Personality disorders
Definition
According to the DSM, a personality disorder is a persistent pattern of inner experiences and behaviors that deviates from cultural expectations. The pattern is:
- pervasive (present in many situations)
- rigid (difficult to adapt)
- early onset (adolescence or early adulthood)
- and causes significant distress or impairment in functioning.
Reframing from the perspective of contextual thinking
Within this project, we view personality disorders from the idea that context blindness and limitations in complex thinking are at the root. Much behavior that is seen as “strange” or “deviant” can be understood as a way of surviving in a society that strongly relies on context sensitivity.
A core problem here is the lack of basic trust. Without the ability to properly integrate intentions, timelines, and patterns, trust becomes fragile. This explains why in various personality disorders (e.g., borderline, paranoid) trust quickly turns into suspicion or emotional crisis.
Cluster A — odd and eccentric
- Paranoid — sterk eerstegraads en wantrouwend interpreteren; complexe structuren worden vereenvoudigd tot “opzet” of “samenzwering”.
- Schizoid — withdrawal from social interactions as a comprehensible reaction to an overwhelming world that is difficult to contextualize.
- Schizotypal — eccentric behavior, magical thinking, ideas of reference. With limited context integration, random patterns are seen as meaningful; that lies on a continuum towards psychosis.
Cluster B — emotional and unpredictable
- Antisocial — egocentric/transactional thinking can lead to rule-breaking when the consequences for others are not considered. This is often clumsy coping, not always intentional “badness”.
- Borderline — a very strong emotional response with limited cognitive empathy to frame those emotions; difficulty showing the "appropriate" emotion depending on the context.
- Theatrical (histrionic) — emphasis on expression without sufficient attunement to the situation and audience; emotions seem "overdone" because context integration falters.
- Narcissistic — fragile self-esteem is protected via fantasies of grandeur or superiority. Limited cognitive empathy and a narrow context focus cause others' signals to be missed; that seems cold or condescending, but is often a rigid coping mechanism to reduce unpredictability. See also pseudo-narcissism as a misinterpretation with a mismatch of thinking styles.
Cluster C — anxious and insecure
- Ontwijkende — vermijden als strategie wanneer context te complex of sociaal onvoorspelbaar voelt.
- Afhankelijke — aansluiten bij iemand die “orde” in de complexiteit brengt; kan steunend of toxisch uitpakken afhankelijk van de partner (bv. bij een narcistische partner).
- Dwangmatige persoonlijkheidsstoornis — rigiditeit, perfectionisme en controle om de complexiteit voorspelbaar te maken. Verwant aan heel sterk eerstegraads denken.
Samenvatting
Vanuit contextdenken verschuift de focus van “afwijking” naar strategie: veel PD-kenmerken zijn pogingen om houvast te vinden bij beperkte contextintegratie. Dat verklaart terugtrekking (schizoïde), patroon-zoeken (schizotypische), emotionele ontregeling (borderline), transactioneel/egocentrisch reageren (antisociaal, narcistisch), vermijden (ontwijkende), afhankelijk organiseren (afhankelijk) en rigide controleren. Het continuüm raakt aan heel sterk eerstegraads denken: van rigiditeit via dwang naar psychotische belevingen.