Inspirational Therapy for Borderline Personality Disorder Treatment

Our therapy Borderline Personality Disorder Treatment is evidence-based and integrates a range of therapeutic modalities, including cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), and acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), to provide personalized care that addresses the specific needs of each individual.

Why Inspirational Therapy?

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a complex and challenging mental health condition that can have a profound impact on an individual’s life. Individuals with BPD may struggle with intense emotions, unstable relationships, impulsive behaviors, and a sense of emptiness or worthlessness. Inspirational Therapy offers a unique and holistic approach to BPD treatment that emphasizes the development of positive coping skills, emotion regulation, and interpersonal effectiveness. Our Borderline Personality Disorder Treatment involves psychoeducation to help individuals better understand their condition and develop strategies to manage their symptoms.

What is Borderline Personality Disorder?

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a mental health condition that influences the way people think and feel about “self” and others. This can cause an impairment in daily functioning. It involves self-esteem problems, difficult time controlling behavior and emotions, and there seems to be issues with relationships.

The individuals that have Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) have extreme fear of abandonment and/or uncertainty and cannot tolerate being alone. Individuals with BPD may push others away by having inappropriate anger, impulsivity and mood swings, even though the person wants to have sustainable and loving relationships with others.

BPD will usually start by early adulthood. This mental health issue is known to worsen during young adulthood but may get better in time.

So many people struggle with BPD, so no one is alone; there are many clients that go on and have a productive life with BPD after receiving treatment through psychotherapy.

Signs and Symptoms

  • Feelings of emptiness
  • Self-harm, suicidal threats or behavior, can be a response to being fearful of abandonment or rejection
  • Some periods of stress-related paranoia and derealization, lasting from minutes to hours
  • Risky or impulsivity, such as gambling, unsafe sex, binge eating, drug abuse or reckless driving or being involved with self-sabotage
  • The person sees themselves as bad or as not even existing at all, rapid changes in self-identity and self-image, which can cause a shift in changing goals and values.
  • Individual will have an extreme fear of abandonment and will sometimes go to serious measures to avoid real or imagined rejection or separation
  • Pattern of unstable relationships, putting someone on a patistole one minute and then thinking they are cruel the next
  • Mood swings that can last a few minutes or up to hours, which can lead to happiness, shame, anxiety or irritability

If you have suicidal thoughts

If an individual is seeing mental images of hurting yourself, having suicidal ideation or suicidal tendencies, get help immediately by:

  • Call 911 or Inspirational Therapies for borderline personality disorder treatment.
  • Call a suicide hotline, In U.S. call or text 988 to Suicide Hotline, available 24/7, or use the Lifeline Chat, free and confidential.
  • Call a mental health provider, doctor or other health care provider.
  • Contact someone from the faith community.

Remember, take every suicidal threat seriously, get that person help immediately!!!

Complications

Borderline Personality Disorder can impact multiple areas of a person’s life. It can make it difficult to have sustainable relationships, jobs, school, attend social activities and a low self-image, which can cause:

  • Serve jail time, multiple legal issues
  • Attempt or commit suicide
  • Not finishing education
  • Involved in accidents, unsafe sex, unplanned pregnancies, physical altercations and sexually transmitted diseases due to impulsivity.

In addition, people can have co-occurring disorders, for example:

  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Drug and alcohol abuse
  • Bipolar
  • Post Traumatic Stress
  • Attention-Deficit/hyperactivity
  • Other personality disorders
  • Eating disorders

Treatment

Borderline personality disorder treatment can be done by using psychotherapy during therapy sessions. Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) usually will not appear in children or teens. This is because what may seem to be signs and symptoms of BPD may disappear as children develop and become more mature.

Borderline Personality Disorder Treatment in Post Falls can help clients develop the skills to cope and manage this disorder. It is imperative that a client receive treatment for another mental health condition that is co-occurring with BPD such as, but not limited to depression or substance abuse. Through treatment a person can feel better about themselves and live a freeing and happy life.

Psychotherapy

Psychotherapy is also known as-talk therapy-it is the primary step of the Borderline Personality Disorder treatment. The therapist will assess and choose the right therapy approach that is right for the client. The goals for psychotherapy can help you:

  • Reduce impulsivity so the client can check into their emotions, instead of acting on them
  • Receive psychoeducation about Borderline Personality disorder
  • Control emotions that are uncomfortable
  • Decrease the impairment in daily functioning
  • Work on making relationships more sustainable

Types of  Psychotherapy that help:

  • Schema-Focused therapy: this type of therapy can help the client to recognize their unmet needs that have negatively impacted life patterns. This therapy teaches the client how to get their needs met and how to increase healthy daily routines.
  • Mentalization-based therapy (MBT): it is a talk therapy that assists in recognizing a person’s thoughts and feelings and teaches them how to create another perspective, MBT focuses on thinking before reacting.
  • Transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP): known as psychodynamic psychotherapy, TFP assists in helping a person begin to understand their emotions and interpersonal struggles through the development of the client and therapist’s relationship.
  • Good psychiatric management: this approach focuses on case management, concentrating on the expectation of school and/or work participation. It makes sense of the emotions that are difficult by considering the interpersonal contexture of feelings. It can include medication, family education, groups and individual therapy.

Medications

There are not any medications at this time approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treating BOrderline Personality Disorder, some medications may help with reducing symptoms or co-occurring issues such as antidepressants, mood-stabilizing drugs and antipsychotics.

You can talk to Inspirational Therapies for borderline personality disorder treatment in about the side effects and ben efits these drugs can offer.

Welcome to Inspirational Therapy:

Accepting Blue Cross Insurance and Cash.