed, my entire life. My mother who has BPD, and other mental illnesses, was a person, who made very good impressions, on many people. She was a physical therapist, who cared for the elderly. She loved them, and had very intense grief, when they would pass away. After she retired, she no longer had purpose, and turned to alcohol. There were many terrible life experiences, with her disorders, but I could always say that she was a good person, with amazing empathy.

  • @amysinger2201
    @amysinger2201 Год назад +21

    LOVE THIS!!! I read an article on Medium a few months ago about the positive aspects of autism and it changed my life by giving me a new approach to my 'problematic' behaviors. It's not about eliminating the symptom, it's retraining adaption! I think this is the genius of trauma work, you do this because it helped you, now it doesn't so lets do something different. No shame, just retraining, reshaping, adjusting, and accommodating. My dad has OCD and turned it into a highly successful career as a forensic accountant! My autism balanced my cPTSD and helped me persist through a TBI and complete my PhD. How do we harness the limitation for the good? By first realizing it is not a limitation, just a tool we didn't know now to use or didn't know we had.

    • @suekelsey1329
      @suekelsey1329 Год назад +1

      Truth 👍

    • @cleanlytidy7733
      @cleanlytidy7733 Год назад

      Autistic people aren’t defined by the abuse they inflict on others.

    • @joan.nao1246
      @joan.nao1246 Год назад

      Thank you for sharing, Amy! Very helpful 😁

    • @Schiffon
      @Schiffon Год назад

      Congratulations on working your wonderful brain! xo

    • @karlarichardson652
      @karlarichardson652 11 месяцев назад

      That's wonderful! 😊

  • @WhitePelicansareReal
    @WhitePelicansareReal Год назад +14

    Thank you for saying that we have something positive to contribute! ❤

  • @Emexperiencinglife-
    @Emexperiencinglife- 6 месяцев назад +3

    Another thing we fight are social media influencers that start channels based upon their negative experiences with someone that has BPD. I have seen one older man tell people "Avoid women with BPD at all costs. They will destroy your life" after he told his story about a woman he had loved that had BPD. It was sad that he chose to deal with his brokenheartedness by bashing an entire group of people online.

  • @kaystevo4796
    @kaystevo4796 Год назад +9

    As someone who has BPD thanks for doing this video cause all my life I've been judged negative and lost people or had them walk away without trying when getting to know them.
    But the one's who do know that I am really empathetic and caring and a extremely loyal and honest and trustworthy person I just have really bad sides like everyone else but at least I have a real reason for some of my behaviour.
    Some people are just Dicks without a diagnosis ❤

    • @williamcartedge5583
      @williamcartedge5583 7 месяцев назад

      No everyone can only do as their brain commands

    • @youtubesucks898
      @youtubesucks898 4 месяца назад

      I like that. Dicks without a diagnosis. Lol

  • @chelseybergh2681
    @chelseybergh2681 Год назад +4

    I absolutely love this! And is 💯 accurate as a person who has been diagnosed with BPD! I have excelled in a career that I had no schooling and in the beginning new nothing about! And I have worked my way up the ladder naturally as a Behavioural Interventionist and Community Support Worker because of my empathy of individuals, many non verbal, with special needs or on the autistic spectrum and enhancing the quality of their lives in a huge way, which does not make what I do a job to me and leaves me feeling so rewarded in so many different aspects. Thank you so much for sharing this🙌🥰💝

    • @stacywhite3907
      @stacywhite3907 Год назад

      You are one of the lucky ones. I'm so happy for you. Stay True!!!❤❤

  • @Bitter-sweet97
    @Bitter-sweet97 7 дней назад

    I love your videos about BPD. They helped me to work on myself and understand myself as well. But more importantly you don't demonize BPD and helped me with the feeling of shame. There's still a long way to go but I do feel some steps in the right direction have been made. Thank you so much for your work.

  • @TaniaSeabock
    @TaniaSeabock Год назад +25

    This is such a great video. So needed.
    My ex husband has BPD and although he can be very difficult (& honestly scary sometimes) ... he also has many good traits.

  • @123zigzag1231
    @123zigzag1231 Год назад +2

    I have been suffering from BPD my whole life. Recently, I tried microdosing with psilocybin. It has changed my life. No more death ideation, no more dysmorphia anxiety or depression and I don't eat compulsively anymore. I get it online

  • @crina193
    @crina193 Год назад +6

    I believe my mother had BPD and at times , esp when i went through important stages/events of my life she was extremely empathetic and helpful, like when i went to the university, or married, or had my babies or when i moved into my new house. Other times she would explode out of no reason i felt was potent enough to trigger that reaction...
    Now that she s gone, i cherish the times i felt her by my side.

  • @natimanicole2736
    @natimanicole2736 Год назад +1

    This was such a great video. No true diagnosis over here but say “Im self-diagnosed OCD” all the time and while I’m watching this, my boyfriend is saying “Hey that sounds like me” while listening to BPD conversation and it’s not the first time he said that. This videos help with understanding a better approach to daily issues and differences.

  • @robbiesmoonmusic
    @robbiesmoonmusic Год назад +4

    A strengths based perspective is soooooo motivating and empowering. Please do more of these!

  • @minervvva
    @minervvva Год назад +1

    thank your these kind of videos. Sometimes is so hard not to blame all the bad things around me to my bpd... now i can think of the positivity i give to the world

  • @kristinarask1807
    @kristinarask1807 Год назад +51

    I Think we are stigmatised as bad, because we sensed other’s emotions clearer than our own. And can easy activate the therapist own shadow sides. So you have to be extremely aware of your own self, to be in a healing position towards a person with borderline personality disorders ❤

    • @New_Zealand_Music
      @New_Zealand_Music Год назад +1

      Thank you 🙏❤️

    • @tiantian6956
      @tiantian6956 Год назад +1

      YES!!

    • @HillbillyYEEHAA
      @HillbillyYEEHAA Год назад +4

      It's stigmatised because some of you are bad. Some of you are great people, but let's not pretend that there's not alot of people with bpd abusing people.

    • @kristinarask1807
      @kristinarask1807 Год назад

      It’s always your own responsibility to heal. But a therapist has the ‘setting’ to clearly show that is yours and what is the therapist. So only if the therapist has enough courage to see her/ his own shadow, can the healing process. Or buildings of new trust in relationships. To hate borderlines is so easy, but to understand why you hate us/them is you key to understanding you self deeply.
      Actually there are no bad people in the world, there are people that has strong convictions that leads them to do bad actions.

    • @kristinarask1807
      @kristinarask1807 Год назад

      @@HillbillyYEEHAA you have to allow someone to abuse you to be abused. I don’t mean this in a provocative manner, but unless someone has a gun to your head, you are free to leave them behind 🙏🏻

  • @philmecup
    @philmecup Год назад +2

    Thanks so much for the video. My god, I’ve felt so overwhelmed lately, and it’s good to see the flip side ❤

  • @Jessicamarra1
    @Jessicamarra1 Год назад +3

    I love this. These are def all positives for me. When I got diagnosed with BPD officially these are some things that I noticed about me before the diagnosis that went hand in hand with some of the worst symptoms of it. This is great for them to do

  • @Ziminy13131
    @Ziminy13131 Год назад +1

    So thankful to have a person with depression talking about this.

  • @lmart16
    @lmart16 Год назад +3

    As someone who is OCD and shows BPD traits, I'd say I'm flexible in trying new things bc my belief is you don't know if you dislike something unless you try it, sometimes multiple times (scientific method), but when it comes to work related things, I really like to plan ahead and have some structure to help.

  • @cunningtricksterrabbit
    @cunningtricksterrabbit 9 месяцев назад +1

    As someone with BPD thank you I do enjoy seeing the positive traits of my personality disorder.

  • @shawn771
    @shawn771 Год назад +4

    I have only watched half of this, but just half to say I Love this conversation and Thank-you!!! You should continue with this as a series😊

  • @Ellendiel
    @Ellendiel 5 дней назад

    Thanks!

  • @mariahmoosymoose470
    @mariahmoosymoose470 Год назад +3

    As being a person with BPD I am extremely empathetic and truly overly loving and kind to people
    My husband will always tell me I have a huge heart and in my happy days I’m just a warm lively person who just wants to feel free
    So we both focus on doing things on a day by day basis and be in the moment to keep me having longer happier days
    I have my episodes like today so we know and expect it to never be perfect
    My dreams and insights are truly strong
    My husband will say I’m very in depth on wanting to talk about anything and look at things with an open mind
    Art is another way I deal and manage my BPD same for journaling
    The more we can treat us as people and not a stigma the better off at further learning of this very intense disorder

  • @amybreunig1214
    @amybreunig1214 Год назад +2

    Thank you for focusing on positives, because we become what we focus on.

  • @andreacatura3382
    @andreacatura3382 Год назад +5

    Such a healthy way of looking at these conditions.

  • @Katelovesanimalsmost2134
    @Katelovesanimalsmost2134 7 месяцев назад

    Dr.Judy, thank you for making this. BPD has such a stigma around it and is looked down on . Everyone is different and shouldn't be stereotyped. I have BPD and am not dangerous or inherently toxic, and I never tell people I have it. I believe a great deal of us take out anger and negativity and direct it inward at ourselves , not outward at others and we suffer greatlt in silence .Great video .Anyone out there suffering from this, you are unique and awesome. Stay strong ! ❤

  • @Donism100
    @Donism100 Год назад +8

    This video is a gift today. Thank you.

  • @Admirable_Tomorrow
    @Admirable_Tomorrow Месяц назад

    Thank you for making this video. I am recently diagnosed so I've been trying to learn a lot. Unfortunately, it's heartbreaking to learn about because of all the stigma. I really appreciate this. Thank you.

  • @smartypants6198
    @smartypants6198 Год назад +30

    Bpd is very treatable. But I think its a result of long term chronic distress. It overlaps with CPTSD.

    • @nikakrapez2593
      @nikakrapez2593 5 месяцев назад +1

      It “fades” over time. Not entirely..

    • @Vulture2918
      @Vulture2918 4 месяца назад +2

      @@nikakrapez2593I agree. I think it ingrains itself deep in the nervous system and brain but through content reprogramming we can make serious remission. Similar to having a sloppy physique and transforming it into a stronger one through exercise

    • @adrianacampanella9461
      @adrianacampanella9461 3 месяца назад

      No it doesnt

  • @chrislandis6873
    @chrislandis6873 Год назад

    I love Dr Judy Ho! She's so smart and warm and friendly.

  • @suekelsey1329
    @suekelsey1329 Год назад +6

    Thank you very much for your help understanding of ways to work with the "disablity" I have.
    At least I am not bored 🙂👍❤️😊

  • @sylviatownsend410
    @sylviatownsend410 25 дней назад +1

    A therapist told me my mother might have had BPD. She would have been the "quiet," high-functioning type, but she had rages that were uncommon but very scary. To a small child they seemed to go on forever.
    Now I am 78 and my sister has not spoken to me for 30 years. Some of her behavior that I have observed or heard from others fits the pattern for BPD, probably not the same type. I have PTSD which is well-controlled now. I seem to have escaped BPD but I think my sister did not. We were both sexually abused by our father and emotionally abused by our mother.

  • @TheStan80
    @TheStan80 11 месяцев назад +8

    BPD taught me not to rely on anyone. It was a dark discovery. But once I accepted that I seem to unlock doors of further development.

  • @christineplaton3048
    @christineplaton3048 Год назад +1

    Wow. New Angle. I'm not a pessimist. People with problems should find ways out of the down side of what they suffer from. Great topic.

  • @Overthetop242
    @Overthetop242 Год назад +29

    Why are Borderlines so stigmatized? Change the name and you'll eliminate the hostility. It's simply about regulation, not some fictitious "line" that crosses over into insanity or an alien-something. Many "professionals" won't even get near understanding the true complexities of the situation, and they themselves have done more to drive so many into despair and self loathing. I have PTSD and even with that, the complete lack of understanding is astounding. For me, retraumatization by therapists has been worse than the precipitating event. I have yet to meet a therapist who didn't need a therapist more than me.

    • @danab172
      @danab172 8 месяцев назад +2

      THANK YOU for this comment. It's about time that someone stands up to what they see and experience. Instead of seeing so many vulnerable people put their mental health providers on a pedestal. The mental health system can create dependency as well as life long impacts on a person's view of themselves. I also encountered abuse. I have so many experiences from which there is no justice for. I was lucky to meet a few really good people in it, that were role models to me. But the rest... were the creepiest controlling people who often were very wrong in their misdiagnosis and more. One day I hope to write a book about it all.

    • @kittynya3649
      @kittynya3649 7 месяцев назад +1

      Nah def not the name, it’s more about what you will read online about all the bad experiences and the followed trauma that partners with Bpd persons had

    • @TastemyAtrocity
      @TastemyAtrocity 6 месяцев назад

      I’m so sorry that’s been your experience :( I’ve been to a number of therapists, due to geography changes or switching insurance. At worst, I’ve seen a few who were terrible at their jobs. But at best, kind people who are truly experts in their field and who treat my wellness as their own measure of success in what they do. Hope you find someone who’s right for you. Having the wrong therapist/dr/lpc can certainly make things worse.

    • @danab172
      @danab172 6 месяцев назад +1

      Like they say, people usually go into the field of psychology for a sense of control over their own psychological issues. I recently found a good therapist, which is lucky! But its also late in life... 48 years later after losing out on equality and my own dreams...im forced to live on in losses. Years of talk therapy was utterly useless. I now have the correct set of "tendencies" aka diagnoses. And will be in treatment, thankfully not with a nut job or someone that doesnt recognize for years on end that what we are doing isnt working. Borderlines or people with borderline tendencies or people with multi diagnoses have a bad rap????? Professionals dont want to work with them?????? Well maybe sone of thats true, but to be clear, the internet and social media spreads alot of stigma, false information and fear! When its just as easy to say that alot of not most psychologists are something to also stay away from. ​@TastemyAtrocity

    • @abstract_extremist
      @abstract_extremist 3 месяца назад

      I've only met one.

  • @marjoriemartinez9973
    @marjoriemartinez9973 Год назад +1

    I need this Doctor, this video has done something to me internally..i cant explain but i feel validated!!! Thank you Dr Ho and Med Circle...you are my therapy!!! ❤

  • @missmohaynes
    @missmohaynes Год назад +6

    Sometimes it seems like i can feel how other ppl feel without them speaking about it

  • @denizaderossi-lx8rj
    @denizaderossi-lx8rj Год назад

    Thank you very much for this precious information. I was searching hours on RUclips to find some tools to deal with BPS. I was diagnosed 1.5 years ago but seemingly having it nearly my whole life. In the past I unconsciously accepted the challenges with my condition & learned to deal with it & to appreciate them. Till life gets too rough & my PTDS gave the whole story steroids. I‘m struggling know with the stigmatization by myself I have to admit, since I’m very lucky having very gorgeous, supportive friends. To bring it to an end - your video is soulhoney for me & aspiration to shift my story once again in a positive direction & vibe. Thank you from the buttom of my heart ❤

  • @kristyjean6219
    @kristyjean6219 Год назад +5

    Thank you for this. I hope people read this instead of always hating on us. Yes, the flexibility. I never know what I want, so I’m always like “ whatever”.

  • @floppymcbowl
    @floppymcbowl Год назад +1

    Thank you for this video. More positivist lenses are needed in the mental health field.

  • @stephaniemorgan6284
    @stephaniemorgan6284 Год назад +27

    Psychedelics is the answer to most severe anxiety and depression. The use of magic mushrooms completely helps one get over depression and makes you feel like yourself

    • @Marksonfixedmatches
      @Marksonfixedmatches Год назад

      Yes, doctor_mckenzie
      Got psych's*

    • @lauramaria2212
      @lauramaria2212 Год назад

      I made researches and found out that shrooms are very helpful, it has really helped to reduce anxiety and depression and some other mental health issues

    • @geraldmiller5343
      @geraldmiller5343 Год назад

      ​@@Marksonfixedmatcheswow, where can I locate him, Is it on IG?

    • @lisadavidson1523
      @lisadavidson1523 Год назад

      All the problems that these compounds can help solve, and the potential for peace they have.

    • @Marksonfixedmatches
      @Marksonfixedmatches Год назад

      ​@@geraldmiller5343Yeah, as doctor_mckenzie he has been my supplier for a year now

  • @BobF321
    @BobF321 Год назад +1

    Since my morbid,sinister fatal BPD.diagnosis with 3comorbities my negativity went down.
    I dont have bold decision making,some flexibility,very empathetic
    But guess what Ive been a dr.50 yrs.&hyperfocus on getting the exact diagnoses of patients,so imagine my depression even strengthening
    But on the other hand would not have had specific treatment better also
    But its been a gnawing mess for 21 yrs,at 74 now
    Good topic&caring talk.
    Bob

  • @brittanyb5942
    @brittanyb5942 Год назад +3

    We are very passionate, we love hard, we are loyal and we are very empathetic to others who are going thru hard times.

  • @rebeccalowe-hodges8162
    @rebeccalowe-hodges8162 7 месяцев назад

    THANK YOU!! I have always referred to my BPD as my special powers . And only negative I ever hear. There is a positive and it is empathy. I have been honored on sooo many occasions where people will just come up to me and let fly their life story. Friends, strangers on the bus, a lady waiting in line ahead of me at Disneyland. I don't know , there has to be some good that can come out of bad bpd

  • @kiseki9665
    @kiseki9665 Год назад +23

    They're not saying it's a good thing to have borderline personality disorder ! Don't miss the message of this video please. You have this disorder and it's a thing that will follow you throughout your life. No, it's not a gift, but do you have to see it as a curse and only focus on the negative ? No, you can find good things in your differences, make it a strength

    • @truescotsman4103
      @truescotsman4103 Год назад +1

      The word POSITIVE in all caps is misleading? I haven't watched the video as a matter of fact I'm apprehensive about it. I had a horrible experience dating a person with BPD once. I'm still haunted and traumatized by it.

    • @kiseki9665
      @kiseki9665 Год назад +3

      @@truescotsman4103 very sorry to hear about this.
      For me, and this is only my opinion so take it as you will, one person doesn't define every other's.
      You had a very bad experience with a person that had BPD, was the fact that they were BPD the reason? Maybe yes, maybe not i don't know and won't pretend to. Could be a person with bad or poor education, could be someone selfish. Not all BPD are like the person you met, for me it's important to take each person as they are.

    • @kiseki9665
      @kiseki9665 Год назад +4

      @@truescotsman4103 it's not misleading, for me, yes it's a hard disorder to live and to live with, but it has some elements that could be considered as a ""good"" thing under certain circumstances

    • @kiseki9665
      @kiseki9665 Год назад +5

      @@truescotsman4103 if i may take myself as an example, I'm the "quiet" type of borderline. When something throw me in a bad loop of thoughts, i tend to rage at myself in silence, to tell myself "why am I like this! I'm going to destroy everything and if they leave me it'll be deserved ! I'm the worst person on earth" and on and on until it's too much. And when it's too much for me i go talk with that person and tell them "i know I'm annoying and you can't bare me anymore so say it and leave if you need but i need to know". Most of the time the conclusion i made of a small detail or thing is 99% untruth and people don't understand why i made such a big thing of that small element.

    • @jijitters
      @jijitters Год назад

      @@truescotsman4103 This is a very selfish way of thinking.

  • @karlarichardson652
    @karlarichardson652 11 месяцев назад +2

    KUDOS ❤😂. THIS IS SO WONDERFUL TO HEAR! LET'S KEEP IT GOING!!!❤❤❤❤😅

  • @nocomment1984
    @nocomment1984 10 месяцев назад +3

    I have bpd and i ,in my opinion care alot for others

  • @E-H_Psychology_Student
    @E-H_Psychology_Student Год назад +1

    I’m a college student with BPD. The increased empathy can certainly foster a deeper understanding of the phenomenological presentation of other’s experiences. Setting the stage for a foundation in Existential-Humanistic psychotherapy. From which skills based modalities (such as DBT) can be incorporated within, instead of the binary empiricist approach to psychopathology, which just looks at outwardly observable symptoms and behaviors.

  • @monairis
    @monairis Год назад +6

    we need more of this im so tired of feeling something is wrong with me, therapy is making it worse. i need more positivity

    • @stacyjaye6350
      @stacyjaye6350 Год назад +1

      Check out the crappy childhood fairy.😘

    • @agnese2215
      @agnese2215 Год назад +1

      Yes you are right

  • @BeautifullyBlessedMoxie
    @BeautifullyBlessedMoxie Год назад +1

    Excellent video 🤍 in reframing & focusing on the positive of really any mental disease or disorders. Thank you 🙏🏻

  • @fluffymajestic4589
    @fluffymajestic4589 9 месяцев назад +3

    Having lived with a mother with borderline personality disorder, the notion of increased empathy seems totally false.
    People with BPD certainly do feel intensely, I admit that. But their ability to use the most hurtful and harmful retaliation techniques shows that they simply do not have the empathy that other humans do. To tell your very own child that you hate them, that they are not as good as their siblings, or they are not loved for good reason, all because you’re upset shows you don’t have empathy.
    The thing is that we all have extremely intense feelings. But it’s the empathy, or the immediate awareness of how hurtful our comments would be, that stop us from doing what you guys do.
    At the end of the day, people with BPD prioritize their wound above everything else in the universe. They will get redress for their wound, whether it literally kills their own children. They are the most toxic, aggressive, and vindictive victims that you can imagine.
    You do not have more empathy than the regular population. You have spotty and broken empathy that is always subservient to how you feel. And it’s always susceptible to be turned off if you feel like it. That’s not how most people work.

    • @Chrysalis616
      @Chrysalis616 16 дней назад

      Damn, this is eye opening to read ♥️🙏🏼

  • @julowens8072
    @julowens8072 Год назад

    Diagnosed w/ BPD, I have thought if there is no cure I might as well check out, it is an uncomfortable life. This video was very helpful. Thank you

  • @luciacorreia6196
    @luciacorreia6196 Год назад +9

    As someone who has just been diagnosed with BPD, at the age of 35, I really needed to hear that it's not all bad. Thank you for this.

  • @Jennagreekgirl66
    @Jennagreekgirl66 Год назад

    THANK YOU! holy shit I’m so tired of doctors on here only talk about the negative or try to identify the whole disorder as one thing or the other. I love that she said it’s on a spectrum, not everyone with bpd like myself has a lack of empathy like I’ve seen another doctor on here say who I won’t name that infuriated me. For people who don’t have this disorder to say things they know nothing about really irked me but this woman is putting an end to the stigma & not making it seem like we’re a monster from hell that everyone needs to stay away from.

  • @cjtrickstar6060
    @cjtrickstar6060 Год назад +3

    I don't see how anyone that doesn't have one of these illnesses can ever really "help" or really be able to figure out what is going on in one's head that has "it"....just doesn't seem possible.

    • @DiamondCombat
      @DiamondCombat Год назад +1

      Ding ding. When I hear highly trained therapists speak about the Borderline I’m surprised. They pretty much get us spot on and I’m fascinated how they did it. However, they never ever seem to have real answers to help. It’s always some Bs about meditation or mindfulness. Then they go on about “stay away from them “ … an aware Borderline has already figured out to live in peace you need to be alone … don’t worry

  • @cici6295
    @cici6295 5 месяцев назад +1

    It makes me happy to know BPD is being mentioned a lot more.

  • @JohnDoe-vy5hh
    @JohnDoe-vy5hh 11 месяцев назад +3

    This disorder is nothing but a curse for me. Completely destroyed me and my life.