Borderline Personality Disorder Could Actually Be an Adaptation!

Borderline Personality Disorder Could Actually Be an Adaptation!
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Borderline personality disorder could be something else rather that what we have been told so far. Check out the latest reports about this below.

Interesting details about BPD 

Borderline personality disorder (BPD) is characterized by difficulties in maintaining healthy interpersonal relationships. Individuals with BPD traits frequently experience unstable and tumultuous relationships, where they can quickly alternate between idealizing someone and completely devaluing them.

“BPD is associated with mistrust, hypersensitivity to rejection, and difficulty controlling emotions. It’s also connected to impulsiveness and self-harm. BPD tends to have a positive outcome. Symptoms often gradually decrease around mid-life, and there are psychological treatments designed to help people diagnosed with BPD,” according to the article we are mentioning from Psychology Today. 

According to mainstream research, BPD is frequently attributed to brain dysfunction, with one theory suggesting that a deficit in the frontal lobe affects impulse control. Nevertheless, emerging scientific literature presents an alternative viewpoint. What if BPD is not a dysfunction, but rather an adaptation? What if it’s a deliberate response to life’s challenges instead of being a disease?

The main proponent of the idea that some BPD traits may reflect an adaptation is Martin Brüne, professor of psychiatry at Ruhr University Bochum and a psychiatrist at LWL University Hospital.

BPD could be an adaptation

There are several pieces of evidence that some BPD traits could be an adaptation rather than a dysfunction (see Del Giudice, 2018 and Brüne, 2016). These include the following: 

– Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is present in around 6% of the population and is linked to genetic risk factors. Usually, if a condition is prevalent among humans and has a significant genetic risk factor, it is likely to serve some purpose. Otherwise, natural selection would have eradicated it from the population.

– BPD can be influenced by traumatic experiences such as neglect and abuse. It is worth noting that a significant number, up to 80 percent, of individuals diagnosed with BPD have reported experiencing such adverse childhood events.
– Individuals with BPD possess a heightened sense of emotional empathy, allowing them to effectively discern and interpret the emotions of others. This aligns with the theory that BPD may serve as an adaptive mechanism for managing interpersonal relationships and fostering intimacy.

Check out more details in the original article. 


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Rada Mateescu

Passionate about freedom, truth, humanity, and subjects from the science and health-related areas, Rada has been blogging for about ten years, and at Health Thoroughfare, she's covering the latest news on these niches.

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