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.
Very good article. However, the person I refer to as a sociopath has actually been diagnosed as a BPD. Twice. Of course, she says both psychologists were completely wrong and didn’t know her at all.
Here’s the problem I have with the article.
The whole premise of a BPD is that they do, in fact, present with sociopathic symptoms when experiencing a perceived sense of abandonment. That’s how they can react with such inconsolable rage, lack of empathy, and suicidal gestures for attention.
So I think the definition of BPD has always included behaviours linked with sociopathy. However– what makes a BPD in general? What do they act like in calm times? Can they feel and respond with empathy? Do they engage in risky behaviours?
That’s my issue, because my abuser is, in my humble opinion, a sociopath. I don’t believe she’d kill anybody in cold blood, but I wouldn’t put it past her either. She would have to be angry, so maybe that makes her a BPD after all. All that aside, she’s a complete b!tch when she wants to be, and a completely syrupy, fake fraud when she wants to be. Is that a BPD? Sounds more S to me, and this is NOT in a period of dissociative anger.
I guess what I’m saying is I need more decisive answers.
Kerisee and Maniatissa,
It really doesn’t matter if it is Borderline/Psychopathic (or any other) PERSONALITY DISORDER—the point is PERSONALITY DISORDER. NONE of them can be “fixed” or “cured” and there is no pilll to help it, so which clinical niche they fit into doesn’t really make a “tinker’s dam” of difference.
They are ALL violent at times, they are all manipulative, they are all incapable of a good relationship, and they are all TOXIC.
As a former mental health professional I think I sort of spent too much time obscessing about which diagnosis, etc. and it doesn’t matter. Even people who are neither BPD or PPD can be TOXIC and do we want ANYONE in our life who is toxic? Nope.
My mother is an ENABLER, a TOXIC ENABLER and there is a pattern there. She is hard core, no changing her behaivor or her attitude. It is her life style. My non-P son C sort of controls her with “black mail” of telling her that if she continues to send money and support to my P-son (thus giving him ammunition to shot at us) that he will NC her entirely forever. Since he is the ONLY close relative she has that is speaking ot her at ALL, this kind of (we think) keeps her behavior in check. (We hope) Sure, this is manipulation on our parts, but at the same time, we KNOW for a fact that my P-son will use every advantage to find a way to GET REVENGE on us, he has already tried to have us killed. So we feel that morally, we have a reason to do this. Maybe a therapist would say we are rationalizing it (the manipulation) but it was our decision and we made it and are ok with it.
My mother has behaved as a “psychopath by proxy” in her protection of my P-son’s murderous behavior. It almost got us killed. I am NC with her and son C and son D have limited contact with her.
But the basic thing is that the BEHAVIOR IS TOXIC. So what the “word for it is” is NOT IMPORTANT. It is just important to distance yourself to the utmost if you can possibly do so.
Whoa. This is just what I needed to read.
Starting oh, about 2 years ago, I realized that my sister wasn’t, hmm… quite ‘right’?
I read quite a bit, and decided she was Borderline. Well, Pandora’s Box was open, and I couldn’t shut it. I had always assumed that she forgot things, or she was distracted, or she didn’t really mean to say that… OMG once I started speaking up and saying, things like ‘hey, that hurt my feelings (more calmly than I felt). She did things, said things, that weren’t like BPD. It was like she was a sociopath.
Even as recently as yesterday I posted something about how my sister was a Narcissist. I knew it didn’t fit quite right, but it was as close as I could get. Because she acts like she is BPD most of the time, but when she’s backed into a corner, she’s S. I just hadn’t thought about it that way before.
If I had a one wish (and I couldn’t bring anyone back from the dead), I want the sister I thought I had back. I know I never REALLY had her to begin with, but we are so close in age (what in heck were my parents thinking?) that I know where she comes from.
Anyway, thanks for the article. It makes so much sense to me now.
Cedrus
Dear Cedrus,
Any of the “cluster B’s” are TOXIC to one extent or another—emotionally, financially, physically or any/all of the above.
The ONLY solution to survive most of these is NC.
NC is like an emotional “condom,” it TAKES THE WORRY OUT OF BEING CLOSE, CAUSE YOU ARE NOT CLOSE!
Ox,
I was NC (not perfectly, but pretty close) for about 1-1/2 years because I needed a cease fire to figure out which way was up. I was grieving and reading and talking to a therapist, and keeping a low profile about it with the rest of my family. (That wasn’t hard. I live far away and I was told explicitly by every one of them that knew that they didn’t want to get in the middle. I learned what that meant later: they had zero interest in my side.)
Anyway, after a brief but gut wrenching break in NC last fall, I am now permanently NC with all of them. I can’t trust one word that any one of them says. And I have no interest in finding out any more of the slander that is being spread about me. I would want to defend myself, and there is no point. No one cares, and that is the heart of what hurts the most. No one, not even my own mother (why would she, she’s S herself), wanted to know my side. They never even asked. And my sister, she is finally the golden child, and I am written out of my mother’s will. Why? no one even bothered to make up an excuse.
(Technically, I am not NC with my mother, she is NC with me. She disowned me, then I went NC with everyone else. It was quite the drama.)
Reality hurts, but it’s the only way to fly!
Cedrus
I was always tempted to play his manipulation game, and I think I did so better than he expected. But he would always go further than I and not only could I never win but he dragged me down to his level and I did things I’d never imagine myself doing. The only way to win was to leave and never look back. Lucky for him there’s no shortage of vulnerable, insecure women in the world. Maybe it’s egotistical of me but I hope he angrily remembers me as a woman who was too sane to sleep with him.
My mom was diagnosed as BPD but if so she’s a very mild case. I think she’s just bipolar and self-absorbed.
Penelope, Many people who are bi-polar are also psychopaths or other personality disorder…the two disorders together I think makes it much worse.
Cedrus, It is tough to cut ties with your family of origin, but sometiems it is the ONLY option. Not just with the Ps themselves, but all of their dupes and enablers as well. I call my egg donor “psychopath by proxy” as she does the work for my P-son since he is in prison (for murder) and she enables him even though she knows and has seen proof that he tried to have me killed…but now she “doesn’t believe” it. All cloaked of course in “Christianity” and LIES–both his and hers.
Until I realized that I COULD go NC with her (I can’t believe I never even considered it on a permanent basis) I couldn’t heal because I always got sucked back into the drama. Now that I am NC with her (even though we live on the same farm, just a half mile apart) I am making progress and my stress level has dropped to almost nothing. My reserves of strength and SANITY are returning and I’m enjoying life, doing things again, and having FUN! A year and a half ago, I didn’t think I would ever smile again.
OxDrover,
True, but in her case she just didn’t want realize that being a wife/mother would be difficult/hard work/not always fun and wanted the family to take care of her instead of the other way around. And she inappropriately medicated for years. Thanks to Zyprexa and the fact that she’s not stressed by not having kids/teens in the house she is far more stable than she ever was in my memories.
penelope:
“True, but in her case she just didn’t want realize that being a wife/mother would be difficult/hard work/not always fun and wanted the family to take care of her instead of the other way around.”
That is a classic form of control — the overwhelmed, infantalized parent looking to the child to parent the parent.
“If YOu Had Controlling Parents” by Dan Neuharth. Can’t say enough good things about this book.