The experts love to say that d.i.d. is pretty rare, but now that my wife and I have been in this journey for the last ten years, I wonder if it's not as rare as some think. You have to remember that d.i.d. is just part of a spectrum of dissociative disorders which include ptsd. When the personality fractures and dissociates that's where you see so many of the other mental health issues come into play because each alter only controls part of the brain/mind's abilities. But people with d.i.d. go to GREAT lengths to appear 'normal' and the host often won't even realize what is going on. If you met my wife, NONE of you would know she has d.i.d. And I still think back and wonder how we got so lucky to have a counselor see it almost from the start because my wife had nearly ZERO of the hallmark 'signs' of d.i.d. like voices and losing time that I was aware of...until we began the journey and welcomed the others into our family and marriage. I wish you well.
Sam
Sam