Sorry guys, this is long and I don't expect anyone to read it. This is just a post to help me sort out the huge amount of information and apply it to my psyche.
@Chava , ever wonder if we do the research etc that we do as a way of keeping touch with our ANP?
Okay, taking this one chunk at a time. It is almost like my brain is not letting this 'sink in' because it does it to protect me. Fascinating. I found a window this morning though and can take in this much:
Structural dissociation Is a "neurological process", where an accumulation of unprocessed trauma events overwhelm the mind, brain and the individual as a whole, causing a separation in the functions of the personality.
ANP = "apparently normal part"
EP = "emotional part"
The problem is that I feel parts of me that are walled off from each other. They feel like they are driven by a whole set of rules that belong to themselves only. They do not merge together at all but I am conscious of them both, making me 'different' from DID. It seems that integration will need to focus on my emotions. Ewwwwwww!
Separate Parts (why not DID)
Structural dissociation is the only time a "split" will ever occur; there is never any action that could be properly called a split during state (ANP/EP) creation.
This is good to know. Apparently secure attachment is huge in all of this as well and was not part of my environment when the split occurred. Oddly enough I have been dealing with a ton of 'attachment' issues to key people in my life since the melt down. The above paragraph (to me) means I don't have to worry about further 'splits' as DID affected people do.
PTSD
...an abundance of evidence has been presented in an attempt to prove that individuals who were able to obtain a secure attachment during their childhood...are immune to ever having post-traumatic stress disorder.
Apparently secure attachment is huge in all of this as well and was not part of my environment when this occurred. I often wondered why some do not get PTSD when it feels like they 'should'. This would explain that.
Personality Formation
The personality...is one area divided into two by a dissociative boundary. On one side of the boundary are the.. ANP and on the other side are the "less than distinct parts of the personality" (EP).
People used to comment, prior to my breakdown, how 'non emotional' or 'controlled' I was. This was not something I felt I tried to do. It was just me. I didn't realize what range of emotions for normal folks were -- I am thinking now, because they were walled off in my psyche. Inaccessible. So makes sense. I feel like because I was so unemotional, it lead to my being stupidly good at my logic driven life. The problem came when a hugely emotional breach of trust happened which my logical self couldn't sort through, bringing my EP to front - very very quickly. I totally lost my ANP in the process and couldn't get it back.
Primary, secondary and tertiary Structural Dissociation
Primary (PTSD): If no more than two divisions are present (one ANP and one EP), the person has a Primary structural dissociation, which is common to PTSD.
Secondary (C-PTSD????): Secondary Structural Dissociation occurs when one additional EP is formed (which some people with PTSD and C-PTSD are able to do). The hypothesis is that this happens because of an overload of unprocessed trauma.
Tertiary
...only dissociative identity disorder is thought to exist in this realm...it's the fact there are two or more distinct states, which are...the ANP...and only this disorder has two or more distinct states. [DID also] has at least two less than distinct states (EP) and usually many more. Onno van der Hart and Ellert Nijenhuis strongly believe the reason for the two or more distinct states is that this disorder manifests itself during infancy, and then during the next "phase of childhood" during which, massive changes to the brain and mind take place.
I often wondered why I didn't get DID - I wonder if this is because I was adopted at two years old into a relatively decent home which interrupted the section in bold, above.
Look up
Other Specified Dissociative Disorder (OSDD).
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The EP and ANP model fit this nicely. I am perfectly normal (if you call stupidly competent and focused 'normal'). This is ANP. When I had my meltdown (EP switch?) I was over the top emotional, needy, scared (never had fear before D-day), etc - no logic. My personality turned like a light switch. One day I was great, (ANP), and in 5 minutes or less I lost my entire life to the EP. All normal skills were gone. Completely. This, of course had me react more emotionally. This lasted for 8 years.
Look up
True Amnesia.
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I have no true amnesia (I call this co-consciousness), and have a sense I only have 2 parts (ANP and EP). This fits as to why I am not DID.
Dissociative Identity Disorder is completely different from all the other disorders mentioned above. Two distinct states exist in this disorder, and what is experienced when two distinct states switch is "true amnesia." This is due to the incredible phobia that exists between these states...True amnesia only exists in dissociative identity disorder.
I knew this which is why I knew I didn't have DID. I also knew that the time I switched was way too long -- 42 years for ANP and 8 years for EP and the fact that I knew who I felt I 'really' was (ANP). I also have this strange feeling that I was familiar with my EP when it came up front and knew exactly what age I was in my life when it was formed. I had dissociative amnesia for these years and was a ward of the Children's Aid so pursued getting my history once I had shored up my toolbox to deal with what I could potentially learn about those years.
This is why I lost it completely. My frontal lobes were lost to me and driven by emotions and not logic as they had been when ANP was engaged. My way of switching back and forth is the 'full control' way, which is why my life changed instantly.
Okay, enough for now. Brain is over taxed. Please forgive if this doesn't make sense in places (or all of it). This was completely overwhelming.
Book for reference:
Haunted Self