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- #13
theshadowoftheliving
Diamond Member
I think you even knowing this means that it isn't amnesia. I would call it more compartmentalization of parts.
This is where I get confused because I know this now, but I don't always know this. I forget about things until I remember them. I don't remember what memory, specifically, it is that I've forgotten or can't recall when I'm in the other headspaces. I just know that, in general, work-self has no access to childhood memories and little-kid-self has no access to work information. Moments and versions in-between those two (like now) I can rationally look at the situation and derive these conclusions, but I don't think I can when I'm immersed in either version. During those polarized moments, I don't know that there is anything else to know.
And then the not-remembering exists on a spectrum from the "oh, I forgot" to the "knowing that I should know something but I can't bring it up" to the scarier things, like spending four days in a city I had travelled to for work, thinking about how I should have visited sooner (at the end of the four days it occurred to me that I had been there - on three different occasions - in the past) and the week that I forgot that I owned a car (that I've owned for the past ten years).
So, I guess I'm confused about the difference between amnesia (pure-not-remembering) and amnesia between parts (which would be structural dissociation, DID) and whether I can call it amnesia if the information ever returns (how long do I have to not-remember for it to qualify as amnesia?).