Posted by
K. Finlayson, MA, LAC on Monday, May 28, 2007 4:14:11 PM
You’ll notice from my previous posts that I am describing the 10 major personality types with some discussion on how the various personality structures influence the type of behavior in the workplace. When I’m done, I’ll summarize them and make a few important points that I believe are critical to understanding and developing an authentic workplace.
First, personality types are only one paradigm in looking at how beliefs and behaviors are motivated. There are also other influences such as defenses, alcohol and drugs, mental illness, relationship issues such as divorce, grieving, and tons of other underlying issues that synergize in the workplace. Second, as a result, it is impossible to strictly regulate behavior in the workplace without creating a sick and unhealthy organization.
The solution is to migrate the focus of workplace compliance from behavior to values and outcomes. But, that is only half of the solution. You must encourage and support behavior that is authentic. That means valuing everyone’s quirks, personality issues, and other behavior not only as a given (yes, the whole person comes to work everyday), but also personality issues as potential strengths in the organization. If you don’t do that, you are really regulating behavior by discouraging certain behaviors (based ironically on your own quirks and personality traits).
There is also a clear difference between quirks and personality traits and behavior that is damaging to outcomes, productivity, employee relations, safety, and an authentic work context. These serious threshold behaviors that should result in termination are not included in these discussions.
The Borderline Personality Disorder
As with all personality types, a person with a Borderline Personality Disorder (as opposed to a personality trait) is not real difficult to identify. For example, a major presenting criteria is the pattern of unstable relationships where one minute a person is an admired best friend, the next the Borderline person angrily rejects them. This rapid alternating from idealization and devaluation is a hallmark of this disorder. Another major presenting criteria is impulsivity in two or more areas: spending, substance abuse, sex, driving, eating, gambling, etc. So if you have a staff person who is dramatic and fluctuates emotionally with anger and is clearly sensation seeking, you would probably on the right path to look at the further criteria of a Borderline Personality.
Other characteristics of this personality disorder are frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment, recurrent suicidal behavior or gestures, moods rapidly moving from depression (dysphoria) and back to anxiety in a few hours (each rarely lasting more than a few days), inappropriate anger, stress-related paranoid ideation or dissociation.
Many times, a staff person with Borderline Personality Disorder will be a good worker when they are not ‘in one of their moods’. Because of this, employers tend to overlook the periodic episodes that usually rock the workplace. In the workplace, anger is ever-present lingering just below the surface. Generally, this is provoked by someone who makes the mistake to interpret the person’s motive, feelings, or intent. Threatening abandonment (termination, team isolation, etc.) will also bring anger to the surface rapidly. Staff know not to provoke such a person. The boss is typically hated one week and respected the next. Typically, impulsive sex and excessive alcohol is a key ingredient in interpersonal relationships, sometimes with fellow workers. Mood peaks are also associated with sick days off from work.
When one looks below the numerous presenting behaviors, a person with a Borderline Personality Disorder shows a complete or diffusion of identity. Their identity is more defined by the events around them (much of which is projected and self-fulfilling) than a person being affected by their events. In fact, a person with such a disorder typically modulate their moods by manipulating their environment (other staff) to provoke the emergence of the appropriate identity to shift them out of an escalating mood sequence. Interestingly, this shift in identity states is established early in childhood.
While the development model of a Borderline Personality Disorders person is complex, it can be characterized by a family context (all caregivers) of abuse that is invalidating. This causes the future Borderline to never to be able to self-manage emotions, specifically what is causing their emotions. There is no adequate mirroring or validating. In addition, the child is considered “bad” and the caregivers project their own dysfunctional affects and cognitions on the child. As a result, the future Borderline cannot label their private emotions and cannot judge normal interactions. They are raised with no secure base, which explains their constant seeking attachment and fearing abandonment.
A staff person with Borderline traits, as opposed to disordered, exhibits intense relationships and nothing is taken lightly. They are emotional and reactive, tend to be intensely fun-loving risk takers, are creative and arouse others to activity, and tend to be deeply involved in only one person. A person with a Borderline trait might have difficulty managing frustration, have some difficulty processing and conceptualizing information, and a little uncertain about ‘who they are’, and have difficulty with life goals.
With regard to the best way to handle a person with Borderline Personality Disorder in the workplace, if you truly have a disordered employee and their behavior has been accepted as a tradeoff for above average work, I would question whether the context of the workplace was not, in fact, creating health hazards for all employees, including the disordered employee. In other words, if you are tolerating Borderline behavior in employees, your workplace is probably quite stressful and unhealthy.
I’ll explain this in more detail in another blog, but all workplace environments should recognize and accommodate the whole person with all their weaknesses and issues. This can be regulated and enforced with good Respect-in-the-Workplace policies that provide a mechanism that allows employees to be authentic and, at the same time, respectful in their interpersonal relationships. Unfortunately, a staff person with Borderline Personality Disorder cannot understand or comply with these interpersonal requirements.
A staff person with Borderline Personality traits should work in a context with consistent expectations. In addition, the supervisor should focus on behavior (coaching, not regulating) when discussing goal achievement and not make the mistake of focusing on the staff person’s identity (“You may not be a good fit for the Marketing section”). Regulating behavior and implying identity issues will only increase the staff person’s anger and insecurity. If this happens and the person is liked within the workplace, they will find security at the peer level by projecting their own insecurity onto the supervisor and ‘bad mouthing’ supervision.