• We are a multilingual website again. Read the notice about this.
  • Understand AI use at MyPTSD: all AI use is explained in our AI help page. AI use is by choice here. It exists if you want it, but does nothing unless you choose to use it.

DID Children of parents with dissociative disorders

Status
Not open for further replies.

Blues in NYC

Silver Member
Does anyone here know of good resources on the web or in print about children from families where a parent has a dissociative disorder, the effects and experiences, especially where there was little or no treatment or diagnosis?

My doctor gave me some preliminary materials on DID following a frank discussion regarding that my mother may have actually had (continues to have) some degree of moderate dissociative disorder from her own trauma filled childhood. My doc has asked me to read what she's given me (and other stuff I may find) and report back what I recognize in the material and what seems quite foreign. She's trying to help me make sense of some experiences and dynamics that dogged me for many years while growing up and says that my mother fits the profile (though she is not diagnosing her by any means!) for DID or a similar dissociative disorder.

Unfortunately the material the doctor gave me is written mostly from the inside. Sort of like book versions of pamphlets that might be entitled "So you've been diagnosed with DID. Now what?" This form of literature is not very helpful. And I've only found one or two generic "web MD" style articles about parents with dissociative disorders on line in my first attempts.

So any body got any other ideas where I can look? Or even threads here buried in the forum written by folks who've also grown up in a house with mental illness or outlining the hallmarks of dissociative disorder in a family dynamic?

Thanks in advance.

I'm a bit in shock to be told today that something like this might be why some of the stuff that was done to me and my sister, the emotional and verbal abuse in particular, was always deep in the shadows as if it had never happened, as if my mother had forgotten entirely what she did on some days and how she always asserted she was a good parent. It's a shock akin to what I've been feeling to learn that the cops are out hunting my assailant (from my more recent trauma, not my mother! :crazy:Too much trauma! Too many characters in this twisting narrative! BLARG!) now and that she's been doing other stuff that crosses the line. We're not sure what. But they made a point of meeting us and making sure we were okay. And my wife saw them again this morning. What a wacky wacky two days this has been for me.
 
Blues,

I don't know any literature specifically about that. Although, I know some developmental theories that emphasize the importance of consistency from the adults in the child's development. Because DID gives people a lot of contradictions (behaviorally speaking), I assume that these might help you with some of what you want to know, even if it is not that specific.

Let me know if that interests you and I will give you the names. I am on my way out now but I will be back sometime soon.
 
Blues,

I don't know any literature specifically about that. Although, I know some developmental theories that emphasize the importance of consistency from the adults in the child's development. Because DID gives people a lot of contradictions (behaviorally speaking), I assume that these might help you with some of what you want to know, even if it is not that specific.

Let me know if that interests you and I will give you the names. I am on my way out now but I will be back sometime soon.

It's more that I think my doctor wants me to read accounts or semi-narrative descriptions of what parents with dissociative disorders are like in the home so I can say "yes, I get that. that sounds like my family." or "no. I didn't experience that symptom or that dynamic in that article." We're dealing with the reality that there is still a moderate to severe undiagnosed mental illness in my family and she'd like to get a better handle I think on what went on to help me make some sense of it as I process these memories. does that make sense?

so I don't know if developmental theories will really provide me with those more concrete narrative examples? or maybe they will. I dunno. this is REALLY new to me.
 
No, they usually are not narrative. Generally they are schematics of types of behavior x development.

I am not sure if anybody ever wrote about children of people with dissociative disorders and if they did I would like to read also.
 
Like I said, I've only found a couple articles that touch upon the subject. One of which said that dissociative disorder in the family is considered a cutting edge research topic in the appropriate fields of law, social work and trauma recovery. Ugh. An "under construction -- check back in ten years" sign was not what I was hoping to find as I looked for answers from the experts. *sigh*

But one article did have some of the sort of stuff I needed to read so I can go back to my therapist to describe my responses.

Things about the "parentalization" of children within the family as they end up caring for their ill parent.

Also that many undiagnosed dissociative parents are convinced that they were "good" parents while dissociating away the "bad."

Also that early research is showing that many children in these households have to endure one if not several suicide attempts on the part of the parent.

Also that parents with dissociative disorders will sometimes "elope" (run off?) for periods.

Also that parents with dissociative disorders tend to either over involve and over inform their children in their prior traumas or withhold far too much information.

All five of those things sound familiar.

I think I'm reading the term "elope" correctly, but I'm not sure. When my mother got upset she'd grab her keys and run out the door. I remember my sister (who is three years older than me) repeatedly chasing her car down the driveway crying, trying to make her stop so she didn't have to tell dad yet again that we "bad kids" chased mom away yet again. We felt like the worst kids in the world for this. And she'd leave sometimes for days at a time. Pretty sure she wasn't having an affair or anything. But she'd just go. And my earliest recollections of this are from as far back as second grade for me.

Regarding the disclosure stuff: It wasn't till I was in my twenties that I learned that my mother's birth mother died when she was less than 1 years old, only to be replaced within 2 years by the stepmother from hell or that she was abused as a child. And only in the past seven years have I begun to learn the severity of the abuse she endured. Weird, huh?

So while some of those general bits resonate with my experiences, the full on descriptions of DID I've read don't sound familiar. Through some flashbacks I've begun to recall my mothers "demon voice" for lack of a better term that she used when she was REALLY upset and like another person. But not sure if she was then or if she was just REALLY upset. If there was any "switching" going on, I don't recognize it in my memory of a child's perspective.

You know what I mean? I'm trying to tease apart from the clinical language what the hell this stuff might look like to a child and if that lines up with what I went through. I know this isn't totally essential to my own recovery. But some more understanding would sure help. My doc seems to agree as she was the one who brought up this possibility today. In particular, this might help me understand the intense denial that my parents seem to have that ANYTHING ever happened in our house. My dad was very much a workaholic, sometimes putting in 70 hour work weeks. He didn't see much of this stuff. My doctor was explaining that maybe by the time he came back home, if my mother was not mid "episode", she may have switched back to another state and honestly could not recall fully the degree of what she had done to us. We endured many day long public humiliations from her outbursts as she shamed us at school in front of parents, teachers and other students. She seems to recall events leading up to those incidents and can even joke about it. But she has no recollection of making scenes for long hours in our school building.

As I'm recalling all this stuff, stuff my sister has since confirmed did indeed go on and that she has been in therapy for for nearly a decade (which I didn't know either), it's all just so... ...strange.

That's almost the hardest part of it from my at the moment. Of course these memories hurt like hell. And I'm still so deeply ashamed from some of it. And I'm having a number of flashbacks to situations where we tried to intervene when she was self harming. But the simple, sheer strangeness of all her behaviours is really bothering me lately. And more insight might help me at this stage.
 
Blue,

I am really sorry that you have been through all this.

About the switching, that happens with DID but sometimes it is not very easy to recognize. I my case for example, it is so fast that I start to say something and somebody else's inside finishes in a way that it does not really look like I was breathing through the sentence.
There are also different levels of consciousness of the different Alters thought inside our heads. Which means sometimes we go thinking that we are thinking that (you can say we are at some level...) while other times we don't know how we got were we are or we cannot figure out what we have done during the time that just passed and we did not notice.
About the different voices, I assume that it is not a rule because DID in some cases is not easy to figure out. Or it may in some cases appear very seldom...
I don't know if you are aware of this also, but it is quite common that DID people have a variable amount of different handwriting other than the careful one and the sloppy one most people have.
If your therapist was talking about dissociation in general and not specifically about DID, I know there are also other kinds of dissociation that I am not very familiar with.

I hope that these informations help you. Let me know if there is something else I can do for you.
 
I am reading your post again, and some other things are calling my attention.

I do understand your desire to contextualize and make sense of your experiences as a child. I am going through the same thing.

I houses were child abuse took place, denial is common even if DID is not present. Sometimes there is another kind of dissociation going on and sometimes people act like if nothing is said, what happened is going to go away... In my experience I can recall some specific strategies my family used to cover the abuse to outsiders and the abuse itself is a forbidden subject, as if it never happened. As I have not confronted them, I am not completely sure if they are going to deny if I do (although I am mostly certain they will).

Take care.
 
Ursa,

Thanks for sharing your insights. Plain vanilla denial might be what is/was happening. But when my doctor asked if she seemed to sometimes forget entire incidents or parts of incidents, a light seemed to go on and we spent the rest of my last session talking about the possibility of her having some sort of dissociative disorder and that what I have conveyed so far says she fits the profile. Again, I don't think it's 100% requisite to my own recovery, but insight seems to help at this moment.

Again thank you for sharing about your own DID. From the little I've read, I get the sense that it is a difficult thing to be open about with strangers. So thank you.
 
I think I'm reading the term "elope" correctly, but I'm not sure. When my mother got upset she'd grab her keys and run out the door. I remember my sister (who is three years older than me) repeatedly chasing her car down the driveway crying, trying to make her stop so she didn't have to tell dad yet again that we "bad kids" chased mom away yet again.

Ah yes...when i dissociate I often grab my keys jump in the car and run. It is hard for me to be around people, around my family. I can't take the noise for one it is really intense and I just need to be alone. it sucks that it left you feeling that way and I wonder if I do that to my kids. I haven't dissociated in awile now but it was happening frequently for awhile. Hmmmm something to think about, although there is not much control there, once you start to go to that place it is hard to come back.
 
Ah yes...when i dissociate I often grab my keys jump in the car and run. It is hard for me to be around people, around my family. I can't take the noise for one it is really intense and I just need to be alone. it sucks that it left you feeling that way and I wonder if I do that to my kids. I haven't dissociated in awile now but it was happening frequently for awhile. Hmmmm something to think about, although there is not much control there, once you start to go to that place it is hard to come back.

Monarch,

Thanks for this bit of insight. From the other side of the equation, have you been able to explain without over involving your kids too much in your trauma that it is not your children's fault when mommy does this?

Honestly, I think if my sister and I were educated even a little bit as to what was going on (but it was impossible because I don't think my parents knew what was going on), it may have gone a long way to help us begin managing how much responsibility we felt for my mothers problems, break downs and episodes.
 
I do explain it to them, sometimes I just let my husband do it, he will just say that Mom is not feeling well and needed time alone. We haven't heard from either of them that they blame themselves, I am still waiting for that.

Communication is key though, I hug and love on my kids alot too and we play, most of the time I am the Mom they love to be around but when I start turning into the Mom they don't want to be around I would rather run than take it out on the them.
 
Monarch,

That's quite a relief to read. I guess back when we grew up, both trauma and the resulting disorders were still so very stigmatized that many families simply did not acknowledge either and did not seek what help was available. At least that was the case for my parents I suppose. I'm glad to hear when parents struggling with this stuff do get help, that educating their children appropriately as to what is going on is a part of the treatment. Wish I could have enjoyed that "luxury."

Ah well. We're here and it's now. And my wife and I had a pretty good weekend with the PTSD pretty far back in "remission" or at least well managed. So I'm not doing too badly this morning.

Hope you are doing well today too. :smile:
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Donation drives

2026 Donation Goal

Goal
$1,800.00
Earned
$910.00
This donation drive ends in
0 hours, 0 minutes, 0 seconds
  50.6%

Trending content

Featured content

Back
Top Bottom