
Personality disorders are often described in terms of observable
behavior, rage, manipulation, withdrawal, impulsivity, but these
surface behaviors are driven by powerful emotional themes beneath
the surface. This first session explores the core content that
fuels personality pathology, helping clinicians move beyond symptom
management to deeper, more targeted interventions.
In this session, we’ll focus on identifying and working with
emotional drivers such as shame, fear of abandonment, chronic
feelings of inadequacy, and internalized beliefs of unworthiness.
These emotional experiences are often rooted in early relational
trauma and can remain unspoken or poorly articulated by clients.
When left unexamined, they influence behavior in rigid, repetitive,
and often self-defeating ways.
This session will present a framework for understanding how
these emotional cores give rise to maladaptive patterns like
emotional lability, self-sabotage, perfectionism, and interpersonal
instability. Through clinical examples and case illustrations,
attendees will learn how to recognize signs of core emotional
distress, even when masked by defensiveness or grandiosity, and how
to begin gently naming and addressing these themes in session.
The session will also introduce strategies to help clients begin
identifying, tolerating, and integrating these painful emotional
states into a more coherent narrative of self. By targeting the
emotional core, clinicians can support more meaningful, lasting
change and avoid reinforcing surface-level coping strategies that
often fail in the long run. This foundational session sets the tone
for the rest of the series, grounding treatment in compassion,
curiosity, and a deep respect for the internal world of the
client.