BDFamily Member Reviews
"I think of BPDs as self-pitying bumbling sociopaths. I can absolutely see how treatment makes some of them more dangerous. ~ Tara Palmatier, Psy.D."Rather than quote more colorful language from this article and video commentary (hopefully this one line says enough), I will summarize and paraphrase the six main points as follows:
- If you meet someone who is obviously abusive, leave.
- If you meet someone who is a damsel in distress, leave.
- If you're in an abusive relationship, leave.
- If you don't leave you probably have issues.
- Do not go to couples counseling. There is a feminist conspiracy at play in the mental health community that will trap you into taking more abuse.
- The authors are the only chance men have of obtaining help from people who are actually interested in ending abuse rather than perpetuating it.
It's a very simple message akin to -
"if you're fat, stop eating". And while it would be silly to criticize the advice to "leave an abusive relationship", the authors do not seem to understand why people stay in emotionally abusive or uncomfortable relationships, in the first place. One thing for sure, if shouting "leave" were effective, Janay Palmer would not have married Ray Rice (NFL football player) 45 days after he knocked her out in a viral video event that monopolized the national news for 15 days - "Leave!" - was never shouted more loudly.
We all know why she stayed and married him. There is something more powerful in the relationship than the emotional abuse, and in this case, even significant physical abuse; all of which which Janay Palmer is well aware of. Awareness is not the issue.
Understanding this is critical to any advocacy hoping to reduce abuse, in the case of the authors above, against men.
Emotional Abuse EvolvesThe authors impassioned pleas for men to walk away from the person that "keys their car" on a third date is laudable but this is not typically how it happens.
Emotional abuse is insidious and slowly evolves over time. It is a
transaction between two people with both playing a part -- the "controller" and the "controlled". For the controller, the role is having dysfunctional psychological defenses and coping mechanisms. For the controlled, the role is providing an conciliatory and enabling reaction to these dysfunctional reactions. It take these two personality types, together working through one experience at a time to eventually cultivate an abusive relationship.
There are many underlying conditions that can lead a "controller" or a "controllable" to act in this way. They are:
low self esteem,
immaturity,
short term mental illness (e.g., depression),
substance induced illness (e.g., alcoholism),
a mood disorder (e.g., bipolar),
an anxiety disorder (e.g., PTSD),
a personality disorder (e.g., BPD, NPD, 8 others),
a neurodevelopmental disorder (e.g., ADHD, Aspergers), or
any combination of the above (i.e., co-morbidity).
There is More than One Way to Solve a ProblemThere are many ways to arrest relationship chronic hurtful behavior or emotional abuse.
Severing the relationship is one, of course. Treating the underlying conditions of one or both partners is yet another. Redefining the relationship is another. Relationship skill building is another. Controlled separation is another.
Determining which method is best for any relationship depends on many factors - the severity/frequency of the emotional abuse, the willingness to work on the problem, and the success of prior efforts to work on the problem. And there are often a myriad of complicating factors to be considered - the relationship type (parent/child, dating, spouses, spouses w/ children, employer/employee), finances, dependencies, religious/family values, mobility, financial independence, etc.
Most will hold off breaking up the relationship until after they have tried other approaches. This is a natural response and, in many relationships, solutions can be found (improvement). In others, time only serves to condition or normalize hurtful behavior and emotional abuse/stress as being an accepted part of the relationship (conditioning). Unfortunately knowing which is happening (improvement or conditioning) is often not immediately clear or obvious to the relationship partners. This is where it gets complicated.
Ultimately, the decision to leave/stay needs to be unilaterally determined by each partner. The couple needs to be reminded of this unilateral aspect - this is one decision they can't make together. Its also a decision that the each relationship partner should revisit periodically if there has been abuse. Often these situations fall into the "too bad to stay, too good to leave" category, which is also very complicated.
Having a trusted confidant with knowledge and credibility to weigh in is really important here - not a stranger shouting "leave". The stranger, who can't know these details and subtleties, isn't going to be credible. The author's advocacy would be far more helpful to encourage anyone in an hurtful or abusive situation or hurtful relationship to get an accountability partners - a confidant and/or a support group.
Are the Caregivers Dangerous?In an article/video that broadly labels anyone seen as emotionally abusive to be BPD and a "self-pitying bumbling sociopath", it not too much of a leap to paint the majority of the mental health community as
"feminist abuse enablers against men". And while there is biases against men in the family court systems and with local law enforcement with respect to domestic abuse, there is really nothing like this in the mental health system.
There is far more bias in the writings of the authors. To state that the majority of therapists, working with families were one member has BPD, tell the family members that people with
"BPD can’t control themselves and don’t know what they’re doing" and that
"they need to accept "tremendous financial and/or physical abuse" is an absurd proposition. What's most concerning is that the author knows that it is not true, just as the author knows that BPD is not the same as ASPD (sociopath). Apparently this has been pointed out to her before because in the video she spontaneously defends her position and states that the DSM manual (American Psychiatric Association) is wrong.
But clearly there can be issues with marriage counseling when both parties are not committed or able. This is typically when individual counseling is prescribed. It also can be when it fails. Marriage counseling can fix many things - but it can be ineffective, too.
There is a need for a laymen's guide to selecting mental health services. Selecting a mental health resource today is often a stab in the dark for many.
Understanding what marriage counseling is, and is not, is a place to start.
There is also clearly a need for clearer and more standardized labeling of services and specialization and better referral dynamics among mental health providers.
In healthcare, by contrast, people have a much better idea of when to involve specialists and how to select them. In mental health, too often people pay top dollar to sit on a couch across from someone, or get on the phone with someone, who is simply not skilled/experienced in dealing with their issues and/or has a poor track record.
Rather than label the mental health field as feminists with an agenda, a better message might be to encourage people to give as much consideration to a selecting a mental health professional as they do a cardiologist. Mental health services can vary significantly from one practice to another.
There is also a need for better relationship assessment and assessment tools. Relationship assessment is complex and multidimensional and there are few tools available on how to make progressive, reoccurring assessments. The current self-help books are pretty shallow. Most people view this process as being static, as if time doesn't change the way we should view certain conditions. Most people struggle to sort out and trade off the multi-dimensional aspects of the relationship (finances, family, custody, religious values, etc.). Any advocacy wanting to address abuse might consider taking this on. It's really needed.
Is the Hyperbole and BPD Bashing Helpful?When has bashing and name calling any group of people been the answer to our well-being? Is there a successful model for this? More importantly, is it harmful to our well-being?
The hyperbole and the BPD bashing plays to the male ego but creates an environment where openness and self-awareness become very hard. As one author repeats in the video,
"if you stay in the relationship, there is more wrong with you than BPD". We have all seen the affect of this style of coaching - the members who will trash talk for days and then scamper like puppies back into their relationship, if allowed, and pick up the problem relationship exactly where they left off.
It might be worth pointing out that the hyperbole and the BPD bashing / class warfare generally comes from people who are out of a romantic relationship or who are holding onto the last vestiges of the romantic relationship and who are struggling to cope. The "BPD" person is gone. We rarely see class warfare and bashing with members who are working on the relationship, their focus is very individualized. We don't see it in parent/child relationships where the anger is typically targeted to the individual or the bad acts.
People with codependent tendencies tend have diminished skills and ability to see themselves. They are prone to blame it on the partner (and be blamed by the other codependent partner). People with depression (upward of 73% of people in abusive relationships) can get lost in cognitive distortions - overgeneralizing being one. An environment of hyperbole and class warfare only makes this worse.
At bpdfamily.com, the anger and the class bashing is understood. So are thoughts of revenge and suicidal ideation. We encourage members to accept and work through these - but not to indulge them. We try to limit the hyperbole and the BPD bashing to the newer, emotionally raw members who are making their way - and we encourage the more established members to start weaning themselves off and lead the newer members. Class bashing it is a real impediment to their personal growth and the growth of others. Targeted frustration and anger is a healthier way to deal with these feelings - as is uncovering the emotions behind the anger.
Does bpdfamily Encourage the Mollycoddling of BPD Abusers?The one thing we hope to bring members at bpdfamily is perspective (what is healthy/pathologic/normal, what is important/not important) and the ability to see the other side of the human relationship (empathy). These are very powerful tools for going forward.
Isn't the lack of these tools where many us have failed in these relationships?
Trying to understanding how another person thinks (empathy) is not condoning their actions any more than an FBI profiler is condoning serial murderers. It's the information needed to safely and effectively co-exist with others - there will always be difficult people.
And asking members to look at their role in the relationship dysfunction is not blaming them, its helping them find solutions that they have control over -- things that they can make happen.
More InformationWhy Do Adults Stay In Abusive Relationships?Kathryn Patricelli, MA
https://bpdfamily.com/message_board/index.php?topic=136322.0How Often do We Return to a Hurtful Relationship and Why?Survey of 500 members
https://bpdfamily.com/message_board/index.php?topic=120215.0