![]() ![]() He continues to alienate himself from others due to his engrained thinking patterns and belief systems. Peter still remains unhappy and isolated with no family, friends, spouse or children in his life. ![]() The leader continued to defend himself, something which is not achievable or even the best approach for a person suffering from PPD. Peter continued to bombard him on his website. Unfortunately the course leader was not psychologically trained to detect that he was dealing not with an ordinary man, but one who suffered from a mental illness. ![]() The fact that Peter had willingly enrolled in the course completely escaped him. And yet Peter believed that the course leader, the other participants, and even the venue itself were all linked in a plot to somehow bring him down. His last session was marked by a shouting match and no-one was sad to see this disruptive influence leave. He was so disruptive in the workshops that he was asked to leave, but even then he believed that it was all conspiracy by the course leader and the other class members to “change him” and that the course leader had “an agenda”. And yet ironically here was a man willingly asking for help and yet putting up stumbling blocks all the way. He was quickly at odds with the course director, arguing with him over payment procedures, and questioning his methods of “coaching”. He was full of suspicions about his colleagues’ behaviors, attributing malignant meanings to even the most benign statements.Įverything that any other person said or did was passed through the filter of Peter’s overly suspicious mind, so that even when corporations announced changes to the local area, he believed they were deliberately out to “get” to him.ĭepressed about his lack of friends, he consulted a life coach and enrolled in a life management course. Within five minutes of meeting Peter, the average person could easily tell that all was not right. Instead it was the way Peter viewed the world that made him so socially unsuccessful. None of the above conditions are peculiar to PPD. Although an intelligent man Peter, at the age of 45, was unable to make or keep friends, had never been married, had lost a series of jobs even though he was a highly qualified engineer and was estranged from his family and former friends. Indeed, his brother suffered from schizophrenia. He believed his father to be mentally ill and his mother as well. Peter was by his own admission in a bad situation. As with most of the personality disorders, the sufferers have little insight into their own behaviors, instead blaming others for what is isn’t right in their lives. Because this condition affects the core personality of the sufferer, it is permanent, pervasive and, as such, the person so afflicted in effectively unaware that there is something wrong with them. Peter is a typical sufferer of paranoid personality disorder (PPD) and finds it difficult to function in both the workplace and in his personal life. ![]()
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