The Three Clusters of Personality Disorders
The Three Clusters of Personality Disorders
Disorders
Professionals consider someone to have a personality disorder if their symptoms significantly
impair their relationships with themselves and others. Furthermore, these issues must be the
result of pathological traits and remain consistent throughout different situations. However,
their personality disorder symptoms cannot be due to normal developmental behaviors or the
influence of substances.
There are 10 different personality disorders, each with different symptoms. Professionals sort
these disorders into three clusters: A, B, and C. The disorders within these clusters make
patients think and behave in similar ways.
People with this disorder feel little to no desire to have relationships with others, including
sexual relationships, friendships, or close relationships with family. These patients find it
hard to notice social cues, express emotions, or find joy in activities.
Others often notice that people with this disorder have strange ways of dressing, behaving,
and speaking. They may hear voices, believe that everyday things leave hidden messages for
them, and believe their thoughts are magical. People with schizotypal personality disorder are
often suspicious of others and have trouble forming relationships.
This disorder causes people to feel constantly suspicious of others without real reasons to feel
this way. They believe that the people around them are somehow working against them. Due
to this paranoia, they may resist forming meaningful relationships, opening up to others, or
forgiving perceived slights.
Cluster B: Dramatic and Erratic
People with Cluster B personality disorders display behaviors that are overly dramatic and
difficult to predict. Their symptoms make it difficult for them to create or maintain
relationships. The disorders in Cluster B are histrionic, borderline, narcissistic, and antisocial.
Like all Cluster B personality disorders, this condition cause patients to have dramatic,
unpredictable outbursts. However, the hallmark of histrionic personality disorder is that
people have these episodes as a way to gain attention. People with this disorder may also feel
like their relationships are intense, even when the other person believes the relationship is
shallow. Their emotions shift rapidly and dramatically, and the people around them greatly
influence their behaviors.
People with borderline personality disorder are driven by an overwhelming fear of being
abandoned. This often leads to signs like impulse behaviors, including gambling, unsafe sex,
and binge eating. They often have fragile self-worth and unstable relationships. When
interpersonal conflict is high, people with borderline personality disorder have paranoia and
outbursts of anger.
This disorder makes people believe that they are more important than others. As such, they
may disregard or even fail to notice the needs of others. People with narcissistic personality
disorder expect constant praise from those around them and may exaggerate their credentials.
They may fantasize about hold more power and envy those with higher statuses. People
describe them as arrogant.
Media portrayals and casual conversations often use the term “sociopath,” to describe people
with this condition. One of the hallmark symptoms of antisocial personality disorder is the
inability to care about other people’s needs and feelings. This leads people with this disorder
to violate people’s rights, steal, cheat, and con others. They often have trouble with the law
and can act violently. People with this disorder feel little to no remorse for their actions
because they cannot understand how they hurt someone else.
Cluster C: Fearful and Anxious
Cluster C personality disorders cause interpersonal friction due to the person’s inability to
face certain fears. The conditions in this cluster are:
People with this disorder fear that if they do not carry out certain tasks or stick to rigid rules,
something horrific will happen. As such, they obsess over orderliness, rules, and cleanliness.
This inflexibility can hurt their relationships.
The fear of having to take care of oneself guides people with this condition. They rely on
others to make decisions for them and take care of all their needs. As such, people with this
disorder are at risk for being abused and staying in those situations, even when they have
options for leaving.
People with this disorder are afraid of any criticism or rejection. In order to avoid these
experiences, they may go through extreme measures to avoid contacting people at work or
attending social events.
If you or someone you love lives with any of these disorders, contact a Florida therapy clinic.
We can help the person with the disorder and those in their lives.