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Personality disorders involve long-standing patterns of thinking, feeling, and relating that can create ongoing challenges at work, school, or in relationships. These patterns develop over time and can change with structured support.
Our website is for information only. We help you understand your options and prepare for conversations with licensed providers, but we do not diagnose, treat, or guarantee outcomes.
A personality disorder means certain traits are strong, consistent, and present across many situations. These traits may affect emotional responses, relationships, self-image, or reactions to stress. With skills-based therapy and, when appropriate, medication for specific symptoms, many people experience greater stability and improved relationships.
Personality disorders are often grouped into clusters based on shared patterns:
Cluster A includes traits marked by distance, mistrust, or unusual thinking.
Cluster B includes traits involving intense emotions, impulsivity, or unstable relationships.
Cluster C includes traits shaped by anxiety, avoidance, or strong perfectionism.
If you have thoughts of self-harm, cannot stay safe, or someone is in immediate danger, call your local emergency number now. For mental health emergencies, use your country’s suicide and crisis line. Online information cannot manage crises.
Some people use alcohol or substances to manage emotional pain, anxiety, or sleep. This can intensify symptoms and complicate care. Integrated treatment addresses personality-related patterns and substance use together through therapy, skills training, and recovery support.
A licensed clinician will:
Review long-term patterns across relationships, work, and daily life
Ask about emotions, impulses, attention, trauma history, and safety
Consider other conditions such as bipolar disorder, PTSD, ADHD, anxiety, depression, or autism traits
Use screening tools and, with consent, input from loved ones
Treatment and therapy for personality disorders focuses on building skills for emotional regulation, healthier relationships, and more flexible thinking. Care is individualized and often combines several approaches.
There is no single medication for personality disorders. A prescriber may recommend medication for specific symptoms such as mood instability, anxiety, sleep problems, or short-term distress. Medication is optional and reviewed carefully. Benzodiazepines are used cautiously due to safety risks.
These tools support treatment but do not replace care.
Families and partners can assist by offering validation, setting clear boundaries, and staying consistent. Education and family sessions are available to help loved ones understand patterns, reduce conflict, and support change safely.
Having a few details ready can help guide care:
Your top goals for treatment
Triggers and early warning signs
Current medications and side effects
Past therapies and what helped or did not
Honest information about substance use
A trusted support person, if desired
Insurance information and cost questions
No. Patterns can change over time with therapy, skills practice, and support.
Not always. Therapy and skills are central. Medication may help with specific symptoms.
No. OCD involves obsessions and compulsions. Obsessive-compulsive personality traits reflect long-standing perfectionism. A clinician can explain the difference.
Often yes. Outpatient and IOP options are designed to fit daily responsibilities.
Ask about skills-based approaches like DBT, MBT, or schema therapy and programs that include structured support and follow-up.
If you or someone you know is in immediate danger or experiencing a medical emergency, call 911. You can also contact the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline for free, confidential support 24/7 at 988.