Firstly, I want to apologize to anyone who read my introduction a while back. It has been revealed very recently that my friend, the sufferer, was not military and that many of the things he told me were, in fact, false (aside from the retrograde amnesia). I feel very bad about posting false information (which I thought to be true at the time), and I just want to apologize to all of you.
But as I said, many things have been revealed to me recently. My PTSD sufferer was also suffering from DID (dissociative identity disorder) when I met him. As far as I understand from my own brief research into DID, the brain "heals" incorrectly and fills in parts of memories with things that didn't really happen. It is generally connected to retrograde amnesia. I'm still doing my research as to what it's all about. But in any case, how I understand it is that my friend was not lying to me consciously. He was telling me the life story he believed to be true. In my case, I do not feel like any falsehood told was malicious or damaging. We're still discussing these things and bringing it all out in the open. I am trying to be understanding and supportive, because I know a lot of this is a bombshell to him as well as simply being hard to admit and talk about.
He said the DID has gone away. Can something like that heal?
I'm still reeling a bit from his admission the other night. I'm trying to be understanding, but I'm wary of trusting him too much. I'm torn between knowing he's being as honest as possible with me (he truly regrets having "led me on" with false facts he thought was truth) and thinking I should take everything he says with a 50lbs bag of salt. Or not trusting him as far as I could throw him.
Has anyone dealt with DID? I know it's maybe not PTSD-related, but it seems to be something that could easily go hand in hand.
Thanks in advance.
~R
But as I said, many things have been revealed to me recently. My PTSD sufferer was also suffering from DID (dissociative identity disorder) when I met him. As far as I understand from my own brief research into DID, the brain "heals" incorrectly and fills in parts of memories with things that didn't really happen. It is generally connected to retrograde amnesia. I'm still doing my research as to what it's all about. But in any case, how I understand it is that my friend was not lying to me consciously. He was telling me the life story he believed to be true. In my case, I do not feel like any falsehood told was malicious or damaging. We're still discussing these things and bringing it all out in the open. I am trying to be understanding and supportive, because I know a lot of this is a bombshell to him as well as simply being hard to admit and talk about.
He said the DID has gone away. Can something like that heal?
I'm still reeling a bit from his admission the other night. I'm trying to be understanding, but I'm wary of trusting him too much. I'm torn between knowing he's being as honest as possible with me (he truly regrets having "led me on" with false facts he thought was truth) and thinking I should take everything he says with a 50lbs bag of salt. Or not trusting him as far as I could throw him.
Has anyone dealt with DID? I know it's maybe not PTSD-related, but it seems to be something that could easily go hand in hand.
Thanks in advance.
~R