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Recognizing Emotional Abuse: Facing BPD

February 13, 2012 Becky Oberg

This is a hard piece for me to write because it involves recognizing emotional abuse and the events leading up to my diagnosis of borderline personality disorder (BPD) and complex post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). It may be triggering to fellow survivors of emotional abuse. If you aren't in a place where you can read about it, don't read this piece. It's okay not to be ready to face your past by hearing about mine.

According to HealthyPlace.com, many people with BPD describe a history of child abuse or neglect. Since the personality is strongly influenced by childhood, abuse and neglect may be strong factors in developing BPD. In fact, some believe that BPD is a type of PTSD from childhood abuse and neglect. While physical abuse is easy to recognize, emotional abuse leaves no physical marks and is far more difficult to detect. I remember writing in my journal "They've never hit me, but I almost wish they would so I would know if this is bad or not."

Recognizing Emotional Abuse in Childhood

According to HealthyPlace.com, signs of childhood emotional abuse include:

  • extreme behavior, such as over-compliance, demanding conduct, aggressiveness or extreme passivity
  • inappropriately adult behavior as a child ("parenting other children", for example)
  • inappropriately infantile behavior (rocking, head-banging)
  • delayed physical and emotional development
  • suicide attempts
  • lack of attachment to the parent

Much of this carries over into adulthood. I tend to bang my head in an effort to feel better at times, I have difficulty showing emotions, and I have a history of suicide attempts.

Other signs of emotional abuse can come from the caregiver, including:

  • constantly blaming, berating or belittling the child
  • is unconcerned about the child and refuses offers of help for the child's problems
  • overtly rejects the child

This can also carry over into the child's adult life. I remember first suffering symptoms of depression as a child. My parents blamed me, yelled at me for crying, dragged me to a psychiatrist and complained about the money spent to "fix" me, demanded high academic performance (there was a volatile argument over whether or not I would be valedictorian), and were often so unconcerned with my emotions that therapists expressed amazement that their parenting skills were as poor as they were. My mom even told me once "You're an embarrassment to this family and you're an embarrassment to me."

Facing the Secret

In AA meetings, it is often said "We are only as sick as our secrets." This also applies to BPD. As long as the emotional abuse is secret, it maintains its power because we believe what our abuser says is true. When we face the secret by discovering our abuser's words are not true, then we take the first step in breaking free from the family secret.

It is slowly becoming more acceptable to talk about emotional abuse. When I was a child, the school I attended knew that I was being emotionally abused but had nothing to call it by, so it continued, albeit an open secret that "Becky has problems at home". Fortunately, I had friends who cared about me and helped me survive (one even set up an appointment with a counselor for me). Now I'm facing my pain in therapy. A support system is vital to surviving and healing from emotional abuse.

The Good News

There is life after emotional abuse, and there is life without BPD symptoms such as self-harm. You can find freedom from your past. It may be difficult--for me facing the past has been a gradual process with occasional setbacks--but it is possible. Every day of your life is a day you can improve.

This doesn't mean every day will be easy; I still struggle with self-injurious behavior. But it does mean that hope is real. Recovery is possible. People can change. You don't have to be miserable for the rest of your life.

That's something to look forward to.

APA Reference
Oberg, B. (2012, February 13). Recognizing Emotional Abuse: Facing BPD, HealthyPlace. Retrieved on 2024, November 21 from https://www.healthyplace.com/blogs/borderline/2012/02/recognizing-emotional-abuse-facing-bpd



Author: Becky Oberg

SmudgeT
October, 20 2022 at 3:32 am

I’ve been trying to recover after my ex with BPD split and never looked at me again. The things she did were so shocking and cruel, it’s been over a year and I still feel like I’m drowning when I start to think about all of the manipulation and lies. It’s like I lived with a stranger, I never imagined she’d never talk to me outside of email or even look at me again. Then overnight I was labeled her abuser and everything changed. Our whole past all these things that meant so much to me were changed into something ugly. She projected it all back on me, I was still too in shock to understand what was going on. We spent so long together just her and I.. I have all these cards, gifts, letters, promising never to be the way she was, and then she was so much worse. I feel like i was chosen from before we met to be the scape goat and dumping ground for issues she runs from. Her mother was boarder line and she claims her sister and father are narcissistics. Everyone becomes her next horror story to use as an excuse to not face her real issues. I don’t want to think about her anymore. I want to feel normal and not live with panic and ptsd, I can barely get out of bed or leave the house anymore .. I tried for so long but I couldn’t function.. I still wake up crying too often, I’ll feel ok and motivated then thoughts of being so used and manipulated and how malicious and deeply it all hurt broke something inside me. I want to give up and not hurt anymore, there’s so much I want to do and accomplish but now all I feel is the hurt 😞 how do you move on when you feel so broken? It’s been so long and I’ve cried almost everyday for 2 years.. I feel so ashamed for how much it still hurts, I know I shouldn’t I was used and setup to be betrayed in the deepest most personal ways, she tried to dump her trauma on me and steal my strength, then even punish me and justify it all by my reaction to her severe emotional abuse. I loved this person like I’ve never thought possible. I believed in her so much I think it tore something I can’t fix to learn I meant nothing to her, it was all twisted ways to get me to open up, she always talked about her past trauma and therapy and she used all that too.. I feel like my inner child was abused, it’s so messed up, transference shouldn’t be real but now I have an eating disorder, ptsd, I’m too depressed and anxious to function or take proper care of myself. Why!?? I didn’t deserve to be ruined and tricked by someone who used to thank me profusely for the strength and happiness I gave her, I said I was the best person thing to ever happen to her for so long. That panicked confusion sitting in my car crying for hours at work everyday, for months it changed me.. her discard ruined my life, cost me my careers, piece of mind, I struggled with depression most of my life. I was finally thriving and liked myself and then met the love of my life, but it was all lies!! From the start, and I never felt closer or more loved… I feel so stupid I know I shouldn’t but there were so many little things that never added up, little did I know she lives multiple lives.. is a different person for everyone.. I wish I didn’t have anyone to disappoint, I never thought I’d have to live like this again and now I feel too hurt and sad to try for me again. I can’t stop crying again or thinking about it and nothing helps. I have to goto funerals and do all these horrible things, I used to support my family now I can barely take care of myself like an adult. They need me so much and I’m useless now.. all I do is try to feel normal and fail anymore. How do you get over the deepest pain of your life, I don’t even think I can live with anymore I don’t know how to make it stop and this isn’t living 😞 i don’t know what to do

Jennifer
May, 2 2017 at 5:05 am

I am struggling with borderline,severe. I am too familiar with childhood neglect & abuse. But have a hard time remembering so thing's. Some memories are lost. But I feel a sense of being physically violated. But I can't say how or by whom. How do you figure that out?

Margie McKinnon
February, 16 2012 at 1:38 pm

Hi Becky,
I can so identify with your story. I've never heard anyone say that they banged their head in order to cope but I did that. My dysfunction from being a child sexual abuse victim was so great that I would, as an adult with 4 kids, literally sit and bang my head over and over hoping to find some relief. Sometimes I think the primary need in all of us who came from abusive homes is to find relief even if it is only temporarily. The emotional abuse in our house was so severe that if we ever said something nice about ourselves we were told, "Get off your high horse, Lady Jane, or similar type statements, often getting punished for thinking were were good in something. As a result we all grew up thinking we had no value. Tough stuff. I know you didn't mention sexual abuse but I still think working the REPAIR program would help you so much as it addresses this problem. Our website (which has a page devoted to that program) is at http://www.thelamplighters.org You might check it out. Amazon.com has them for only $15 or so. Take care of yourself and good luck with recovery.
Margie

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Becky Oberg
February, 16 2012 at 3:21 pm

Thank you for your response. I'll be sure to check out your program. I know what you mean about the trauma from child sexual abuse. Both of my parents were molested as children by non-caregivers, and they never dealt with it. So they had no idea how to deal with the trauma I experienced (molested by a neighbor as a child, sexually assaulted by an acquaintance in 2002, domestic abuse survivor). I have only bits and pieces of my traumatic memories, which I'm working on in therapy. Sadly, child sexual abuse is a common possible cause of BPD--when I was on the borderline unit at Larue D. Carter Memorial Hospital (a state hospital), nearly every person in the program had survived some type of child sexual abuse.

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