Navigating Relationships with BPD: Building Connection Despite Emotional Storms
June 26, 2025Living with complex mental health challenges like borderline personality disorder (BPD), complex PTSD, and anxiety disorders makes traditional self-care advice feel inadequate. When you’re experiencing emotional dysregulation or flashbacks, suggestions to “take a bubble bath” seem trivial at best.
As a mother navigating trauma recovery while raising a toddler, I’ve discovered what genuine trauma-informed self-care actually looks like. Today, I’m sharing practical, evidence-based practices that address the unique needs of trauma survivors balancing family responsibilities.
Trauma-Informed Self-Care: Beyond the Basics
True self-care for trauma survivors isn’t about escaping reality—it’s about creating conditions where we can feel safe enough to be present in our lives. Effective trauma recovery requires practices that directly address nervous system dysregulation and emotional processing challenges.
Nervous System Regulation for Trauma Recovery
**1. Intentional Pendulation for Anxiety Management**
One effective trauma healing technique is pendulation—the conscious movement between activation and calm:
– Set a timer for 2 minutes to acknowledge anxious sensations
– Engage in 2 minutes of a regulating activity (deep breathing, cold water on face)
– Repeat 3-4 times
This teaches your nervous system it can move in and out of activation safely, reducing PTSD symptoms over time.
**2. Micro-Moments of Co-Regulation**
For parents with trauma histories, brief co-regulation opportunities throughout the day are essential:
– 30 seconds of synchronized breathing with your child
– A 20-second hug with your partner (releases oxytocin)
– Gentle contact with pets for parasympathetic activation
These “nervous system tune-ups” prevent dysregulation from building—particularly important for those with BPD and anxiety disorders.
Emotional Processing for BPD and CPTSD
**1. Containment Before Processing**
With BPD’s emotional intensity and CPTSD’s overwhelming flashbacks, trying to process every feeling immediately can be counterproductive:
– Acknowledge emotions without immediate deep diving
– Visualize “placing” overwhelming emotions in a container for later
– Schedule specific times to process contained emotions with support
This DBT-inspired approach helps manage emotional flooding common in personality disorders.
**2. Differentiation Work**
A crucial practice for trauma survivors is learning to differentiate between:
– Past threats vs. present triggers
– Emotional flashbacks vs. current emotions
– Others’ responsibility vs. personal responsibility
Keep a simple chart: “What happened,” “What it reminds me of,” and “What’s different now.” This cognitive behavioral technique grounds you when emotions threaten to overwhelm.
Boundary Practices for Mental Health
**1. Energy Accounting**
With limited emotional resources, treat your energy like a bank account:
– Identify activities/people that deposit vs. withdraw energy
– Schedule high-demand activities when your emotional resources are fullest
– Build in recovery time after necessary energy expenditures
This approach helps manage the emotional exhaustion common with anxiety disorders and PTSD.
**2. Permission Slips**
Writing literal permission slips for things your trauma makes difficult:
– Permission to leave triggering situations
– Permission to change your mind
– Permission to prioritize regulation over explanation
These reminders counter the internal pressure to override needs—a trauma response that worsens mental health symptoms.
Identity Reclamation After Trauma
**1. Values-Based Decision Making**
Trauma disconnects us from our authentic selves. Regularly check decisions against core values:
– Does this align with who I want to be as a parent?
– Is this reaction from my authentic self or my trauma response?
– What would I choose without fear?
This ACT approach helps rebuild identity after trauma.
**2. Pleasure Mapping**
Trauma severely impacts our ability to feel pleasure. Deliberately track activities that create positive feelings:
– Keep a “joy journal” of moments that brought pleasure
– Schedule brief pleasure activities daily
– Work through guilt or shame around experiencing joy
This practice counters anhedonia (inability to feel pleasure) common in depression and PTSD.
Relational Healing for BPD and Attachment Trauma
**1. Secure Attachment Behaviors**
Consciously practice secure attachment with partners and children:
– Directly ask for needs instead of testing
– Practice repair after connection ruptures
– Verbalize appreciation for reliability
These practices are particularly healing for those with BPD and attachment trauma.
**2. Selective Vulnerability**
Rather than all-or-nothing sharing (common with BPD):
– Identify safe people for different types of vulnerability
– Start with small disclosures to test trustworthiness
– Respect your need for privacy without shame
This balanced approach builds healthy relationships while protecting emotional safety.
Implementation for Parents with Mental Health Challenges
**1. Integration Rather Than Separation**
Instead of seeing self-care as separate from family life:
– Practice co-regulation while playing with your child
– Use meal preparation as mindfulness practice
– Turn bedtime routines into sensory regulation opportunities
**2. Micro-Practices Throughout the Day**
Healing doesn’t require hour-long sessions:
– Use 30-second grounding practices between activities
– Utilize transitions (driving, waiting in line) for brief regulation
– Set phone reminders for body/emotion check-ins
**3. Leveraging Natural Parenting Rhythms**
Align healing practices with parenting:
– Use naptime for emotional processing
– Practice mindfulness during repetitive tasks
– Create family rituals serving both child development and your regulation
The Reality of Trauma Recovery While Parenting
Healing from trauma while raising children is challenging. Some days, survival mode is all you can manage. On those days, self-care might look like:
– Ordering takeout
– Asking your partner to handle bedtime
– Lowering expectations to focus on essential connection
This too is self-care—recognizing limits and working within them.
he Family Impact of Authentic Self-Care
What motivates me through this work is seeing how healing practices create positive ripples:
– Children learn emotional regulation by watching us
– Relationships deepen as attachment patterns heal
– Generational trauma patterns begin to transform
When we engage in authentic self-care, we’re creating a new legacy for our children.
Starting Your Trauma Recovery Journey
If you’re parenting with BPD, CPTSD, or anxiety disorders, experiment with just one practice from this post. Start small, be gentle with yourself, and remember that healing isn’t linear.
What forms of authentic self-care have you found helpful in your healing journey? I’d love to hear your experiences in the comments.
*Note: While these practices support healing, they complement rather than replace professional treatment. If you’re struggling with trauma, BPD, CPTSD, or anxiety disorders, please consult a qualified mental health professional.*
