Zainab Jafri
Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a complex and often debilitating condition marked by intense emotional instability, impulsive behavior, self-harm tendencies, and difficulty maintaining stable relationships. While BPD is typically diagnosed in adulthood, adolescents may exhibit early signs of borderline traits, which, if left unaddressed, can develop into a lifelong struggle with emotional regulation and interpersonal dysfunction. Social influences, including peer relationships and digital interactions, often reinforce maladaptive behaviors, while caregivers face the overwhelming challenge of managing extreme emotional shifts, impulsivity, and crisis situations. Despite psychological interventions, some adolescents continue to exhibit persistent emotional and behavioral dysregulation, highlighting the challenges in treating emerging borderline traits and the burden on caregivers.
This study explores the case of a 16-year-old adolescent female who is from Patna and is currently undergoing counseling sessions. She displays emerging borderline traits, including self-harm, impulsivity, fabricated victimization narratives, and unstable relationships. The case delves into the impact of social influences, including peer validation and online interactions, on her behavior and examines the significant emotional burden placed on her caregivers. She has undergone a total of fifteen sessions so far, including Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) interventions. The sessions are ongoing as per the need, reflecting the complexity of borderline traits and the necessity of sustained, flexible intervention. Psychological assessments, including Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) and Rorschach Inkblot Test, revealed a deep fear of abandonment, intense emotional reactivity, and a chronic need for external validation, all of which continue to shape her behavioral patterns.
It emphasizes that short-term interventions are often insufficient in addressing emerging borderline traits and that a long-term, multidisciplinary approach involving mental health professionals, structured therapeutic environments, and targeted caregiver support is essential. Without sustained intervention, these traits may solidify into a pervasive disorder, further impacting emotional and social development into adulthood.
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