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- #25
Justmehere
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How do you know @Justmehere if it is a full personality or not?
Many things with dissociation happen on a spectrum, with a lot of grey areas and variety inbetween.
I'll try to explain it how it's been explained to me. Everyone has ego-states. Let's take the example of Jane the school teacher. She's teaching a class as her professional-teacher-adult self. Someone comes and tells her she has an emergency call from her mother. Then she becomes jane-the-worried-daughter. She goes to answer the call, and finds out that her mother wants to simply give her advice about cooking. Then Jane becomes pissed-off-jane... But, because she is well integrated with her teacher-self, she is able to remain professional and ends the call with her mother, goes back to work, and deals with the anger later. That's how ego states generally work.
For me, having ego states that are disconnected means that I have a hard time moving from one state to the other, and sometimes things are jumbled up. It's very hard to explain.
My therapist told me that even people with DID have ego states, it's just that the walls (or lack of integration/communication) between different states were so strong at a young age, in order to cope, that the ego states developed into separate personalities. Feelings of sadness or terror about trauma walled off into a full personality, sometimes with his or her own likes and dislikes and etc. It's my understanding that in the case of DID, these personalities sometimes don't even feel like the same person. They can feel like someone else. (Someone with DID can explain so much better -- and please correct me if I am wrong in any way.) Sometimes the personalities in DID can even be different genders.
My therapist has told me I don't have DID, this state isn't another personality, because I act the same, only sound younger. The young state in me feels like me. I don't lose time, etc.
That's the best way I can explain it - as I understand it.