Supporting and promoting the well-being of mental health carers and their families.
Mental Health Carers Austalia.
11-08-2022 04:44 PM
11-08-2022 04:44 PM
11-08-2022 04:55 PM
11-08-2022 04:55 PM
Hey there @Cinderella83 so nice to see you in this thread too ❤️
I thought I'd tag a few members who can probably give some great support from their lived experience ❤️ @BPDBunny and @BPDSurvivor how are you both doing today?
And there's also a great thread where some of our great forum members worked through the DBT skills workbook together. If you haven't heard of it yet (it's new to me!) its a skill set lots of folks with BPD find useful. The thread is Let's do Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)
So glad to have you here,
TuxedoCat
11-08-2022 07:24 PM
11-08-2022 07:24 PM
Good Evening @Cinderella83 ,
BPD can be quite challenging at the best of times, yet having more of an understanding means you can work with the symptoms in a more informed way.
Feel free to have a browse through Raising Awareness of BPD - Flipping the Script .
One thing I do know is that one of the greatest impact of BPD is on relationships. Therapy works with practising the skills needed for healthy interpersonal relationships. This includes working towards feeling okay with sitting with not-knowing; understandings that things are not just 'good' or 'bad' - that there are in betweens; strategies to manage emotional pain etc.
Medication has a small part in BPD recovery - much of the work is done through psychotherapy.
Look forward to hearing what others think,
11-08-2022 11:33 PM
11-08-2022 11:33 PM
Hi @Cinderella83 ,
Thank you for your post. Receiving a BPD diagnosis can be both scary and also liberating. It ‘explains’ some of the struggles Borderlines have including the rage that comes with the emotional brain taking over, black/white thinking, difficulties trusting people, ‘obsessing’ over certain people etc.
For me, learning I had BPD meant I could deal with it head on. I realised my experiences had a name to it. I understood why I had the struggles I did. But most importantly, I could work on each aspect of BPD.
I undertook a solid 18 months of mentalisation based therapy, as well as various psychotherapy. At the end of it, I can truly say I have come out with a ‘changed brain’. I realised I had more control of my brain than o first thought. I could ‘train’ my brain to think differently to how I had grown up to think. The maladaptive ways of thinking that came with childhood stressors.
Its been a long journey, powerful and totally worth it.
It is one MH condition where YOU are the author of your own story. It is not reliant on medication.
Im so glad you have been able to connect with us on the forums!
BPD is such an amazing teacher.
BPDSurvivor
12-08-2022 09:36 AM
12-08-2022 09:36 AM
12-08-2022 09:53 AM
12-08-2022 09:53 AM
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Supporting and promoting the well-being of mental health carers and their families.
Mental Health Carers Austalia.
Our Mission
To be the voice of mental health carers to enable the best life possible.
Get In Touch With Us
We're here to support and promote the well-being of mental health carers and their families
Mental Health Carers Australia is the only national advocacy group solely concerned with the well-being and promotion of the needs of mental health carers.
Supporting and promoting the well-being of mental health carers and their families.
Mental Health Carers Austalia.
Our Mission
To be the voice of mental health carers to enable the best life possible.
Get In Touch With Us
We're here to support and promote the well-being of mental health carers and their families
Mental Health Carers Australia is the only national advocacy group solely concerned with the well-being and promotion of the needs of mental health carers.