BPD Mood Swings: Understanding Emotional Highs & Lows
Borderline personality disorder can feel like you have emotional whiplash. You might go from emotionally steady to overwhelmed in a matter of a few moments. Those emotions hit hard, and the intensity can be frightening for everyone involved.
People often refer to this experience as mood swings, which is a fairly accurate description of the outward symptoms. But the mood shifts in BPD are not random or because you’re sensitive. They follow patterns, which can be better managed when you understand them.
If you’ve experienced BPD mood swings, it can feel hopeless at times. But BPD is treatable, and the emotional changes that feel uncontrollable now can become easier to live with when you have the right support.
In this guide, you’ll learn:
- What borderline personality disorder mood swings look like.
- The role of emotional dysregulation in BPD symptoms.
- How BPD mood swings differ from bipolar disorder.
- Borderline personality disorder treatment options.
- Everyday strategies for managing emotional intensity.
What Borderline Personality Disorder Mood Swings Look Like
Mood swings are one of the defining features of borderline personality disorder. But there’s an important difference between the everyday label “mood swings” and the clinical term to describe shifting mood: affective instability.[1]
Rapid Mood Changes and Emotional Instability
Affective instability in BPD means that the mood shifts are:
- Quick.
- Strong.
- Set off by something specific.
Often, it’s an interpersonal trigger, such as feeling let down, slighted, or rejected. That’s what makes BPD’s version of mood swings distinct from everyday moodiness.[1]
BPD mood swings can move in both directions as well. Your mood can lift suddenly. Then it can drop just as fast, a little while later. When you have BPD, these highs and lows tend to be bigger than they are for other people.[2]
These intense emotional states usually last a few hours, but sometimes, they might last multiple days. In many cases, an ordinary day can involve multiple changes in mood.[3]
Why “Mood Swings” Doesn’t Tell the Whole Story
Using “mood swings” to describe the emotional experience of BPD isn’t quite accurate. It tends to carry a stereotype of a lack of control, that perhaps someone is just “being moody” or “too sensitive.”
The reality is that BPD involves reactive instability, not a personality characteristic or perceived flaw. The label “mood swings” can make it sound like you’re choosing to be difficult. But your emotional system is reacting intensely to things that matter to you, especially relationships.
Emotional Dysregulation and the Roots of BPD Symptoms
Beneath the mood swings of BPD is emotional dysregulation, a difficulty managing the intensity and timing of emotions. That dysregulation isn’t a passing thing; it’s a consistent feature over time in people with BPD, which is central to many of its symptoms.[4]
Emotional Sensitivity and Emotional Dysregulation
Emotional dysregulation usually works in a sequence, and it usually starts early. You feel things more easily and more strongly than others seem to. Those feelings rise fast. And because the tools for calming those emotions were never fully developed, you end up reaching for whatever brings quick relief, even when it doesn’t help for long.[4]
This isn’t a character flaw. The emotional regulation skills that other people developed early, often without realising it, may not have developed in the same way for you. That’s not your fault.[4]
People with BPD often use ineffective coping strategies to deal with their emotions. For example, you might replay an upsetting moment over and over in your mind to try to resolve it. While this strategy might feel like it helps in the short term, it doesn’t help resolve the unsettled feelings in the long term. In fact, it keeps those feelings alive and intensifies them, rather than settling them.
As another example, you might try to suppress the feeling to make it stop. But, again, while you might experience some initial relief, this isn’t an effective strategy because it tends to make that feeling stronger. Suppression works for a few minutes, then the feeling comes back, often more intensely than before.
During an emotional surge, it can be genuinely difficult to name what you’re feeling. You might not even be able to separate what you’re feeling from other emotions: hurt from anger from fear, for example.[4] That in and of itself makes it hard to navigate the emotional experience. When you can’t name what you’re feeling, it’s more difficult to respond to it effectively.
How Early Experiences Shape Emotional Instability
Borderline personality disorder usually develops where an intense emotional temperament meets an environment where you can’t make sense of or soothe big feelings. How your emotions work today reflects how those parts of you developed, not because of a failure of effort on your part.[4]
If the adults around you growing up couldn’t help you regulate your emotions, or dismissed or punished your emotional responses, you didn’t get the chance to develop emotional management skills.
Like any mental health condition, BPD isn’t caused by a single factor. Genes and difficult early experiences interact with one another. Some research suggests that BPD might result, in part, from how emotion and control circuits work in the brain. However, there isn’t a settled, proven brain model of BPD.[1] What we know is that biology and environment both contribute.
BPD Mood Swings vs. Bipolar Disorder
Borderline personality disorder and bipolar disorder share some symptoms, so it can be easy to confuse the two. Both disorders involve mood instability and impulsivity, and research suggests that the disorders co-occur in about 10–20 percent of cases, too. All of this can make identifying and distinguishing between the conditions complex. Understanding their distinct features is therefore important for a correct diagnosis and treatment plan.[5]
Why Rapid Mood Changes Look Different in BPD
Mood shifts with BPD behave differently than they do with bipolar disorder. As explained above, BPD mood shifts are rapid, often occurring within hours, and usually depend on what’s happening around you, especially in your relationships. Bipolar mood changes work differently. They tend to last days or weeks, and they’re less tied to the moment.[5][6]
Why an Accurate Diagnosis Matters
Getting the diagnosis right changes what helps, because BPD and bipolar disorder are treated differently. The wrong call can mean the treatment doesn’t fit. The right call means relief can be much closer.[5]
Part of the issue is that BPD isn’t always assessed. When it is, it can be missed or confused with bipolar disorder. Identifying BPD is hard, even for highly trained clinicians.[6] If you’ve been treated for bipolar disorder and the treatment hasn’t helped, or if your symptoms don’t quite fit that diagnosis, it may be worth exploring BPD.
Mission Connection is here to help you or your loved one take the next steps towards an improved mental well-being.
Borderline Personality Disorder Treatment That Helps
The outlook for BPD is much better than many people realize. When researchers followed people with BPD over the long term, about half got well. And more than nine in ten went on to have two or more years of symptom remission.[1]
That outlook owes a lot to psychotherapy. Therapy is the first-line treatment option for BPD. There are no medications approved specifically for the disorder, but it can help with the symptoms of co-occurring mental health conditions like depression or anxiety. Daily habits and routines can support your progress, but they work best alongside professional treatment, not instead of it.[4][6]
Therapies That Ease Emotional Dysregulation
Psychotherapy isn’t just one type of intervention. Numerous forms of psychotherapy are well-supported for treating borderline personality disorder:[1][6]
- Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) helps build skills for managing intense emotions and relationships.
- Mentalization-based therapy (MBT) is effective in helping you understand your feelings and the feelings of others.
- Transference-focused psychotherapy (TFP) focuses on working through relationship patterns in the context of the therapeutic relationship with your therapist.
- Schema therapy assists in reshaping long-standing emotional patterns.
All of these therapies are well-researched. None are superior. Having options means you can get tailored treatment for your specific situation. It also means that if one doesn’t feel right, other research-backed options are available.
Everyday Strategies to Manage Borderline Personality Disorder Mood Swings
You can help steady your rapid mood changes by supplementing therapy with some daily skills.
Name the Feeling
One thing that can help is to focus on naming your feelings and separating them from other feelings as they arise.[4][6] When you feel an emotional change occurring:
- Take a purposeful break.
- Take a deep breath.
- Focus on what you’re feeling. Is it hurt? Anger? Fear? Shame?
Naming the emotion, even silently, can reduce its intensity.
Ride the Emotional Wave
Another useful skill is to act based on the fact that the emotional wave is often short-lived. Rather than trying to fix the feeling or stopping it altogether (neither of which provides long-term relief), try focusing on getting through the feeling without doing something that creates a new problem.[3][4]
For example, someone with BPD might interpret a friend canceling plans as a slight that triggers a fear of abandonment (a hallmark symptom of BPD). This, in turn, can cause an immediate downturn in mood and an urge to withdraw.
Riding the emotional wave helps protect against this. Recognizing that the worst of the emotional intensity is temporary (even when it doesn’t feel like it in the moment) allows you to focus on how to move forward. Once your mood stabilizes, you can think about the triggering situation with a clearer mind.
Putting a gap between the emotional surge and the impulsive action often means the impulsive action doesn’t take place. Just sitting with the emotion helps steady things. It builds distress tolerance; you learn that heavy or painful emotions are part of the experience, and that reacting to them immediately might do more harm than good.[3][4]
Develop a Routine and Focus on Relationships
Having even a small amount of routine can help, too. When you’re sleep-deprived or your days are chaotic, your emotional system has less capacity to handle stress. Things like steady sleep and predictability in your daily routine can help keep your system from running on empty. This can help make big feelings a little more manageable when they come up.[6]
Since BPD centers on interpersonal sensitivity, having meaningful connections with others can also be helpful. Supportive, stable relationships can help stabilize you when an emotional wave hits, and are a counterweight to the rejection sensitivity that drives the emotional reactivity of BPD.[6]
Each of these techniques can help prevent a hard moment from becoming a more harmful consequence. But none of this is meant to be done alone, and lasting change, the kind that makes the emotional waves smaller and less frequent, often comes from working with people who understand what these moods are and how to steady them.
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Find Help for BPD Mood Swings With Mission Connection
The mood swings you’ve experienced are real. They have a real sequence with real causes. Experiencing mood shifts is tough, and finding it hard to cope isn’t something to be ashamed of. It means you’re human. And sometimes we all need help navigating what we’re experiencing.
Reaching out for help is a positive step when you’re ready. When you take that step, you’ll learn how to identify your moods, how to steady them, and how to cope better with BPD.
Mission Connection is here to lend you that support. Our expert clinicians understand BPD and how it looks and feels in everyday life. We go beyond traditional treatment and provide personalized, life-changing care.
We offer several options for effective outpatient treatment, including in-person programs at our locations in California, Virginia, and Washington, virtual telehealth, and a hybrid program that combines in-person and virtual care. We are in-network with most major insurance providers.
To learn more about how we can support you, reach out to us online or call us at 866-833-1822. Steadier days are within reach.