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What is DID?
See
Glossary of Terms
Definitions,
Frequency, and Cause of DID
Excerpts
(some paraphrased)
are from:
Dissociative Identity Disorder:
Recognizing and Restoring the Severely Abused
by Tom R.
Hawkins, Ph.D.
DEFINITION OF
DISSOCIATION
Dissociation is
generally considered to be a disturbance or alteration in consciousness, memory,
identity or perception of the environment. Normally, a person integrates these
various functions, whereas dissociation is a compartmentalization of these
functions. Dissociation is a process whereby the mind separates one or more
aspects of its function (knowing, feeling, tasting, hearing, seeing, etc.) away
from the normal stream of consciousness.
Dissociation lies
on a continuum ranging from the normal phenomena of day dreaming, fantasy, and
“highway hypnosis” on the one end to the polyfragmented (highly complex)
multiple whose mind is split into hundreds (or thousands) of separate
identities on the other end. This condition was formerly known as Multiple
Personality Disorder (MPD), but was changed to Dissociative Identity Disorder
(DID) in 1994 by the American Psychiatric Association with its publication of
DSM-IV, in order to more accurately describe the disorder.
In the case of
dissociation outside the bounds of "normal" dissociation (i.e. highway
hypnosis), the mental separation involves the building of a more or less
permanent and impermeable wall between the separated components so that part of
the person can be unaffected by a given experience. We believe that such a
defense is a temporary God-given capacity that enables a child to survive
overwhelming trauma, though later in life this compartmentalization usually
leads to dysfunction.
Once a child
successfully employs the dissociative defense, dissociation usually becomes the
preferred defensive mechanism and often will be used subsequently even when less
extreme defense processes might suffice in threat containment.1
definition of dissociative identity disorder
(DID)
(formerly known as MPD)
Dissociative
Identity Disorder
(DID) is not to be confused with demonization or schizophrenia.
The disorder is characterized by the following:
-
Two
or more personality states or distinct identities who think, feel, and choose
from a different world view. As a result, each identity perceives God,
themselves, other persons and their environment differently.
- Two
or more distinct identities must (at different times) take control of a person’s
behavior.
-
Though
normal memory is hard to define, there is general agreement in the mental health
field that persons exhibiting DID have more memory loss than a non-dissociated
person.
-
The
resulting disturbances in the functions of the mind are not due to a medical
condition or the effects of drugs or alcohol.
- These
extreme Dissociative experiences are not due to psychosis (being out of touch
with reality).
It is also common
to have personality fragments, which are defined as a part of the person with a
persistent and separate sense of identity but a limited (compared to a
personality) range of function, emotion, or history.2
DID can present
itself in a variety of subtle ways (explained in detail in Dissociative
Identity Disorder). Few cases will be as obvious as the stereotypical Sybil
with dramatic, abrupt switching from one personality state to another.
Most multiples will initially be unaware of such switches and will attribute
changes in the way they perceive God, themselves, others and their environment
as just mood swings. Total amnesia among the presenting identities
is no longer viewed as part of the diagnostic criteria.
This condition is defined fully
in Tom's book, Dissociative Identity Disorder: Recognizing and Restoring the
Severely Abused (Volume One has been released).
frequency of DID
According to the
psychiatrist, Dr. Colin Ross, some form of pathological dissociation may
affect as much as ten percent of the population.3 DID itself,
according to his data may affect at least one percent of the general population.4
Other researchers have reported that as much as 20 to 50% of psychiatric
hospital inpatients suffer from dissociative disorders.5 Many working
in the field will not be surprised if further studies demonstrate that as much
as five percent or more of the population has DID. Many of these are people who,
in the past, were misdiagnosed by the medical and mental health community.
Previously the disorder was so narrowly defined and considered such a rarity
that it was little studied or understood. Fortunately, that lack is now being
corrected, though the societal “need” for denial has not diminished.
cause of DID
It is generally
agreed that in about 97% of the cases where dissociative identity is formed,
the victims suffered serious abuse at an early age. Friesen comments,
Most of them
have been abused sexually. They needed to use dissociation to cope with the
abuse. . . .the life circumstances have been dangerous, and the children
continue to suffer abuse over a long period of time. The home is not a safe
place, and the child needs to keep on using dissociation to deal with the
continuing abuse.6
It is not always
true, but too often the home is the source of the abuse.
DID is not caused by a brain or
chemical deficiency. In fact, multiples are usually above average in
intelligence and creativity. In this sense DID is not a pathological sickness
but rather a God-given, temporary coping mechanism for an overwhelmed child
whose only options were to dissociate, lose touch with reality (go crazy), or
commit suicide.
DID is generally considered a
"disorder" rather than a mental illness
because it
is not caused by defective brain chemistry and treatment is usually effective.
Someone with DID might be described more accurately as a normal person with a
normal brain responding to the abnormal experience of overwhelming trauma.
It is helpful to
note that the literature in the field reflects an approximate 80% to 90% cure
rate for those multiples who stay in therapy.
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1
Bloch,
James P. Assessment and Treatment of Multiple Personality and Dissociative
Disorders.
Sarasota, FL:
Professional Resource Press, 1991. Describes both the dissociative and ego state
disorders from a secular perspective: p. 13.
2
Putnam, Frank W. Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Personality Disorder.
New
York:
The Guilford Press, 1989: p. 43.
3
Ross, Colin. “Epidemiology of Multiple Personality Disorder and Dissociation,”
503-517, in The Psychiatric Clinics of North American: Multiple Personality
Disorder 14:3 (September 1991), P. 505.
4
Ross…, p.506
5
B.A. Van der Kolk and Onno van der Hart, "The Intrusive Past: the Flexibility of
Memory and the Engraving trauma," American Imago. Vol. 48, No., 4: 432.
Reprinted in Trauma: Explorations in Memory, 158-182 (Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1995).
6
Friesen, James G. Uncovering the Mystery of MPD.
San
Bernardino, CA: Here’s Life Publishers, Inc., 1991, p. 42.
Other topics
addressed in Tom's book: Dissociative Identity Disorder are:
-
Psychological Clues to
Recognizing DID
-
Different Complexities of DID
-
Various Failed DID-RA Treatment
Approaches
-
Spiritual Hierarchy and related Issues
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