- A person has a right not to seek out or be forced to use mental health resources.
- Some countries have privacy laws for patients, privacy even from spouses.
- Therapists or counselors may choose not to offer a diagnosis, being aware that identifying such a label may make the patient more likely to resist further therapy.
So what we can do is to be aware of the behavior patterns, consider whether they fit certain disorders, and ponder the various ways to deal with those behaviors in time-tested ways.
We are advocates of Boundaries, but with a twist. Since people with BPD traits (pwBPD) are known to resist boundaries, we therefore can choose to make our own
Boundaries are for us, not for the other but for us, which is how we respond to poor behavior. That perspective is not intuitive but it works more or less. Family court's version of boundaries are named "orders".As an example, the other person may start ranting, raging, blaming us, making demands, virtually taunting us to respond similarly. However, we can have a clearly stated Boundary that we won't sit by as a willing target, appeaser or whipping boy. Rather, one possible response is that we can decide to exit and go elsewhere such as to the park, to a restaurant or the supermarket, stating we will return. That gives the other time to reset. Will it work? Perhaps not so much at first. Hopefully over time at least part of our boundary will become the normal and accepted policy.


