Background: Although the experience of reception of borderline personality disorder (BPD) diagnosis was previously researched, the process of mental adjustment to this diagnosis remains both empirically and theoretically unexplored. Theoretical concepts describing the structure of lived time in borderline patients, which underlies adjustment to diagnosis, living with the diagnosis, and recovery from the disorder, namely, immediacy and instantaneity are not empirically verified. Aim: This study aimed to phenomenologically describe the process of mental adjustment to the diagnosis of BPD and to uncover its underlying temporal structure. Methods: Semi-structured phenomenological interviews based on Giorgi’s descriptive phenomenological psychological method and Cottle’s Circles Test. The participants were 10 white, adult women diagnosed with BPD aged 20–32 years. Results: The process of adjustment to BPD diagnosis comprises three following stages: (1) a cumulative feeling of inadequacy preceding the diagnosis, (2) the outburst of diagnosis, (3) a battle of Self fragments while adjusting to the diagnosis. Simultaneously, the diagnosis modifies the relationship between the self and illness in a way that previously scattered problematic issues become inscribed into the self as symptoms. At the same time, these symptoms are relatively separated from its “healthy” part. The temporal structure underlying this process is discontinuous. Particular temporal dimensions are distanced from one another, and the inner images of the past and present consist of unconnected, emotional peaks. The present resembles waking up from the lethargy of the past, while the future consists of two colliding scenarios – either being free of or in control of symptoms. Conclusion: Clinicians should pay more attention to the pathway of identification with BPD diagnosis and its underlying temporality. This is crucial for recovery and may allow adjusting therapeutic interventions to the patients’ needs. Treatment should aim to enhance the patients’ abilities to reflect upon their temporal experience to merge their fragmented narrative identity and better situate them in the recovery process.

1.
Campbell
K
,
Clarke
KA
,
Massey
D
,
Lakeman
R
.
Borderline personality disorder: to diagnose or not to diagnose? That is the question
.
Int J Ment Health Nurs
.
2020
;
29
(
5
):
972
81
.
2.
Stanghellini
G
,
Broome
M
,
Raballo
A
,
Fernandez
AV
,
Fusar-Poli
P
,
Rosfort
R
, editors.
The Oxford handbook of phenomenological psychopathology
.
USA
:
Oxford University Press
;
2019
.
3.
Lo Monte
F
,
Englebert
J
.
Borderline personality disorder, lived space and the stimmung
.
Psychopathology
.
2022
;
55
(
3–4
):
179
89
.
4.
Lester
R
,
Prescott
L
,
McCormack
M
,
Sampson
M
;
North West Boroughs Healthcare
,
NHS Foundation Trust
.
Service users’ experiences of receiving a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder: a systematic review
.
Personal Ment Health
.
2020
;
14
(
3
):
263
83
.
5.
Ntshingila
N
,
Poggenpoel
M
,
Myburgh
CPH
,
Temane
A
.
Experiences of women living with borderline personality disorder
.
Health Sa Gesondheid
.
2016
;
21
:
110
9
.
6.
Ng
FYY
,
Townsend
ML
,
Miller
CE
,
Jewell
M
,
Grenyer
BFS
.
The lived experience of recovery in borderline personality disorder: a qualitative study
.
Borderline Personal Disord Emot Dysregulation
.
2019
;
6
(
1
):
10
9
.
7.
Morris
C
,
Smith
I
,
Alwin
N
.
Is contact with adult mental health services helpful for individuals with a diagnosable BPD? A study of service users views in the UK
.
J Ment Health
.
2014
;
23
(
5
):
251
5
.
8.
Bonnington
O
,
Rose
D
.
Exploring stigmatisation among people diagnosed with either bipolar disorder or borderline personality disorder: a critical realist analysis
.
Soc Sci Med
.
2014
;
123
:
7
17
.
9.
Black
G
,
Murray
J
,
Thornicroft
G
.
Understanding the phenomenology of borderline personality disorder from the patient’s perspective
.
J Ment Health
.
2014
;
23
(
2
):
78
82
.
10.
Fromene
R
,
Guerin
B
.
Talking with Australian indigenous clients with a borderline personality disorder diagnosis: finding the context behind the label
.
Psychol Rec
.
2014
;
64
(
3
):
569
79
.
11.
Veysey
S
.
People with a borderline personality disorder diagnosis describe discriminatory experiences
.
Kotuitui
.
2014
;
9
(
1
):
20
35
.
12.
Dyson
H
,
Brown
D
.
The experience of mentalization-based treatment: an interpretative phenomenological study
.
Issues Ment Health Nurs
.
2016
;
37
(
8
):
586
95
.
13.
Jade Lovell
L
,
Hardy
G
.
Having a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder in a forensic setting: a qualitative exploration
.
J Forensic Prac
.
2014
;
16
(
3
):
228
40
.
14.
Moskalewicz
M
.
Disturbed temporalities. Insights from phenomenological psychiatry
.
Time Soc
.
2016
;
25
(
2
):
234
52
.
15.
Wyllie
M
.
Lived time and psychopathology
.
Philos Psychiatr Psychol
.
2005
;
12
(
3
):
173
85
.
16.
Stanghellini
G
,
Ballerini
M
,
Presenza
S
,
Mancini
M
,
Raballo
A
,
Blasi
S
,
.
Psychopathology of lived time: abnormal time experience in persons with schizophrenia
.
Schizophr Bull
.
2016
;
42
(
1
):
45
55
.
17.
Stanghellini
G
,
Ballerini
M
,
Presenza
S
,
Mancini
M
,
Northoff
G
,
Cutting
J
.
Abnormal time experiences in major depression: an empirical qualitative study
.
Psychopathology
.
2017
;
50
(
2
):
125
40
.
18.
Stanghellini
G
,
Mancini
M
,
Fernandez
AV
,
Moskalewicz
M
,
Pompili
M
,
Ballerini
M
.
Transdiagnostic assessment of temporal experience (TATE) a tool for assessing abnormal time experiences
.
Phenomenol Cogn Sci
.
2022
;
21
(
1
):
73
95
.
19.
Kimura
B
.
Ecrits de psychopathologie phenomenologique
.
Presses Universitares de France
;
1992
.
20.
Mancini
M
,
Stanghellini
G
.
The life-world of persons with borderline personality disorder
. In:
Stanghellini
G
,
Broome
M
,
Fendandez
AV
,
Fusar-Poli
P
,
Raballo
A
,
Rosfort
R
, editors.
Oxford handbook of phenomenological psychopathology
.
Oxford University Press
;
2019
. p.
665
81
.
21.
Lo Monte
F
,
Englebert
J
.
Borderline personality disorder and lived time
.
Evol Psychiatr
.
2018
;
83
(
4
):
37
45
.
22.
Fernandez
AV
,
Køster
A
.
On the subject matter of phenomenological psychopathology
. In:
Stanghellini
G
,
Broome
M
,
Fernandez
AV
,
Fusar-Poli
P
,
Raballo
A
,
Rosfort
R
, editors.
The oxford handbook of phenomenological psychopathology
.
Oxford University Press
;
2019
. p.
191
204
.
23.
Moskalewicz
M
,
Popova
Y
,
Wiertlewska-Bielarz
J
.
Lived time in ovarian cancer: a qualitative phenomenological exploration
.
Eur J Oncol Nurs
.
2022
;
56
:
102083
.
24.
World Health Organization
.
The ICD-10 classification of mental and behavioural disorders: clinical descriptions and diagnostic guidelines
.
World Health Organization
;
1992
.
25.
First
MB
,
France
A
,
Pincus
HA
.
DSM-IV-TR guidebook
.
American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.
;
2004
.
26.
Giorgi
AP
,
Giorgi
BM
.
The descriptive phenomenological psychological method
. In:
Camic
PM
,
Rhodes
JE
,
Yardley
L
, editors.
Qualitative research in psychology: expanding perspectives in methodology and design
.
American Psychological Association
;
2003
. p.
243
73
.
27.
Giorgi
AP
,
Giorgi
BM
,
Morley
J
.
The Descriptive phenomenological psychological method
. In:
Willig
C
,
Rogers
WS
, editors.
The SAGE handbook of qualitative research in psychology
.
Sage Publications Ltd
;
2017
. p.
243
73
.
28.
Smith
JA
,
Shinebourne
P
.
Interpretative phenomenological analysis
.
American Psychological Association
;
2012
.
29.
Schmitt
R
.
Husserl’s transcendental-phenomenological reduction
.
Philos Phenomenol Res
.
1959
;
20
(
2
):
238
45
.
30.
Cottle
TJ
.
The circles test: an investigation of perceptions of temporal relatedness and dominance
.
J Proj Tech Pers Assess
.
1967
;
31
(
5
):
58
71
.
31.
Fallon
P
.
Travelling through the system: the lived experience of people with borderline personality disorder in contact with psychiatric services
.
J Psychiatr Ment Health Nurs
.
2003
;
10
(
4
):
393
401
.
32.
Horn
N
,
Johnstone
L
,
Brooke
S
.
Some service user perspectives on the diagnosis of borderline personality disorder
.
J Ment Health
.
2007
;
16
(
2
):
255
69
.
33.
Ramon
S
,
Castillo
H
,
Morant
N
.
Experiencing personality disorder: a participative research
.
Int J Soc Psychiatr
.
2001
;
47
(
4
):
1
15
.
34.
Fuchs
T
.
Fragmented selves: temporality and identity in borderline personality disorder
.
Psychopathology
.
2007
;
40
(
6
):
379
87
.
35.
Rigoli
F
.
Prisoner of the present: borderline personality and a tendency to overweight cues during Bayesian inference
.
Personal Disord
.
2022
;
13
.
You do not currently have access to this content.