Editor’s note: This article was submitted by Steve Becker, LCSW, CH.T, who has a private psychotherapy, hypnotherapy, and clinical consulting practice in New Jersey, USA. For more information, visit his website, powercommunicating.com.
It is not unusual in my clinical experience to see, sometimes, some quite chilling sociopathic activity from my “borderline personality-disordered” clients. When someone has a “borderline personality,” it’s quite likely, among other things, that he or she will present with a history of emotional instability; a pattern of chaotic interpersonal relationships; and poor coping skills under stress, reflected in self-destructive/ destructive acting-out and a tendency to suicidal behaving.
These unstable trends are not explained by a core psychotic orientation, although individuals with borderline personality can sometimes lapse into psychotic thinking when feeling hurt and rejected enough. Borderline personalities tend to see others in “black and white,” as either all-good or all-bad; they struggle to retain more flexible, ambivalent views of others. Others are either idealized, or devalued; these swings of perceptions can be sudden, volatile, and complete.
Perceptions and/or experiences of abandonment often elicit the borderline’s dysfunctional responses and psychological deterioration. In his or her more stable state, the borderline personality can sometimes function well and seem to be well-adjusted. But more intimate involvement with him or her, over time, will expose an underlying, poorly disturbed sense of self and incapacity for mature relating.
A question I’ve found myself considering is: When the borderline personality is acting, and looking, like a sociopath, is it the case that he or she, in these states, effectively is a sociopath?
It should be noted that behaviors per se are never sociopathic, only the individuals perpetrating them. Sociopathy is a mentality from which antisocial, exploitative behaviors gestate and emanate with a destructive, historical chronicity. But one can infer the presence of the sociopathic mentality from a telling pattern of behaviors.
Clearly there are fundamental differences between borderline personalities and sociopaths, differences which I appreciate. At the same time, when the borderline personality’s rage or desperation is evoked, one sees (and not rarely) responses that can closely correspond to the sociopath’s calculating, destructive mentality.
Once inside this mentality, I’m suggesting that borderline personality-disordered individuals can lapse into a kind of transient sociopathy. Commonly, victims of the “borderline’s” aberrant, vicious behaviors will sometimes react along the lines of, “What is wrong with you? Are you some freaking psychopath?” They will say this from the experience of someone who really has just been exploited as if by a psychopath.
Because this isn’t the borderline personality’s default mentality (it is the sociopath’s), several psychological phenomena must occur, I think, to enable his temporary descent into sociopathy. He or she must regress in some way; dissociate in some fashion; and experience a form of self-fragmentation, for instance in response to a perceived threat—say, of abandonment.
These preconditions, I suggest, seed the borderline personality’s collapse into the primitive, altered states of self that can explain, among other phenomena, his or her chilling (and necessary) suspension of empathy. This gross suspension of empathy supports his or her “evening the score” against the “victimizer” with the sociopath’s remorseless sense of entitlement.
Case example
I worked not long ago with a male, 24, who slit his ex-girlfriend’s tires in the parking lot of the restaurant in which she tended bar. He’d suspected her of cheating with her manager. Notably, they were still together at the time of his act. Although his girlfriend surmised his guilt, he wouldn’t admit it, suggesting foolishly that the perpetrator was probably the manager. While his suspicions of her infidelity had some basis, the important point is that they activated an inner-self crisis and desperation characteristic of borderline personality structures.
Specifically, he feared losing her—a prospect so traumatic that rage was summoned to help mobilize his fragmenting self. His rage was experienced as cold, not volatile. He regressed into paranoia, as one who had been betrayed and, cruelly, left helpless. His failure to soberly examine the circumstances and his inflammatory reactions represented a form of mild dissociation/detachment from reality that enabled the paranoid experience, and processing, of his fear; his detachment (and regression) enabled him to formulate and execute his revenge with his empathy (and guilt) conveniently iced. In other words, he could perpetrate his vengeance with the detached calm of someone who has experienced a trauma, as in a state of depersonalization.
Upon emerging from this state, it would be as if emerging from a sort of dream, or seizure. The rationalization would kick in: what I do in those states really isn’t me, so I don’t really have to take full responsibility for it later on. It’s as if the borderline individual surfaces from his dip into sociopathy once again a borderline (and no longer a sociopath).
Motives that drive patterns of problematic behaviors frequently illuminate and distinguish the personality disorders. In this case, what seems to have driven my client was his crumbling sense of self in the form of an inarticulate terror of being abandoned. For this reason (among others), I can confidently say that he wasn’t a sociopath. But when he was in that regressed, dissociated, fragmented state—for as long as it lasted—I suggest he was.
Hmmm. This is where I tripped up. I was very hooked on BPD as the problem with Bad Man but then my reading took me further and Sociopathy seems quite fitting as well. Originally, I thought BM qualified as an extreme case of BPD based on something I read. Also, he did identify for himself *once*… only once.. that he noticed that feeling abandond was a trigger for him. That was the only time I witnessed any real self reflection. Of course he would take this back in a flash if he was upset again.
Bad Man did seem to lack empathy as I witnessed in his comments and tied to a few moments where I was surprised by his response to something. He had told me he used to call himself the Minister of Compassion but then I never saw any compassion from him. At one point, I described him as the meanest, most inappropriate human being I have ever encountered.
He has demonstrated very Narcissistic thought patterns and moments. Also, very BPD behavior. And Sociopath stuff… well, I think so to the best of my understanding.
I guess I have a simple question. Can a person be diagnosed as BPD, NPD and SOCIOPATHY. Are any of these things mutually exclusive?
I went and read the description of BPD in wikipedia. When I read it, I saw things, situations, reactions, that the S got out of me…without him..I am perfectly sane and normal. Again…they DRIVE you crazy.
I only knew mine for a few months, and based on what I experienced, he is a sociopath. I’ve often wondered did he turn ‘sociopathic’ after finding out of his HIV status? or did he become HIV positive because he’s a sociopath? (reckless with their own lives, as well as the lives of others).
Everything that happened from start to finish was like it was taken out of a textbook example of how they target, mirror, use the pity-play, idealize, devalue, and discard. As well as deny the truth when it’s in their face, accept no responsiblity, blame the victim, and play the victim themselves. Not to mention the lies and manipulations.
I’ve never met anyone that so boastfully projects themselves so loyal, trustworthy, honest, etc…..but yet lying and risking others with their own non-curable, deadly disease.
A real mind-fuck.
Whether it’s transient socipathy by a BPD or a flat-out sociopath, or a Narcissist, the end result is always the same.
In my opinion- if someone is ANY of the above- that’s reason to stear clear.
Dodged a bullet, I couldn’t have said it better myself.
“Everything that happened from start to finish was like it was taken out of a textbook example of how they target, mirror, use the pity-play, idealize, devalue, and discard. As well as deny the truth when it’s in their face, accept no responsiblity, blame the victim, and play the victim themselves. Not to mention the lies and manipulations.”
This is exactly what happened to me except for somehow the devalue part didn’t really happen, much. She began to devalue me just a little, but it mostly went from idealize to discard. Also, when I confronted her, I used those exact words that you did which were “mind fuck”.
Still trying to figure out if she’s BPD or sociopath or some combination of both.
Can you explain to us in English what a fragmenting Self is? and Is the mentality that produces a sociopath’s instrumental aggression any different from the mentality that produces a non-sociopath’s instrumental aggression?
While this explanation of this is pretty complex, and difficult to follow, I think I see where it is going.
MY X-DIL has more of the, in my opinion, BPD characteristics, including self-injury, which I have seen in many patients I have treated through the years. However, I do know that many of my former patients were also very capable of rages that approached homicidal rages.
When I was working with BPD adolescent girls, one minute they would be trying to kill you, and 10 minutes later they would be trying to hug you. The mercurial rise and fall of their emotions was sometimes dumbfounding.
My XDIL seems in many ways to be “classic” BPD, but at the same time, her last coldly calculating attempt to murder my son was certainly P-type behavior as well.
He feelings apparently now vacillate between anger at herself, and at my son for sending her to jail…as if she had nothing to do with being arrested.
She is continuing to try to pull financial shenanigans toward my mother and feels justified in doing so apparently because my mother has “so much” and she “has nothing.” My mother is having to go to court to put a stop to that.
She apparently has a problem with “being alone” (without a male partner) and moves rapidly from one to the next. When he gets out of prison, she apparently is planning to “live happily ever after” with the sexual predator, diagnosed psychopath, habitual criminal, that she had the affair with and that tried to help her kill her husband. At this point, her family of origin, and even her BPD daughter have “disowned” her and she has no friends at all now, as all of my son’s and her mutual friends won’t have anything to do with her, and apparently those are her only contacts.
From what I have learned about her life prior to her marrying my son (they met on the internet) her life was pretty chaotic, multiple marriages, live-ins, etc.
Though her attack on my son, with her rage at him (it was her, not the BF, that wanted her husband dead) that sort of feels like P behavior to me, but everything else I have seen about her or know about her history is pretty much “classic” BPD.
When I first met her 8 yrs ago I felt that she was “deceptive” in some way, she never really became part of our family. She was overly polite and very distant. Even after they moved her to the farm near us, there was no real relationship between her and the rest of the family. I don’t think I have ever been in my son’s home long enough to sit down, and she never came to my house long enough to sit down either. She used her son in a wheel chair as an excuse to not socialize with the family. She did all she could to isolate my son as well.
It was ONLY after her affair started with the P-BF that she started to “curry” my mother’s favor, and to manipulate my mother into letting her control my mother’s finances, etc. which the BF was “in on” as well. At that point, she became openly belligerent to me.
I’m not sure if she is “fish, fowl, or good red herring” but like Dodged_a_bullet says, it really doesn’t matter what “label”you put on it she is TOXIC and dangerous STEAR CLEAR.
This is my first post, although I have been reading this site for over a year.
This is my mantra now: BPD, HPD, NPD, AsPD = Cluster B = a whole lot of misery on the receiving end.
They are ALL sociopaths, psychopaths at some point in relationship to YOU. (this is a great article)
If it walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck its a sociopath ,, err,, I mean a duck !!
K
Dear K,
Welcome, and you are right on–Cluster B = misery.
For those of you who don’t know what “cluster B” is it is part of the psychiatric diagnostic process and includes a list of several personality disorders, in addition to say in other parts of the diagnosis “depression” or some mental illness, rather than a DISORDER.
None of the Cluster B problems are easily solved or solvable at all. Just because a person has Cluster B problems doesn’t mean they are not ALSO: Bi-polar, depressed, etc.
One or more mental illnesses added to a personality disorder can make things really “interesting”—
You know I just remembered… I had decided that it didn’t really matter what he was.. I knew he was not normal. I created “Bad Man” when I didn’t want to say his name anymore and didn’t know for sure what was wrong except that he was just BAD.
Part of me would like to know if I am correct in my diagnosis for after all… I am not a clinician. The other part of me knows that it doesn’t matter. He was a nightmare no matter what you would call it.
Somewhere along my journey, I stopped trying to determine the appropriate label for the behavior I believe I experienced. It just didn’t matter anymore. I knew what I experienced was NOT normal. What mattered was me. I focused on who I am instead of what he was. It was the key to my success.
I just found a beautiful poem that is about healing and life’s journey entitled, “My Journey”:
http://www.giftfromwithin.org/html/poetryart.html