Living With
Personality Disorders In The Home
When a loved one in your family is suffering
from one of the personality disorders, the entire family
is under stress. A family is like an orange: each segment
is unique, but connected to make a whole. When member
suffers, the entire family suffers.
There are many excellent
therapists, counselors, and medical practitioners who
specialize in treating personality disorders, but very often
the caregivers are overlooked. Just as Mom and Dad can be taken
for granted by the children, they can also be assumed to be
doing just fine in such a stressful environment.
It doesn't matter much what the
personality disorder is when it concerns the well-being of the
family. It could be borderline personality disorder,
depression, bipolar disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, or
manic depression. The caregivers need to be taken care of as
well!
Be careful for Crazy
Making
Crazy making is a term to
describe a common effect that someone with a personality
disorder can have on the one caring for them. It means that the
caregiver begins to question his own sanity. It can and does
happen that you become so surrounded by the relentless symptoms
of a disorder that you lose sight of reality. It begins to make
you crazy, hence the term: crazy making.
If you have been there, you know
exactly what I'm talking about. Day after day, night after
night, maybe your spouse acts out. Sometimes it is subtle,
other times it is blatantly obvious that something is wrong.
But if there is nobody else to talk to, or you are afraid to
confide in another, it creeps up on you and you start to
question your own mental condition.
Some typical examples of crazy
making
Suppose for a moment that your adult
son,still lives at home , owes you some money. You politely, but
firmly ask him for the money, which is past due. This
should not be a complicated matter, he borrowed it and
promised to pay it back on a certain date.
One favorite tactic is what I
call smoke and mirrors. He brings up numerous semi-relevant
topics to distract you, all the while appearing like an honest
person. He has developed a refined ability to cloud the matter
and eventually bring it back on you! Now you might even owe him
money! This is a personality disorders time to shine!
He might tell you of his
hardships, your hardships, your relationship to the other
children and how you favor them, and on and on and on. Next
thing you know, you actually should have given him this money
anyway, somehow he is entitled to it. Personality disorders are
highly developed in the sense of manipulation.
The worst thing is that you might
fall for it, at least a few times. Eventually though, you begin
to realize that you are being manipulated very skillfully. It
it when you put your foot down that the sh*t hits the fan.
Another example is when they tell
you (and everyone else within earshot) how you think, feel and
act. Never mind that it is not true, they are telling you
anyway. In fact, they have the uncanny ability to make five
hens out of a feather any time, day or night!
Even when such a person is shown
to be wrong and they acknowledge this, soon they are back to
the original embellished story that protects them from reality.
Their show simply must go on, in spite of the facts or feelings
of other people.
What can you do to avoid crazy
making?
The first thing is to recognize
it. If you live with somebody who has a personality disorder,
you will see it all the time. It becomes entirely predictable,
once you learn the signs.
Educate yourself. . There are numerous books available that are very helpful in learning to cope
with the stress of crazy making.
Take your life back. You have the
right to a safe and healthy life. Take care of you health, your
finances, your well-being. This is also one of the
best things you can do for the family member who has a
personality disorder.
Be forewarned, however: once you
begin to take your life back, the episodes will most likely
escalate, at least for a time. Make sure you have an adequate
support system in the form of friends, family, church,
therapists, etc.
Personality disorders can be gut wrenching in the pain they bring.
But by learning to read the symptoms and manage your own
reaction, life can become much closer to normal.
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