The Science of Us
Imagine living with a level of emotional sensitivity where the slightest social friction feels like a third-degree burn. For over 4 million people in the U.S. alone, Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) is a daily reality of intense mood swings, unstable relationships, and a fragile sense of self. In this episode, we follow the story of Leo, a brilliant software engineer whose "chaotic cycle of competence and collapse" was triggered not by a single violent event, but by decades of "little-t" trauma—chronic emotional invalidation and the relentless pressure to be perfect. We explore how Leo’s journey at McLean Hospital led to a revelation: that the mere absence of safety and being seen can be its own profound injury. We dive into the emerging science that is radically reframing BPD as a response to injury rather than a character flaw. Discover the "overlapping stress-axis" between BPD and complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (c-PTSD), supported by data showing that up to 85% of individuals with BPD have a history of neglect or coercive control. We examine groundbreaking brain imaging from Oslo and South Korea that proves constant humiliation can thin out the anterior cingulate cortex just as deeply as physical trauma. From the genetic "vulnerability" identified by the UK Biobank to new "Trauma-Integrated" therapies, this episode traces a path from misunderstood wounds to a more hopeful frontier of repair.
19 Folgen
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