BPD often means a shaky sense of self. CSC05 keeps a one-line anchor: “I am someone who is trying.” Not “good.” Not “healed.” Just trying . That verb holds more weight than any adjective.
Still volatile. Still learning. Still here.
The “05” means there was a 01, 02, 03, 04. Each one abandoned when it felt like nothing was working. Each one a small tombstone in the graveyard of trying. But here’s the thing about BPD recovery that no one tells you: you don’t graduate. You just get better at falling. bpd-csc05
This is not a diagnosis code. This is not a file name from a therapist’s encrypted drive. This is a log. A raw, unpolished entry from the ongoing experiment of learning to exist inside a nervous system that has, for most of my life, mistaken emotional weather for the end of the world.
is the fifth iteration of a personal protocol. The first four failed. This one might too. But failure, I’m learning, is not the same as extinction. 1. The Architecture of the Splintered Self If you have BPD, you know the feeling: one email, one silence, one slightly cooler tone of voice, and suddenly the floor dissolves. You are not sad. You are annihilated . You are not angry. You are arson . The emotional intensity doesn’t just color reality—it replaces it. BPD often means a shaky sense of self
bpd-csc05
bpd-csc05: Notes from the Threshold
For years, I believed this meant I was broken at the hardware level. A personality defect. A moral failing in the shape of a human.