Common features of personality disorders
Psychology is more an art form than a
science. There is no "Theory of Everything" from which one can derive
all mental health phenomena and make falsifiable predictions. Still, as far as
personality disorders are concerned, it is easy to discern common features.
Most personality disorders share a set of symptoms (as reported by the patient)
and signs (as observed by the mental health practitioner).
Patients suffering from personality
disorders have these things in common:
They are persistent, relentless,
stubborn, and insistent (except those suffering from the Schizoid or the
Avoidant Personality Disorders).
They feel entitled to - and vociferously
demand - preferential treatment and privileged access to resources and
personnel. They often complain about multiple symptoms. They get involved in
"power plays" with authority figures (such as physicians, therapists,
nurses, social workers, bosses, and bureaucrats) and rarely obey instructions
or observe rules of conduct and procedure.
They hold themselves to be superior to
others or, at the very least, unique. Many personality disorders involve an
inflated self-perception and grandiosity. Such subjects are incapable of
empathy (the ability to appreciate and respect the needs and wishes of other
people). In therapy or medical treatment, they alienate the physician or
therapist by treating her as inferior to them.
Patients with personality disorders are
self-centered, self-preoccupied, repetitive, and, thus, boring.
Subjects with personality disorders seek
to manipulate and exploit others. They trust no one and have a diminished
capacity to love or intimately share because they do not trust or love
themselves. They are socially maladaptive and emotionally unstable.
No one knows whether personality
disorders are the tragic outcomes of nature or the sad follow-up to a lack of
nurture by the patient's environment.
Generally speaking, though, most
personality disorders start out in childhood and early adolescence as mere
problems in personal development. Exacerbated by repeated abuse and rejection,
they then become full-fledged dysfunctions. Personality disorders are rigid and
enduring patterns of traits, emotions, and cognitions. In other words, they
rarely "evolve" and are stable and all-pervasive, not episodic. By
'all-pervasive", I mean to say that they affect every area in the
patient's life: his career, his interpersonal relationships, his social
functioning.
Personality disorders cause unhappiness
and are usually comorbid with mood and anxiety disorders. Most patients are
ego-dystonic (except narcissists and psychopaths). They dislike and resent who
they are, how they behave, and the pernicious and destructive effects they have
on their nearest and dearest. Still, personality disorders are defense
mechanisms writ large. Thus, few patients with personality disorders are truly
self-aware or capable of life transforming introspective insights.
Patients with personality disorder
typically suffer from a host of other psychiatric problems (example: depressive
illnesses, or obsessions-compulsions). They are worn-out by the need to reign
in their self-destructive and self-defeating impulses.
Patients with personality disorders have
alloplastic defenses and an external locus of control. In other words: rather
than accept responsibility for the consequences of their actions, they tend to
blame other people or the outside world for their misfortune, failures, and
circumstances. Consequently, they fall prey to paranoid persecutory delusions
and anxieties. When stressed, they try to preempt (real or imaginary) threats
by changing the rules of the game, introducing new variables, or by trying to
manipulate their environment to conform to their needs. They regard everyone
and everything as mere instruments of gratification.
Patients with Cluster B personality
disorders (Narcissistic, Antisocial, Borderline, and Histrionic) are mostly
ego-syntonic, even though they are faced with formidable character and
behavioral deficits, emotional deficiencies and lability, and overwhelmingly
wasted lives and squandered potentials. Such patients do not, on the whole,
find their personality traits or behavior objectionable, unacceptable,
disagreeable, or alien to their selves.
There is a clear distinction between
patients with personality-disorders and patients with psychoses
(schizophrenia-paranoia and the like). As opposed to the latter, the former
have no hallucinations, delusions or thought disorders. At the extreme,
subjects who suffer from the Borderline Personality Disorder experience brief
psychotic "microepisodes", mostly during treatment. Patients with
personality disorders are also fully oriented, with clear senses (sensorium),
good memory and a satisfactory general fund of knowledge.
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