Stop Walking on Eggshells
Recommendations
For working with: a BPD Child
For working with: a BPD Child or Lover
For working with: a BPD Lover
For working with: a BPD Lover
For working with: a BPD Parent
For working with: a Broken Heart
For working with: a Broken Heart
For working with: a Broken Heart
For working with: All BPD Loved Ones
For working with: All BPD Loved Ones
For working with: All BPD Loved Ones
Your therapist may have recommended Stop Walking on Eggshells. Therapists will suggest that you read this book to see if the description sounds anything like your mother (or child, or relationship partner). Stop Walking on Eggshells was one of the first books for the general public on Borderline Personality Disorder and has sold over a half million copies and has been published in nine languages. It is currently in its second edition, updated in 2010.
This is a beginner's self-help guide. The book looks at the complex emotions that family members go through. It explains how the disorder affects you and what you can do to get off the emotional roller coaster and take care of yourself. This book includes common questions and answers about Borderline Personality Disorder. It also contains ten steps to help the reader better live with and accept someone who suffers from this disorder. The book covers how to choose a therapist, support group, and book resources, too.
This is a sympathetic, blame-free, and simply-written book. For example, the authors explore BPD behavior in terms of manipulation vs. desperation and conclude that people with Borderline Personality Disorder often do not deliberately and consciously manipulate. Rather, they tend to become emotionally desperate in their panicked and frantic efforts to connect with others.
The book is divided into three parts.
One interesting aspect of the book is the authors' discussion about the four stages family members often go through in making sense of it all. We have seen this happen many times here at BPDFamily.com:
Paul T. Mason MS is a program manager of Child/Adolescent Services and a psychotherapist with Psychiatric Services for St. Luke's Hospital in Racine, Wisconsin. His research on Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) has appeared in the Journal of Clinical Psychology, and he teaches seminars for mental health professionals on the effects of BPD on partners and family members.
Randi Kreger is a professional writer, and co-author of The Stop Walking on Eggshells Workbook (2002), The Essential Family Guide (2008), and Splitting: Protecting Yourself While Divorcing a Borderline or Narcissist (2011). Kreger blogs at Psychology Today. Ms. Kreger is also a professional member at BPDFamily.com.
Read about the experiences of BPDFamily.com members with this book here.
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Excerpts:
• feel things more intensely
• act in ways that seem more extreme
• have difficulty regulating their emotions and behavior