Personality Disorders
Personality refers to a distinctive set of traits, behavior
styles, and patterns that make up our character or individuality.
How we perceive the world, our attitudes, thoughts, and feelings
are all part of our personality. People with healthy personalities
are able to cope with normal stresses and have no trouble forming
relationships with family, friends, and co-workers.
What is a Personality Disorder?
Those who struggle with a personality disorder have great
difficulty dealing with other people. They tend to be inflexible,
rigid, and unable to respond to the changes and demands of life.
Although they feel that their behavior patterns are
“normal” or “right,” people with
personality disorders tend to have a narrow view of the world and
find it difficult to participate in social activities.
Recognizing a Personality Disorder
A personality disorder must fulfill several criteria. A deeply
ingrained, inflexible pattern of relating, perceiving, and thinking
serious enough to cause distress or impaired functioning is a
personality disorder. Personality disorders are usually
recognizable by adolescence or earlier, continue throughout
adulthood, and become less obvious throughout middle age.
What Causes a Personality Disorder?
Some experts believe that events occurring in early childhood
exert a powerful influence upon behavior later in life. Others
indicate that people are genetically predisposed to personality
disorders. In some cases, however, environmental facts may cause a
person who is already genetically vulnerable to develop a
personality disorder.
Types of Personality Disorders
There are many formally identified personality disorders, each
with their own set of behaviors and symptoms. Many of these fall
into three different categories or clusters:
Since there are too many identified types of personality
disorders to explain in this context, we will only review a few in
each cluster.
Cluster A:
Cluster B:
Antisocial Personality Disorder People with antisocial
personality disorder characteristically act out their conflicts and
ignore normal rules of social behavior. These individuals are
impulsive, irresponsible, and callous. Typically, the antisocial
personality has a history of legal difficulties, belligerent and
irresponsible behavior, aggressive and even violent relationships.
They show no respect for other people and feel no remorse about the
effects of their behavior on others. These people ware at high risk
for substance abuse, especially alcoholism, since it helps them to
relieve tension, irritability and boredom.
Borderline Personality Disorder People with borderline personality
disorder are unstable in several areas, including interpersonal
relationships, behavior, mood, and self-image. Abrupt and extreme
mood changes, stormy interpersonal relationships, an unstable and
fluctuating self-image, unpredictable and self-destructive actions
characterize the person with borderline personality disorder. These
individuals generally have great difficulty with their own sense of
identity. They often experience the world in extremes, viewing
others as either “all good” or “all bad.” A
person with borderline personality may form an intense personal
attachment with someone only to quickly dissolve it over a
perceived slight.Fears of abandonment may lead to an excessive
dependency on others. Self-multilation or recurrent suicidal
gestures may be used to get attention or manipulate others.
Impulsive actions, chronic feelings of boredom or emptiness, and
bouts of intense inappropriate anger are other traits of this
disorder, which is more common among females.
Narcissistic Personality Disorder People with narcissistic
personality have an exaggerated sense of self-importance, are
absorbed by fantasies of unlimited success, and seek constant
attention. The narcissistic personality is oversensitive to failure
and often complains of multiple somatic symptoms. Prone to extreme
mood swings between self-admiration and insecurity, these people
tend to exploit interpersonal relationships.
Cluster C:
They are reliable, dependable, orderly, and methodical, but
their inflexibility often makes them incapable of adapting to
changed circumstances. People with compulsive personality are
highly cautious, weigh all aspects of a problem, and pay attention
to every detail, making it difficult for them to make decisions and
complete tasks.
When their feelings are not under strict control, events are
unpredictable, or they must rely on others, compulsive
personalities often feel a sense of isolation and helplessness.
Professional Help
When these characteristics are carried to an extreme, when they
endure over time and when they interfere with healthy functioning,
a diagnostic evaluation with a licensed physician or mental health
professional is recommended.
Treatment of the Personality Disorder
There are many types of help available for the different
personality disorders. Treatment may include individual, group, or
family psychotherapy. Medications, prescribed by a patient’s
physician, may also be helpful in relieving some of the symptoms of
personality disorders, including problems with anxiety and
perceptions.
Psychotherapy for patients with personality disorders focuses on
helping them see the unconscious conflicts that are contributing to
or causing their symptoms. It also helps people become more
flexible and is aimed at reducing the behavior patterns that
interfere with everyday living.
In psychotherapy, people with personality disorders can better
recognize the effects of their behavior on others. Behavior and
cognitive therapies focus on resolving symptoms or traits that are
characteristic of the disorder, such as the inability to make
important life decisions or the inability to initiate
relationships.
There is Hope
The more you learn about personality disorders the more you will
understand that they are illnesses, with causes and treatments.
People can improve with proper care. By seeking out information you
can recognize the signs and symptoms of a personality disorder and
help yourself or someone you know live a healthier more fulfilling
life.
For more information contact your local Mental Health Association,
community mental health center, or for additional resources, please
call 1-800-969-NMHA.
National Mental Health Association
2001 N. Beauregard Street, 12th Floor
Alexandria, VA 22311
Phone 703/684-7722
Fax 703/684-5968
Mental Health Resource Center 800/969-NMHA
TTY Line 800/433-5959
National Mental Health Consumer Self-Help Clearinghouse
Phone: (800) 553-4539
Center for Mental Health Services
National Mental Health Information Center
PO Box 42490
Washington, DC 20015
Phone: (800) 789-2647