I don’t know from BPD but this is literally every female student in the past 20 years:

“How do you think it made me feel when I saw that you corrected 16 mistakes in my composition? It’s like you are saying I’m a horrible person.”
I don’t know what causes this extreme touchiness but I do believe that people put it on because they think it’s cute and then it becomes second nature.
Then we end up with the idea of hurty words being equal to violence, and the rest we all know.
That’s how a 5-year old behaves – extreme touchiness at any correction or criticism, especially coming from a parent. It takes a lot of love, patience and a lot of praise to overcome that. I think that eventually a child grows up and realizes that someone telling them to do something differently does not equal rejection. It’s like some of these adult people are perpetually stuck in that stage where everything they do is perfect and any criticism is equal to a lack of love from a parent figure.
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BPD, clinically, is highly correlated with abandonment by one or more parent figures between the ages of about 3 and 5. Basically arrested development in the preschool stage, complete with tantrums, short time horizons, extreme emotional volatility.
emphatically not cute. And they tend to abandon their own kids, or worse, cut their kids’ dads out of their lives and then raise them without any buffering adult. Which leads to high rates of BPD in their offspring. Yay self-perpetuating problems.
If the main theory is right, and this is caused by parental abandonment or abuse leading to arrested development at about age 4… then the increase in divorce, family breakup, single parenthood, and the lack of family formation at all, would tend to lead to a huge increase in this.
In a just world, it’d be self-limiting because these people can’t form functional relationships. Sadly, short of physical infertility, they almost always have kids, because of the consistently poor decision-making. It’s a generational contagion.
-ethyl
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Yeah, contrary to the feminist nonsensical social workers of the 70’s openly supporting no-fault divorce, there were and are often consequences for the children — almost like PTSD. And yes, it can run for generations.
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TLP has written insightful articles about it.
https://thelastpsychiatrist.com/2007/01/borderline.html
https://thelastpsychiatrist.com/2012/01/penelope_trunk_abuser.html
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translation: “crazy” behavior in a young woman is tolerable to the guys she’s giving blowjobs to. There’s never any shortage.
-ethyl
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LOL, Kid, are you suggesting that guys are easy ;-D
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I’m suggesting that, while there are many good men and women out there, if you have no standards and no self-respect, it is extremely easy to pick up the other sort.
-ethyl
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True.
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Relax, by and large, guys are easy ;-D
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