Troubled personalities and their wicked ways
The riveting high-roller-lifestyle television drama series from 2006 called Wicked Wicked Games, starring Clive Robertson as the 25-year hate target of the jilted-lover figure for Tatum O’Neal’s onscreen character – I wonder now if lawn tennis great John McEnroe knew about her really crazy-wicked Blythe Hunter half before they wedded – ended its run in my neighborhood last week on Africa Independent Television or AIT.
By the way, she was really terrific in that role of Blyhte Hunter! And, after reading this about her abused early childhood and tweenies and her remarkable comeback, I do believe that she's truly one heck of a beautiful survivor.
Her paternal-twin sons put her in the loony bin after being diagnosed for multiple split personality or MSP. Now it turns out that the overkill behavior found in borderline personality disorder or BPD patients is not so far fetched anymore.
In fact, according to the article linked to above, “….As many as 75% hurt themselves, and approximately 10% commit suicide…A 2008 study of nearly 35,000 …..found that 5.9% — which would translate into 18 million Americans — had been given a BPD diagnosis. As recently as 2000, the American Psychiatric Association believed that only 2% had BPD. (In contrast, clinicians diagnose bipolar disorder and schizophrenia in about 1% of the population.)…”
What defines BPD? Well, how about inconsolable depression or raging anger over otherwise normal situations in life and all compounded by overeating, substance abuse, suicide attempts, and/or intentional self-injury? Is that normal?







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