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- #13
Midnightmoon
Diamond Member
You've explained so bang on how it feels to be in my head but I couldn't find the words for, so thank you. I get the processing time of something like this isn't a quick fix, but even just typing out this stuff helps me accept the notion of the idea that little bit more. CTAD videos are really good. Its that balance of finding info without ending up down a rabbit hole of people almost 'performing' to camera which I find incredibly difficult.I get what you mean... there's alot of stigma attached and it's a diagnosis which even alot of therapists steer clear of...
I was diagnosed with DDNOS (now OSDD) about 7 years ago... I denied it all that time... Amd it's only recently I've allowed myself to look into it with curiosity to find whether it fits what I'm truly experiencing or not...
You mention your T is an assessor at one of the leading UK clinics. My assessor was too and I found this to be a double edged sword. First, the 'they must know what they are talking about then they know their shi*.' Then, 'this is someone who is very invested in working in a certain way (seeing everything through the lens of DDs) and I don't want to be a guinea pig and just be fit into that mold.'
For me, the feelings have shifted from denial to curiosity. I am beginning to educate myself more (please be careful looking up random DID YouTube videos... they can be really damaging and very artificial done by people who want to put their experience out there as 'THE COLLECTIVE DID EXPERIENCE' which just isn't the case)... I find the CTAD clinic videos for the most part informative and practical.. check them out). And I'm also very aware now that ignoring my diagnosis for 7 years didn't get me far in the long run.. so I'm open to new therapy possibilities now... I've also realised that some of my experiences I'm being to therapy aren't known to my T who is very experienced... but not trained in DDs... so another clue that something is going on there...
In terms of feeling like you've lied and are being dramatic, DID or not, these are common feelings about trauma as well as other diagnoses... just watch them from a far and be curious...
They other thing I'm learning about DID is it's not necessarily correlated just to severe and enduring trauma... they are beginning to link it to more subtle forms of attachment issues, during the early years, including well meaning parents who just weren't able to provide a stable attachment for whatever reason eg mental illness... which can go on to create the same feelings of unsafety that other more overtly and severely abused kids experience...
So what you view as not a big deal you may have to reframe looking from the point of view of little you ... the environment the people and access to support you didn't have, your level of perceived safety, whether objectively real or not...
I understand this 100%
At the end of the day, all diagnoses aren't the objective truthful identity of any of us... they just try to capture and make sense of certain sypmtoms which are experienced also by others and can be helpful in guiding therapeutic approaches, based on research done etc... but it doesn't change who you are as a person...
Its not for anyone here to convince you whether you do or don't have a DD.. but perhaps look into it with interest about what strategies could be offered to help you through your journey.
And tell your T to slow down. No one should be pushing any diagnosis on to you. Tell her you have the info and when you're ready you will initiate the convo with them. If you can
(And heck yes to the double edge sword, having a T as an expert in the field means every word and movement is analysed to work out 'the system', which just sets my cynicism off).