
Clients with personality disorders often engage in confusing,
contradictory, or even self-defeating behaviors that can be
misinterpreted as manipulative or resistant. In reality, many of
these behaviors are defensive strategies, protective mechanisms
developed early in life to manage overwhelming emotional pain and
preserve a sense of self. This session focuses on identifying and
understanding these defenses as essential to survival, not signs of
pathology.
We’ll explore common defenses seen across personality disorders,
including splitting, projection, denial, idealization and
devaluation, dissociation, and reactive anger. These defenses often
serve to manage painful emotions such as shame, fear of
abandonment, or perceived threat to identity. While they may appear
rigid or maladaptive, they represent a client’s best attempt to
navigate emotional experiences that feel unmanageable or
dangerous.
Through clinical examples and discussion, participants will
learn how to recognize when a client is using a defense, how to
avoid reinforcing it, and how to gently explore the underlying
emotional vulnerability it protects. We’ll also examine how certain
defenses are more characteristic of specific personality
structures, for example, narcissistic defensiveness versus
borderline splitting, and how this shapes the therapeutic
relationship.
Rather than trying to dismantle defenses prematurely, this
session emphasizes a stance of clinical empathy and timing, knowing
when to validate, when to interpret, and when to wait. By
understanding defenses as adaptive, clinicians can reduce
reactivity, build trust, and help clients gradually develop more
flexible and authentic ways of relating to themselves and
others.