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Title: Sometimes I Act Crazy : Living with Borderline Personality Disorder by Jerold J. Kreisman, Harold Straus ISBN: 0-471-22286-0 Publisher: Wiley Pub. Date: 20 February, 2004 Format: Hardcover Volumes: 1 List Price(USD): $24.95 |
Average Customer Rating: 4 (6 reviews)
Rating: 1
Summary: Not Worth The Paper It's Written On
Comment: I picked up this book at the store, intenting to purchase it and began to flip through it as I waited for my boyfriend. When I hit the section that described how BPD is underdiagnosed and went on to give a list of 'signs' for the reader that indicate you could have BPD, I put the book back on the shelf and decided not to waste my money.
The authors seem to have the idea that anyone who was abused as a child, the victim of any type of violence, or been in a bad relationship needs to make an appointment with a psychiatrist because they suffer from BPD and are going to either kill themselves or end up in a long term hospital if they don't get treatment for their 'personality disorder' right away. Its books like this one that are the reason that anyone who has their own, non-mainstream, opinions are told they are mentally ill and verbally and psychologically abused by mental health professionals until they conform to what the mental illness gurus define as normal.
As far as BPD being underdiagnosed, Kreisman and Straus are horribly mistaken. BPD is one of the most prevalent labels around and normally given to any woman/girl who has the courage to disagree with a psychiatrist or therapist's opinion or has any views they don't agree with. When suffering depression as a young teenager (13-15) I was told I had BPD. The fact that I was an honor roll student in school, described as easy to get along with, polite, and very mature by my classmates and teachers and flirted with alchohal and weed no more than any of my peers didn't matter. All that was needed was one thing - the fact that I self injured. The second that label was on me no mental health professional would ever take a word I said at face value again; everything I said would be twisted and distorted to fit the DSM criteria for BPD. I came to know many, many other teenaged girls and young women who were subjected to this same treatment.
BPD is nothing more than words, a label created to ensure doctors get paid and can maintain the upper hand over the people they treat by reminding them of their 'disorder'. To anyone who reads this after being told you have BPD by a doctor or therapist, I have some advice for you. First, don't buy this book it will only make you feel less than human. Secondly, find a therapist who doesn't take stock in all the lovely little labels psychiatry has cooked up over the years and will see you as a person. That is how you will truely feel better, not by taking medications or going to DBT groups to learn how to handle what they've decided are inappropriate emotions.
Rating: 4
Summary: Abused Confused Anxiety Ridden Depressed and Destructive
Comment: I strongly recommend this book for anyone seeking to find help with frequent feelings of loneliness or emptiness, mood disorders, any type of addiction, identity issues, self-esteem issues, reoccurring unresolved anger, troubling relationship, boundary and trust issues.
Excellent compliments to this book are: The Angry Heart: Overcoming Borderline and Addictive Disorders by Joseph Santoro and Ronald Cohen; Emotional Blackmail: When People in Your Life Use Fear, Obligation and Guilt to Manipulate You by Susan Forward and Donna Frazier; Why Is It Always About You?: The Seven Deadly Sins of Narcissism by Sandy Hotchkiss and James Masterson; The Narcissistic Family: Diagnosis and Treatment by Stephanie Donaldson-Pressman and Robert Pressman; Understanding the Borderline Mother: Helping Her Children Transcend the Intense, Unpredictable and Volatile Relationship by Christine Ann Lawson; Living with the Passive-Aggressive Man by Scott Wetzler; Malignant Self Love: Narcissism Revisited by Sam Vaknin and Lidija Rangelovska (Editor); Children of the Self-Absorbed: A Grown-Up's Guide to Getting Over Narcissistic Parents by Nina Brown; Treating Attachment Disorders: From Theory to Therapy by Karl Heinz Brisch and Kenneth Kronenberg; Secrets, Lies, Betrayals: The Body/Mind Connection by Maggie Scarf; Toxic Coworkers: How to Deal with Dysfunctional People on the Job by Alan Cavaiola and Neil Lavender; Bully in Sight: How to Predict, Resist, Challenge and Combat Workplace Bullies by Tim Field.
And if you want to pursue the subject even further, you may be interested in reading The Narcissistic / Borderline Couple: A Psychoanalytic Perspective On Marital Treatment; Sickened: The Memoir of a Munchausen by Proxy Childhood by Julie Gregory and Marc Feldman; Charred Souls: A Story of Recreational Child Abuse by Trena Cole; Parenting with Love and Logic: Teaching Children Responsibility by Jim Fay and Foster Cline.
Rating: 5
Summary: Brilliant!
Comment: Easily the best book out there on BPD. All the new medication regimes and treatment regimes that weren't around when he wrote his first book on the subject 30 yrs ago. Hopefully this book will reach the same heights as his first book as the BPD Primer. Extremely concise, easy to read. I love this book. Read it.
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