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DID - Dissociative Identity Disorder Counseling
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Recently
considered rare and mysterious psychiatric curiosities,
Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) (previously
known as Multiple Personality Disorder-MPD) and
other Dissociative Disorders are now understood
to be fairly common effects of severe trauma in
early childhood, most typically extreme, repeated
physical, sexual, and/or emotional abuse.
Dissociation is a mental process, which produces
a lack of connection in a person's thoughts, memories,
feelings, actions, or sense of identity. During
the period of time when a person is dissociating,
certain information is not associated with other
information as it normally would be. For example,
during a traumatic experience, a person may dissociate
the memory of the place and circumstances of the
trauma from his ongoing memory, resulting in a temporary
mental escape from the fear and pain of the trauma
and, in some cases, a memory gap surrounding the
experience. Because this process can produce changes
in memory, people who frequently dissociate often
find their senses of personal history and identity
are affected.
Most clinicians believe that dissociation exists
on a continuum of severity. This continuum reflects
a wide range of experiences and/or symptoms. At
one end are mild dissociative experiences common
to most people, such as daydreaming, highway hypnosis,
or "getting lost" in a book or movie,
all of which involve "losing touch" with
conscious awareness of one's immediate surroundings.
At the other extreme is complex, chronic dissociation,
such as in cases of Dissociative Disorders, which
may result in serious impairment or inability to
function. Some people with Dissociative Disorders
can hold highly responsible jobs, contributing to
society in a variety of professions, the arts, and
public service -- appearing to function normally
to coworkers, neighbors, and others with whom they
interact daily.