OK, safety. This comes up in the context of researching, as suggested by both
@joeylittle and
@BuckarooBanzai That would be my normal approach to everything, but, because I have no-one to direct or monitor that research, I'm very cautious. I constantly have to remember that approaching trauma in therapy too soon has twice led to me acting in a way that endangered others lives as well as my own. I have to be circumspect in what I expose myself to, and stop well short of anything that might be too much. The aspect of myself that believes it is better to be dad than to reveal those secrets to another pops up so suddenly. I'm all the more confused because I find myself thinking "but that wasn't me, that has nothing to do with me. I'm a calm measured person" I don't know what I might read that is too much, or what is there to be set off in an unexpected explosion.
Then much bigger and reverberating around all my thoughts is the issue
I have also find it helpful to remind myself that although my understanding of the situation has changed I in fact am the same person I was before the diagnoses
My understanding of myself has been changed, in a way that is reverberating on and on. It is not just the DDNOS diagnosis itself, much more the examples given throughout the report of why my depersonalisation / derealisation / amnesia are Severe. Suddenly I'm being told that I have always been pathologically abnormal.
things I considered to be just how I was, or how the world was - were actually an illness - and aspects of it were considered shocking to doctors, even though I'd mostly figured out how to live with it
I can accept things like a single childhood experience of watching myself standing on the other side of the school hall as clearly odd. Some of the other examples- always having multiple unexplained bruises, not knowing my birthday, or age,or chronological sequencing, finding things in odd places, losing track of meetings and of time, having a running commentary in my head, things dropping out of 3D - they all seem wholly normal. I wouldn't have brought them up in therapy because as the report quotes me saying repeatedly "that's just how it is, that's how I live"
Now, I'm told that all those things add up to Severe abnormality. I'm having to reframe and reorient my view of myself. I want someone who will go through each of those examples - and the ones I've listed are just a selection - and help me understand how and then why they are not normality.
I want someone to tell me if I the long term work is supposed to change those things, and how, and what that would be like. I can't imagine not having this
"a constant presence of ‘2 opposing
views, without conflict, it just is..it makes decisions or answering any
question very difficult… the I of me is very clear but there is other stuff,
facets, around that is very dark…’. She said that her inner sense of
constant contradiction is ‘disciplined enough’ not to affect relationships
and work. She wasn’t sure about the level of associated level of distress,
‘ it is confusing, muddling, chaotic but it has always been like
that…neither I or anyone else want to know about that..’ "
I know I used not to show that. OH commented that I used to be exactly the opposite, both spontaneous and decisive. But I assumed at least something along those lines was everyone's normality.
I feel as though I'm looking at myself in a freak show.