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Catatonia

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St.Maybe

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When I use the therm "dissociate" to describe my behavior, I don't mean it within the context of DID... when I say I experienced severe dissociation, I mean that I blacked out, and was allegedly catatonic during this time. Or when I experience pervasive dissociation, it means I lost my ability to speak or otherwise respond physically to outside stimuli.

Does anyone else experience this?

Do you guys think maybe I apply the term inapp
 
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No, I think you use the term "dissociation" quite appropriately. We all have different versions of dissociation that we experience.

Everyone (even people without PTSD) dissociates on one level or another. The term dissociation isn't reserved to describe only the experiences of those with DID.
 
I'm not one to tell you if you use the words inappropriately, but I can tell you what I understand some of your words to mean, and I can tell you what words I use to describe my spectrum of disassociative behaviors. In a good way-in respect to our individuality, we have different experiences of the same thing. I think I understand what you mean.

I really think we need more words in English that describe the spectrum of disassociation. And disassociation seems to be fitting to PTSD.
severe dissociation.....blacked out...allegedly catatonic
I think of these words differently. Severe disassociation means a psychotic break-unable to be in touch with this reality. Black-outs are a term that I relate to alcoholics who have a memory loss of conversations or events, that occurred while they were drinking. My understanding, a catatonic state would mean that a person is unresponsive to stimulation, near death.

My expressions of my dissociative states are lying frozen, not being able to track information, not being able to hear what someone said, experiencing confusion-since I can't integrate information, unable to speak, not being able to complete tasks, not being able to remember names, not being able to move. (All of the above symptoms appear out of fear-from triggesr).
 
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*Catatonic in a state to which a person is unable to respond or react.
*Black out is a term for which one is unable to account for a space of time normally associated with a type of amnesia.
So I believe your terminology is correct. More over, I often experience a state in which I am unable to respond and can not make my body move. My emotions seem to pause during this time until I became afraid for no known reason. My former therapist believed my brain was trying to prevent something from surfacing.
 
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