Paul T. Mason, MS, is a seasoned health care executive
currently serving as vice president of Ascension Medical Group in
Wisconsin. His research on borderline personality disorder (BPD)
has been published in the Journal of Clinical Psychology, and his
written work has appeared in national and international print
media.
Randi Kreger is author of The Stop Walking on Eggshells
Workbook and The Essential Family Guide to Borderline Personality
Disorder. Her website, www.StopWalkingOnEggshells.com, offers
material related to BPD. She also provides a free online family
support group, Moving Forward, at groups.io/g/MovingForward. She
gives workshops throughout the US and Japan.
“In the third edition of Stop Walking on Eggshells, Paul Mason and
Randi Kreger update their classic work on borderline personality
disorder (BPD). This edition adds new research and information to
their seminal work and raises the standard. This book is a
must-read for anyone whose family has been affected by BPD.”
—Daniel S. Lobel, PhD, clinical psychologist in private practice in
Katonah, NY; and author of WhenYour Daughter Has BPD and When Your
Mother Has Borderline Personality Disorder
*Daniel S. Lobel, PhD*
“This third edition is filled with the wisdom and tips that come
from the authors’ continuing work with people with BPD and their
loved ones. I’m so glad they have added narcissistic personality
disorder (NPD) in this edition, because the overlap of NPD and BPD
is present in so many of the high-conflict individuals I see in
relationships and conflicts that end up in court today. Family
members, friends, professionals, and (frankly) everyone needs to
read this book to understand and deal with much of the surprising
and outrageous behavior we see in close relationships all around us
now.”
—Bill Eddy, LCSW, JD, attorney, therapist, mediator, coauthor of
Splitting, and author of 5 Types of People Who Can Ruin Your
Life
*Bill Eddy, LCSW, JD*
“This third edition of Stop Walking on Eggshells makes a very
important contribution to better understanding the complexities of
working with individuals displaying behaviors consistent with both
BPD and NPD. The authors recognize that multiple factors and other
diagnoses may also be operational and need to be taken into
account. The advice and recommendations are practical, well
explained, and give hope to clinicians and families, as well as
those struggling with these perplexing disorders.”
—Debra Resnick, PsyD, clinical psychologist in private practice in
the Philadelphia, PA, area who has been teaching and practicing
dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) for approximately twenty
years
*Debra Resnick, PsyD*
“An important resource for clients who are being emotionally
abused. It identifies two types of BPD—conventional and
unconventional. While conventional BPDs typically exhibit overt
behavior such as self-harm and suicidal ideation, unconventional
BPDs don’t believe they have any problems. They project their pain
onto others and refuse to take responsibility for their harmful
actions. As an expert in emotional abuse, I have identified this
behavior as emotionally abusive.”
—Beverly Engel, LMFT, internationally recognized expert in
emotional and sexual abuse, and best-selling author of The
Emotionally Abused Woman and The Emotionally Abusive
Relationship
*Beverly Engel, LMFT*
“Stop Walking on Eggshells is the quintessential book for families
to understand BPD. The cases and examples are compassionate,
accurate, enlightening, and starkly realistic—providing a true
sense of how people with BPD think and feel, as well as how family
members experience their behaviors. It includes comprehensive
strategies, techniques, and responses for the most difficult
situations, and provides the newest information about causes and
help for BPD.”
—Margalis Fjelstad, LMFT, author of Stop Caretaking the Borderline
or Narcissist and Healing from a Narcissistic Relationship, and
coauthor of Raising Resilient Children with a Borderline or
Narcissistic Parent
*Margalis Fjelstad, LMFT*
“Very impressive! This third edition of Stop Walking on Eggshells
is a compendium of practical advice. Written in a friendly style,
it’s like reading a letter from someone who really cares about you.
New chapters, such as the chapter on BPD in children and teenagers,
further enhance the book, discussing a previously ignored issue. I
strongly recommend this five-star book.”
—Christine Adamec, coauthor of When Your Adult Child Breaks Your
Heart
*Christine Adamec*
“For the last twenty years, Stop Walking on Eggshells has been my
‘gold-standard’ recommendation for learning how to live with, love,
and care for people who struggle with BPD. Now, Mason and Kreger
have improved and updated this masterpiece to include how to cope
with narcissistic personalities as well. If you feel like you’re
walking on eggshells around people in your life, then read this new
edition.”
—Jeffrey C. Wood, PsyD, psychologist, coauthor of The Dialectical
Behavior Therapy Skills Workbook, and author of The Cognitive
Behavioral Therapy Workbook for Personality Disorders
*Jeffrey C. Wood, PsyD*
“Stop Walking on Eggshells makes good on its promise to restore the
lives of people in close relationships with someone diagnosed with
BPD. It is a rich guide to understanding and coping with the
reactions aroused in others by troubling BPD behaviors that
negatively impact relationships. Readers will find this book very
useful and beneficial.”
—Nina W. Brown, EdD, professor and Eminent Scholar at Old Dominion
University in Norfolk, VA; and author of Children of the
Self-Absorbed
*Nina W. Brown, EdD*
“This book is the absolute go-to guide for my clients who are
dealing with a loved one with BPD. Readable and thorough, it
strikes a perfect balance of practical advice and emotional
sensitivity. This book has helped so many people break through
their sense of confusion and isolation by helping them to name,
understand, and respond to the difficulties of this complex and
misunderstood disorder.”
—Daniel E. Mattila, MDiv, LCSW
*Daniel E. Mattila, MDiv, LCSW*
“Amazingly, Stop Walking on Eggshells not only teaches readers how
to recognize the signs of BPD, it also shows how they can make life
and relationship decisions based on what they want and need instead
of decisions controlled by the illness.”
—Julie A. Fast, coauthor of Loving Someone with Bipolar
Disorder
*Julie A. Fast*
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