Have you read about both? I have read what I could. One book _The Haunted Self_
Link to sample Dead Link Removed
DID should no longer bear stigma under the theory of Structural Dissociation, which says that there is a dissociation spectrum. However, in USA, memory is long for the media-stained hyberbole of what MPD or DID actually is. Rather than deal with the new research, too many North Amercans in USA have a tendency toward an underinformed opinion rather than read what foreigners have discovered. This makes change frustratingly slow and patchy.
If you can set aside taking the vastly patchy opinions of therapists who either do or don't believe in DID as a real phenomenon, and ignore YouTube or any other sensationalizing of it, and focus on the scholarship in the area of dissociation, you'll feel more grounded in a rational discussion of it.
The book is not light reading, but if you go slow and take notes on key terms, like ANP and EP, it will make sense.
I don't know if there is a better set of sources for laypeople, but this one was popular recently on the forum for those curious about structural dissociation. I plan to use my summer break to do further study with my husband on this topic for my own healing.
I'd be happy to share if I can. My issue is that with my dissociation, I get ideas that then fly right out of my head. I can't seem to hold onto my thoughts these days.
Link to sample Dead Link Removed
DID should no longer bear stigma under the theory of Structural Dissociation, which says that there is a dissociation spectrum. However, in USA, memory is long for the media-stained hyberbole of what MPD or DID actually is. Rather than deal with the new research, too many North Amercans in USA have a tendency toward an underinformed opinion rather than read what foreigners have discovered. This makes change frustratingly slow and patchy.
If you can set aside taking the vastly patchy opinions of therapists who either do or don't believe in DID as a real phenomenon, and ignore YouTube or any other sensationalizing of it, and focus on the scholarship in the area of dissociation, you'll feel more grounded in a rational discussion of it.
The book is not light reading, but if you go slow and take notes on key terms, like ANP and EP, it will make sense.
I don't know if there is a better set of sources for laypeople, but this one was popular recently on the forum for those curious about structural dissociation. I plan to use my summer break to do further study with my husband on this topic for my own healing.
I'd be happy to share if I can. My issue is that with my dissociation, I get ideas that then fly right out of my head. I can't seem to hold onto my thoughts these days.