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Please stop and listen

Posted: 27 February 2003 | Subscribe Online


There is a real lack of understanding among the public about people described as having a "personality disorder". My aim is to increase understanding and do my part in helping both the public and those who suffer from this condition.

We are generally made vulnerable to problems with mood, thought, behaviour and interpersonal difficulties, usually as a result of gross injustices in our early lives. We need our experiences to be heard and validated, but are largely misunderstood.

I was physically and sexually abused by a powerful authority figure during my childhood; this made me vulnerable in adulthood to feelings of misplaced depression, hopelessness, guilt, shame, rage and fear on a daily basis, to such a degree that I often had feelings of violence toward myself and others.
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The abuse also made me react with complete terror as well as rage when faced with authority figures, while simultaneously craving safe parenting as well as punishment from him or her, with sexuality often becoming confused in all of this. This helped to perpetuate the abuse from other men throughout my adult life, compounding my problems. After a few years of intense therapy, I now see that these things are totally understandable and follow on directly from such childhood abuse, but for many years I thought I was a freak and had no insight into why I was like I was.

The chronic sense of defectiveness that I experienced was exacerbated by professionals who, lacking skills in the field of personality disorder, expressed judgemental opinions about me - for example that I was "a psychopath". This kind of statement, which was often made by nurses, GPs and others, was very damaging to me and was also, at times, the source of distrust, fear and anger.

The hatred that I had towards society in general, and the violent behaviour that I exhibited both towards myself and others, came to a stop when I was finally taken in by a therapeutic community ward within a large secure hospital in York - an environment that was both willing to help and had the skills to do so.
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The pain I still experience will probably always be with me. However, I find I can manage it much better when I have the support of people who are sufficiently educated and willing to listen. At my present treatment centre, an open therapeutic community within a hospital called the Retreat, York, the professionals do not call it personality disorder. They say, instead, that we are survivors of trauma.

Throughout my difficulties, I have experienced much intolerance. People with this unfortunate label can be held in even more disdain than those with a biological mental illness. The stigma is even more damaging when it comes from health professionals.

Usually, if people see a child being hurt, their instinct is to help. Yet when they see the adult child, they turn away. I am one voice for adult survivors. Many of us were that child, but we were largely unheard then. I ask that we are heard now.

Nina Roberts is a service user.


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