I do agree that it appears this way on the outside, but I believe that often the exact opposite is happening. The BPD goes to a celebration and sees everyone so happy when they're filled with chaos inside, and that leads to awkwardness as they try to "fake it". But often it leads to a meltdown because so much stress is built up beforehand or afterwards.
Hi Pook,
I agree with you, up to a limit. I know that pwBPD try to "fake" happiness, and they often struggle with it. I know in the case of the pwBPD in my life, she feels both "exhausted" and "fake" trying to be cheerful. She's had customer-service-oriented jobs and just can't seem to muster the desired cheerfulness the jobs require. Her disposition is too tentative, negative--not the happy-go-lucky, nice and helpful type customers prefer. Thus when she makes on-the-job mistakes, she can't muster the right mix of apologeticness and can-do helpfulness, and she tends to get let go (if she doesn't quit first).
But I think pwBDP are prone to "fail" at being agreeable because their real-world incentives are all mixed up. What if, in the real world when they lose a job, they are forced to get another one and try again, because they have to make rent? Practice makes perfect, right? What if, when they have a meltdown, everyone else goes on with the celebration or vacation without them? What if the pwBPD was given a "time out" to get herself together, and allowed to rejoin the festivities when she's back to baseline, if she decided to do so? I just think it's not fair or correct to stop the festivities or bend over backwards to "beg" her to rejoin, just to let her ruin it for everyone else. If she ruins a vacation once, shame on her. If I let her ruin vacations again and again, shame on me. I feel like I've let her ruin things for me too much, and I'm angry at myself for it. Yeah I was trying to be the "martyr," taking the hit to "save" her. In hindsight, I was not only misguided, I was an enabler!
Honestly I've come to the point where I've vowed to myself not to cancel any more vacations because of the pwBPD. As I write this I'm bracing myself for a potential meltdown scenario, given an upcoming family wedding.
I read once that a good way to break a bad habit--say, smoking--is not to rely solely on willpower, because willpower only lasts so long. Besides, mental fortitude is not something that pwBPD have in excess. One recommendation to is to try to replace a bad habit with a healthier one. The example with smoking is to chew a stick of gum instead. An example with excess snacking is to drink a cup of water first, or enjoy a fruit or vegetable first. My sense is the DBT training focuses on this sort of habit substitution, disguised as coping skills. For example, when a pwBPD feels the urge to shoot off a rage-text, a healthier habit could be to write down thoughts in a journal, or to cuddle with a pet. I think most adults have their go-to strategies for dealing with stress and conflicts, based on a lifetime of experience. It's just that I think that pwBPD have a lifetime of distorted "feedback" and have learned, given perverse incentives, maladaptive coping techniques. I guess that's why I'm a big believer in therapy, which can help identify bad habits, re-train automatic responses and ultimately replace them with better coping skills.



