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:

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

Casus

Sciensano, an independent institution of the Belgian government, issued the guidelines regarding testing and quarantine. But some saw Sciensano as a 'power structure' of the Belgian labs. It was said that Sciensano and the Belgian labs are one entity, because Sciensano performs quality control of the labs. Sciensano indeed performs quality control, but also as an 'independent institution' of the government, not of the labs themselves. But that is already a lot more complex, and to understand that you need 'patience', which is difficult for someone who mainly relies on 'first-degree' thinking.

Cluster B — emotional and unpredictable

Cluster C — anxious and insecure

Summary

From a contextual thinking perspective, the focus shifts from “deviance” to strategy: many PD-traits are attempts to find a foothold with limited context integration.
That explains withdrawal (schizoid), pattern-seeking (schizotypal), emotional dysregulation (borderline), transactional/egocentric reactions (antisocial, narcissistic), avoidance (avoidant), dependent organizing (dependent), and rigid controlling.
The continuum touches upon very strong first-degree thinking: from rigidity via compulsion to psychotic experiences.