To look at both issues specifically, (DID and Depression) as comorbid, a therapist should be able to delve into those in detail and let you know if you exhibit some of those traits to the extent that a DSM diagnosis is appropriate; however, for our discussion, we are informed enough to decide for ourselves if we think we have it. Anthony has said, self-diagnosis is not a diagnosis, and that is correct. But the fact is, therapists are not in a wave of dislike of labels, it seems. 15 yrs ago, they were label crazy, when the new SSRI's started to appear on the Rx market. There was a rush to try them all out on everyone. Therefore, the diagnostic labeling, and over-labeling that is still happening to this day, in the exhuberance of medicating the masses. A therapist who is dedicated to "being there for you" is more hesitant to name things. There are some studies that show that just being labeled is a setback in some ways.
Self-discovery is not self-diagnosis, but I can see a mental image of a Venn Diagram. :rolleyes:
Dissociative Identity Disorder is something I would have immediately dismissed for myself until recently. The difficulty making decisions without having an internal debate or concensus is listed as a feature of DID. I have to do this, too.
Another feature, for me, is having dreams with the main "alters" (characters inside my personality) collaborating on various tasks to get me well. Alter is short for alternative personalities, but more accurately, alternate parts of one's personality. The main thing I get from it is that trauma repeated over time tends to compartmentalize various aspects of one's experience and later personalities, or strengths/skills, weaknesses or general attributes. Thus, my personality "switches" into these alters; but for me, they feel more like "modes."
For example, when I feel in the mood to tackle an intellectual task, my "professor" comes out. I live entirely in my head while I work on the task, and can focus for hours without taking any notice of my physcial body, but I have to switch into that persona to do this task well. This is the secret to my success, academically.
In the past, when I was younger and new to college, my sexualtiy would stand in the way of the Professor and demand attention. I don't know that is was a true alter, but it could be. Sometimes, just tying to study and switch into Professor mode was impossible if Sex was not dealt with first. I don't know why, but I chalked it up to raging hormones, (and still do... :roflmao: I mean, how many 18 year olds aren't sexaholics?) Also, I'd drink coffee before a study session, and have seen over the years that coffee in particular as a form of caffeine is an afrodisiac to me.
Then there is the nurturing alter, when I am her, I am empathetic and caring...totally, and cannot think about my own needs.
There is the angry, raging, destructive (even self-destructive) alter, who also hides the memories of trauma. I should call her Kali, the Hindu Goddess of Destruction. But she is "Belle" in child form, and "Beatrix" in adult form. She always appears to be so beautiful in my dreams, but this only serves to obscure her true intentions, which are homicidal. She is like "the Madwoman in the Attic" in Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte. I keep her locked up pretty well, but she gets out at night in my dreams.
Michelle, the caring nuturer, the "Professor," and Beatrix have made appearances in my dreams. I didn't think of them as alters until recently. As I have said, I have difficulty seeing myself as a true DID sufferer since I don't exhibit it much at all.
I do Dissociate, sometimes dramatically, but rarely in an obvious way.
There is one thing that makes me think I have DID. During counseling, I tapped some buried grief over the loss of my grandfather. As the conversation continued, I must have D'd a tiny bit to numb the pain just to stop crying. I felt like a child again, very in pain and alone, so I must have. Then, suddenly, I began talking in a more confident voice that sounded male to me, and the Professor had taken over the reins so that I could finish the session without the emotions getting in the way. It was almost scary, as I tried to "turn the voice back" to my normal one, and she didn't seem to notice, but I did. Maybe she thought my voice was husky from the tears in my throat, but it wasn't that. The fear kicked in when I felt I was on autopilot with that masculine, emotionless voice, and I didn't like it. It took a minute or two of talking in that voice/alter, then a pause and a breath, and I was "back on" as "me" again. This took me by complete surprise. So now I do think I have at least some DID.
Your characters sound like DID alters to me. They contain vastly diametric emotional ego states that have polarized into full personalities. That is what DID is about. But it really needs to be exhibited in other ways then just our dreams or imaginations (or even maybe internal dialogues). For a diagnosis, you have to exhibit "switching" I think. Only those close to you and maybe the T. will be aware of it, because, like I said, you will be one person at work, one at home (with triggers like anger causing you to "switch"). Switching is often misdiagnosed as Bi-polar b/c they can appear to be the same, especially if you have only two main alters. But since I have at least four main ones, and several subsidiary "fragments," and I don't exhibit any bipolar traits, such as mood flux at all, then I'm more likely DID, which is common with C PTSD, although it didn't make the DSM this round.
Hope that helps with the DID discussion.
Depression is another topic. I think it's more biological and can be influenced by diet and other body patterns. However, cognitively, I have learned to monitor my negative self talk and get it down to a minimum, which has really helped over the years. It's also been major to stay away from my parents, from whence the self- castigation was being internalized. They are the source, so I cut the cord. That has done more than any pill ever could.
But Depression is complex and can take many forms comorbidly. It's probably the most important thing to remove from one's mental playground, like a vicious bully, before further play and improvements can be realistically made. Not enough fat in the diet, not enough quality sleep (or frequent nightmares), not enough play and movement and excercise and sunshine, all these matter. I also personally feel that it is the symptom of having repressed anger and pain that needs to leak out in a very supportive way. Releasing that tension leaves room for more happy thoughts and positive futuring. Also, positive affirmations directly run against the grain of depression, and though they may intitiallly inflame negative self-talk, you simply note the neg-talk, and let it pass by like a passing sailboat, and keep sailing into the positive port you want. Have you read You Can Heal Your Life by Louise Hay? While she is a bit New Age for me, the bulk of what she says works for most people who try it.
When one is young, finding out one has depression, PTSD, and such is horrifying and self-limiting. A dark cloud appears and joins the others and the future takes on those tones of am impending storm. Where will it all end? But, with just a little patience and a lot of energy and gusto, it actually can end rather well. For you see, it is not what we have right now, it is what we want and the choices we make in love that matter.
Recently, I attended a funeral. There were several people there, and although the woman had no degree, no "career" as such, and was not beautiful, she had the most wonderful funeral I have ever been witnessed. Her children clearly admired and loved her, and they told of her devotion. She was active in all their childhood pursuits, such as 4H club and events, which she served as Secretary for years. They showed a picture of her smiling with a horse and her kids also. Her grandchildren thought the world of her, and her husband and his family grieved the loss of a wonderful, loving "angel" in their world. She was not fancy, but she was Love to many people.
It has long been my goal to not let PTSD turn me into someone unlike the forementioned lady. Though my rage comes out once in a while, and I can get blue or low energy, or sick a lot, I want my family to see my devotion in many forms. Love is what I live for now, and not only for myself, but for my own family and co-workers. Self-sacrifice is a hallmark. Though it is not seen, it is there. Right now, it means getting up early so I can see my oldest off to school with a hot breakfast and a hug, though that has been hard with a baby keeping me up most of the night (and PTSD doing its worst to my body.) So I am always tired. But it's worth it. Each day is another day I had something to give, something to offer someone I love.
Victor Frankl's Man's Search for Meaning highlights the hallmark of this creed. That we have the best life if we can take another's burden from them, and carry it ourselves.