Living With BPD Without Excusing Harm
Holding compassion and accountability at the same time.
“How many times has your mind taken a small piece of uncertain information and spun a story around it that ends up consuming your thoughts.”
♥️A Note from Me
Hi, I’m Jessica.
I write NP Fellow, a weekly mental health and functional medicine newsletter, to help readers build emotional regulation skills, gain mental clarity, achieve optimal health and emotional freedom, and become the C.E.O. of their own health.
This article is personal for me.
I’ve lived alongside a close family member with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). I’ve seen how deeply it can affect the person experiencing it and how profoundly it can shape the emotional dynamic of an entire family.
I’ve also seen how much changes when understanding, boundaries, and effective treatment enter the picture.
This piece is Part II in a short BPD series. It was written in response to reader conversations, questions, and pain from people living with BPD and from those who love someone who has it.
My intention isn’t to assign blame, but to hold space for complexity, to offer clarity where there is often confusion, and to show that compassion and self-protection don’t have to be opposites.
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Understanding BPD Without Excusing Harm
It’s not always the arguments people remember; it’s the quiet afterward.
The moment when the room feels heavy and you replay what just happened, wondering how something so small escalated so quickly. You tell yourself to be patient. To be understanding and to remember that this isn’t intentional.
And yet, your body stays tense. You begin monitoring your words, your tone, and the timing of conversations. You don’t call it fear. You call it love. Or patience. Or compassion.
I’ve heard versions of this story from very different people.
From those living with emotional swings they don’t choose.
To those who fear abandonment deeply and feel overwhelmed by reactions they don’t fully understand themselves.
And from those who love someone like this and who also feel worn down, hypervigilant, and unsure where empathy ends and self-betrayal begins.
Both sides are both hurting and exhausted.
Both deserve clarity, compassion, and boundaries that protect mental health on all sides.
This is where conversations about Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) often break down.
Not because people don’t care, but because we struggle to hold compassion and accountability at the same time.
Understanding Isn’t The Same as Excusing
One of the most important distinctions in conversations about BPD is this:
Explaining behavior isn’t the same as excusing harm.
Research shows that people with BPD often have heightened emotional sensitivity and difficulty regulating stress responses, particularly in relational contexts.
This helps explain why emotions feel overwhelming and reactions escalate quickly; however, explanation doesn’t erase impact.
Someone can be struggling and still cause real harm.
Someone can be dysregulated and still be responsible for seeking treatment.
And loved ones are allowed to acknowledge both truths without guilt.
Boundaries aren’t a lack of empathy. They’re a form of care for everyone involved.
When Emotional Dysregulation Affects Relationships
The exact cause of BPD is still unknown, but research points to a combination of biological, psychological, and environmental factors.
BPD is marked by emotional intensity, fear of abandonment, and difficulty tolerating perceived rejection.
When untreated or unsupported, this can show up as:
Rapid mood shifts.
Escalating anger or emotional withdrawal.
Push–pull dynamics in close relationships.
Heightened reactivity to perceived slights.
Over time, loved ones often adapt by becoming hypervigilant, constantly scanning for emotional cues to prevent conflict.
This isn’t weakness. It’s a nervous system response to unpredictability.
Chronic exposure to this dynamic can lead to:
anxiety.
emotional exhaustion.
self-doubt.
codependent patterns.
Naming this reality doesn’t demonize people with BPD.
It simply acknowledges that relational harm can occur even when harm isn’t intended.
Accountability Is Part of Healing
A common misconception is that accountability is unfair or unrealistic for someone with BPD.
In reality, accountability is central to recovery.
Evidence-based treatments, particularly Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), are effective because they pair compassion with responsibility.
DBT teaches emotional awareness, distress tolerance, impulse control, mindfulness, and interpersonal effectiveness.
Treatment doesn’t shame emotions. It supports learning new ways to respond to them.
Healing isn’t passive. It requires engagement, practice, and willingness and when treatment is present, outcomes improve significantly for both individuals and their relationships.
Companion Section: For Loved Ones
If you love someone with BPD, this section is for you.
You can care deeply and need boundaries.
You can understand the illness and protect your mental health.
You can support recovery without sacrificing yourself.
A few truths that often go unspoken:
Validation doesn’t mean tolerating harmful behavior.
Boundaries aren’t abandonment.
Staying too long can quietly become self-betrayal.
Leaving a relationship doesn’t mean you failed or didn’t love enough.
Compassion that costs you your own nervous system isn’t sustainable compassion.
Your well-being matters too.
Reader Questions, Addressed
“Isn’t this just manipulation?”
What looks like manipulation is often fear-driven behavior rooted in emotional dysregulation. That being said, impact still matters and repeated harm requires boundaries and accountability.
“What if they don’t think they need help?”
Lack of insight can be part of the illness, but recovery still requires willingness. Loved ones aren’t responsible for forcing change.
“How do I know when it’s time to step away?”
If the relationship consistently feels unsafe, destabilizing, or damaging to your mental health, and treatment or change isn’t happening, stepping away can be an act of self-preservation, not abandonment.
“Does treatment really work?”
Yes. Research consistently shows that therapies like DBT reduce self-harm, emotional volatility, and relationship instability when actively practiced.🙌
When Stepping Away Isn’t Abandonment
Sometimes, the healthiest choice for a loved one is to step back or leave.
Choosing mental health, stability, or safety isn’t abandonment. It’s self-preservation.
Boundaries protect relationships when change is possible and protect people when it isn’t.
Final Thoughts
BPD is real.
The suffering is real and the relational impact is real too.
People living with BPD deserve understanding, access to effective treatment, and hope for recovery.
The people who love them deserve safety, clarity, and permission to protect their own mental health.
Understanding a condition should never require someone to tolerate harm and compassion should never come at the cost of self-preservation.
Both can exist.
Both matter.
And holding that complexity is where meaningful healing begins.
If this article brought something up for you, whether clarity, discomfort, or relief, you’re welcome to share thoughtfully.
This conversation matters, and it deserves care on all sides.
Thank you for reading this article.
Until next Sunday,
—Jessica
Your 2am friend who actually gets it
“When healing gets deep there’s sometimes an explosion of emotion that occurs to clear out old energetic debris. You feel most agitated right before you settle into a more substantial peace.” —Yung Pueblo
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MEDICAL DISCLAIMER
This content is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide medical advice or to take the place of such advice or treatment from a personal physician. All readers/viewers of this content are advised to consult their doctors or qualified health professionals regarding specific health questions. All viewers of this content, especially those taking prescription or over-the-counter medications, should consult their physicians before beginning any nutrition, supplement or lifestyle program.








This piece was written in response to reader conversations and lived experiences on all sides. My hope is that it offers clarity without blame, compassion without self-erasure, and space for complexity. Please engage thoughtfully. this is tender ground for many people. 🩵
Thanks for the information. It’s always good to spread awareness