Avoidant Personality Disorder, Social Anxiety, or Just Shy?

Simple shyness? Social Anxiety Disorder? Avoidant Personality Disorder? What’s the difference? Are we just pathologizing normal behavior? Why so many labels?

Well, the labels exist to help professionals differentiate between constructs. That’s what most diagnoses are: categories put together by committee, identifying particular experiences or patterns of behavior, thinking and/or feeling that tend to co-occur. That’s an extreme simplification, but it’s a good jumping-off point for us.

Shyness is normal-people-speak. It’s the way we describe someone, or ourselves, when we are a little reluctant to “blow our own horn” or “put ourselves out there” (whatever THAT means). A little shyness means some mild worry about doing the right thing, not embarrassing ourselves, and wanting to avoid being a nuisance.

Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) is a psychiatric label that covers a level of shyness that interferes with someone’s daily life. That’s the test: whether the person’s regular life is constricted by worry about saying/doing the wrong thing in social settings and a tendency to avoid social gatherings or work or school related activities. It’s anxiety: there are both physical symptoms of fight-or-flight (elevated heart rate, for example, or more perspiration) and psychological symptoms (worrisome ideas about being in the spotlight and doing something “stupid,” for example). People with SAD usually have close relationships and get through daily life pretty well, with bumps along the way when big events or unusual circumstances – public speaking at a work meeting, for example, or large gathering – looms.

Avoidant Personality Disorder (APD) is sometimes confused with SAD. ADP is markedly different, though, because it encompasses a global low self-esteem and fear of being judged and found wanting in just about every way. So, for example, the person with some social anxiety has close friendships but might feel a bit anxious about going to a wedding reception with a lot of people s/he doesn’t know. The avoidant person has few close relationships out of fear of people finding them just not good enough to be friends. The APD person suffers anguish before annual performance reviews, and even gentle constructive criticism is received as devastating evidence of how deficient they are.

The fear is not “just in their head.” Fear is always a full-body experience. When a situation seems to be a threat (for the person who suffers with APD) to be judged and found wanting, the body responds before the logical, higher brain has even identified what is happening. So the amygdala has sounded the general alarm – the endocrine system flies into action, and as a result logical assessment is curtailed. Telling someone whose heart is pounding, whose blood is full of adrenaline and a massive dose of glycogen and is primed to run away that they are just overreacting is not helpful. Learning how to manage this, how to recover from the old messages of being “less than” and “not good enough,” is a process, not an instant fix. It can be healed.

There’s much more to these labels and to the details of treatment, of course, but perhaps the useful take-away today is: help is available. A lot of people will find that solid self-help approaches based in cognitive-behavioral therapy research (David Burns, MD’s books are excellent examples of these) quite sufficient for mild to moderate social anxiety. When that anxiety is all-pervasive, and there are few relationships out of fear of being found wanting, and loneliness and fear of being judged rule one’s life, the additional support of a counselor might be more helpful than trying to struggle through alone. Ironically, group psychotherapy can be quite effective for these difficulties – but it’s hard to find them.

If you know someone who is struggling, try to help them get help.

 

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Why are personality disorders so difficult to treat?

Why are personality disorders so difficult to treat?

Well, there’s a complicated question! This post attempts to present an overview response.

A personality disorder, like just about all mental disorder diagnoses, is made based on a checklist of complaints, symptoms, and observations. However, personality disorders are very different from what we normally think of as emotional problems.

Consider, for example, depression. “Depression” is diagnosed when 2 weeks have passed and certain criteria have been met (and there’s no “pass” given for grief or other traumatic events in the new diagnostic manual, although we’re supposed to note it in the records). Most people know when they’re sad, irritable, unhappy, and hopeless. It feels awful and they want to get that bad feeling off of them. Some people might not think of it as “depression.” They might identify it as a “low time,” or it might be grief, or a normal adjustment to a new phase of life such as marriage, an empty nest, or graduating from college. It might be a normal but very painful response to some new curveball life has thrown at them: an illness, a layoff, retirement, etc.

A personality disorder is different because it is pervasive; like the personality of any person, it is part of everything. Your personality impacts how you interpret everything that happens, the way you react to people and events, the emotions you experience. This goes for healthy people as well as those whose patterns are far enough from the big, wide range of normal to merit a “disorder” status. So, when someone seems to have a personality disorder (say, narcissism), they are not experiencing their diagnosis as a messy, icky experience to be stopped. They are rolling along (over other people) and having their life. Everything comes through a lens that assures them that they are special, entitled to preferential treatment and to have their way, and, well, let’s face it, just better than us. Problems are experienced as due to the outside world and their own role in those problems is not apparent.

From a therapist’s perspective, when someone comes in with depression, even if that’s not what they, or we, might call it, they know they are unhappy and they want very much to feel like themselves again. They are hopeful that a counselor can help them push through this difficult time.

When someone who meets criteria for a personality disorder comes to treatment, it’s usually because of some other issue, such as work or relationship problems. Remember that each of us is walking around, seeing the world through our own eyes and interpreting everything we experience, including our own thoughts and feelings, through our unique mental structure. You build that mental structure from the earliest moments of life. Is the world safe? Are my needs met? Are the grownups who tend to me patient, gentle and kind? Babies are already sorting out information and creating a set of basic assumptions about the world that will become essential aspects of their personality. It’s so deep, it’s hard to not take for granted that our way of making sense of things isn’t necessarily the only, or best, way. So when patterns of problems arise with colleagues, bosses or family, it’s hard to believe that the problem is fundamental to our mental structure; it defies logic and could be very insulting. The person may be suffering terribly, every day. This is definitely the case with some of the personality disorders, such as Borderline Personality Disorder, Avoidant Personality Disorder and Dependent Personality Disorder. Whether these or any of the personality disorder diagnoses, the person did not choose this burden and it isn’t their fault. However, presenting it as an internal problem – to them – can feel like blaming and attacking – which is definitely not the therapist’s intention.

Imagine if something terrible happened to you: a tsunami. Your workplace is destroyed. You lose your house. You lose your stuff. You catch a mosquito-borne illness and suffer long-term ramifications. It’s a series of terrible events and you find yourself traumatized and perpetually anxious. Is that anxiety your fault? Certainly not. Just so, the early life experiences that set people up for the challenges we call personality disorders are not their fault. However, it’s a problem that they can learn to heal, but that can sound like blaming the victim. Thus, if someone meets criteria for a personality disorder, trying to sell them on dealing with the personality disorder is pretty much like saying, “Look, an awful lot about the way you think and respond to things is kind of messed up. But, never fear! Together we can bulldoze your personality and how you think, feel and behave, pour a new slab, and then we’ll rebuilding you from the ground up. You’ll learn new ways of thinking, feeling and behaving.”

Even when it’s dressed up in tactful, compassionate psychological language, that, my friend, is a very hard sell indeed.

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Oh, the drama!

It’s about 2/3 of the way through the spring term, so it’s time again for my intro psychology students to learn about the various personality disorders, as defined by the American Psychiatric Association. One interesting one – and not necessarily in a good way – is Histrionic Personality Disorder (HPD).

Traditionally, HPD was estimated to occur in perhaps 2-3% of the population. You know these folks; you’ve known them all your life. They’re exciting, intense, and fun; the life of the party, the center of attention…and they can’t turn it “off” when appropriate. It’s the “friend” who wears a very well-fitted white dress to your wedding; the family member who always has to make it “about them,” when it’s very, very much about someone else; the middle-aged parent who is trying to compete with a teenaged child to the point of embarrassment (for the child, that is). They lack empathy for anyone but themselves, but can emote with the best of them. Recent studies indicate that incidence of HPD is exploding – with some estimates as high as 27% of the young adult (under 35) population now meeting criteria for the psychiatric diagnosis. It’s thought that the two-generation long emphasis on having high self-esteem absent any achievement of good character or performance might be involved, as well as the current culture that elevates attention (any attention) as better than just chugging along, living your life happily with the people you love.

Which of our grandparents would ever, in million years, have imagined everyday people talking about how many “followers” they have, as if they were Jesus?

Like almost all psychiatric diagnoses, HPD is defined by a checklist; meet enough criteria according to the clinician holding the checklist, and you’ve earned the label. Of course, someone with HPD isn’t coming for therapy for help with HPD. Others may come for help with them, or it may become apparent within the context of counseling for some other issue: relationships, work conflicts, etc.   It’s sad, really, that it can be so difficult to realize one needs help, because at the root of this is a small child, still jumping up and down crying out, “Mommy! Watch this! Mommy – look at me!” and that small child in the unconscious just doesn’t realize that all the jumping up and down cannot make them feel “seen,” and they need to find other ways – more adult, meaningful ways – to feel connected and recognized. After all, everyone wants to be seen by eyes that love them; didn’t the film Avatar touch on that well, where the most intimate thing people could say to another living being was, “I see you”?

Like some of the other personality disorders, particularly Antisocial Personality Disorder, Borderline Personality Disorder, and Narcissistic Personality Disorder, the person with Histrionic Personality Disorder will seem fine…in fact, better than fine. All four can be very charming, interesting, and fun. They can seem special and their attention can make the next victim caught in their vortex feel special until all heck breaks loose.

Be compassionate but beware. No matter how wonderful, loving and patient you are, healing the wounded heart under HPD is not a one-man or one-woman task.

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.