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Prevalence of Dissociate Identity Disorder in the community

Started by Roni, November 12, 2015, 12:53:19 AM

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Roni

I have been thinking a lot about this and decided to voice my thoughts here because I figured you ladies out of everyone would probably understand.

Does anyone think Dissociate Identity Disorder (DID)/Multiple Personality Disorder might be more prevalent in our community? And that maybe some of us were misdiagnosed as gender dysphoric when really we are probably DID?

Reasons why I think this:

- Despite being transitioned for almost two years now, I still find myself "switching" between my male persona and current new female persona. This has made it hard to transition at times and I often look in the mirror and see a freak.

- There are days I am more dysphoric than others, and I've come to realize much of the intensity of my dysphoria stems from which "persona" I seem to be operating in. Sometimes I see nothing but guy in the mirror; other times I see a beautiful female.

- Prostitutes and sex workers have some of the highest rates of DID out of the general population, according to scientific studies. Is it merely coincidental, then, that a lot of trans people work in the sex industry?

- DID patients have an array of personas: male, female, gay, and even trans personas. What if a lot of us transitioned due to the trans or female persona taking over our daily behavior and thinking, etc.?

- DID patients claim they feel like their body is not theirs, that their personas feel trapped in the wrong body, and that they lack a solid sense of identity. This is eerily similar to the trans narrative of being gender dysphoric.

Anyway, just thinking out loud. I might visit a therapist about this. What are your thoughts?
On the wild journey to self-discovery. Free yourself.
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Cindy

It is one of the conditions that good therapists look for first! Hence one reason to go to trained therapists.

It is treatable so if you are worried please see a GOOD therapist
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Roni

Quote from: Cindy on November 12, 2015, 01:34:37 AM
It is one of the conditions that good therapists look for first! Hence one reason to go to trained therapists.

It is treatable so if you are worried please see a GOOD therapist

Yeah, I realize that now. My therapist was quick to diagnose me as trans when I talked about my female identity. I'm not so much worried as I am trying to understand myself and others in the community who might be feeling the same way. I love being female, but transitioning didn't seem to eliminate my male personality like I thought it would. He's still there in the back of my brain, which is why I sometimes look in the mirror and see nothing but "tr*nny"---cue the intense dysphoria.
On the wild journey to self-discovery. Free yourself.
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Cindy

Roni,

We also have an incredible means to overthink our selves. Most of us still see him, feel him, have him in our brain like a worm for ages. It isn't surprising; my male persona looked after me and protected me for most of my life. I don't hate him; but he isn't me even if he drifts in and out every now and again.

I'm me. A woman. Who in her past had to live as a man. Of course my male upbringing is still part of me and will always be so. But that doesn't mean I have DID. I'm a woman who was brought up male. Guess what, the trauma of that will always live with me. It doesn't mean I was wrong in accepting myself as a trans sexual woman. I'm not a cisfemale.

I and all of us carry baggage.

Maybe don't over think it?

Are you happy being you?

Were you unhappy being him?

Do you want to be you or him?

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Roni

I guess another question I have is how much of my issues pertain to actually being trans and how much of it lends to the possibility that I could be DID? Do most trans people undergo the same mental battle I do in the sense that we've been living as one gender for so long, it's been hard to let go of that persona completely?
On the wild journey to self-discovery. Free yourself.
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Roni

Quote from: Cindy on November 12, 2015, 02:00:17 AM
Roni,

We also have an incredible means to overthink our selves. Most of us still see him, feel him, have him in our brain like a worm for ages. It isn't surprising; my male persona looked after me and protected me for most of my life. I don't hate him; but he isn't me even if he drifts in and out every now and again.

I'm me. A woman. Who in her past had to live as a man. Of course my male upbringing is still part of me and will always be so. But that doesn't mean I have DID. I'm a woman who was brought up male. Guess what, the trauma of that will always live with me. It doesn't mean I was wrong in accepting myself as a trans sexual woman. I'm not a cisfemale.

I and all of us carry baggage.

Maybe don't over think it?

Are you happy being you?

Were you unhappy being him?

Do you want to be you or him?

I guess you answered my previous comment before I had the chance to ask it haha.

I am happy being myself now, and yes I was unhappy being him. Thanks for your perspective Cindy!
On the wild journey to self-discovery. Free yourself.
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Cindy

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Cindy

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Roni

On the wild journey to self-discovery. Free yourself.
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Rose City Rose

I think there may be some overlap, but it has more to do with how hard we try to embrace ourselves as men while we're still in denial.

Yes, we end up creating a sort of separate "self."  This isn't the cause of our dysphoria, but a result of it.  It's not DID but a sort of coping mechanism that works in a similar way, but not the same. 

I'm at a point in my transition where I feel like I've integrated both parts of myself but first, I had to accept that he wasn't the real me.

My male personality was slow to mature emotionally, but still had a protective impulse.  He was chivalrous, but in a very Don Quixote sort of way.  He was a little boy playing knights for real, and in trying to protect the real me, he got hurt; a little boy can't protect a grown woman forever no matter how brave and selfless he is. 

And so I had to grow up as a woman and learn how to be a strong woman who could take care of herself in a world that seemed full of enemies.  And in doing so this plucky little boy finally got a chance to step back and slowly merge with the woman he once fought so hard to save from the world. 

This is what we mean when we say that a transition makes us whole. It's the moment when we can gather up all the good things about ourselves and piece them back into one single, unitary personality united under the admonition to "Know Thyself."
*Started HRT January 2013
*Name and gender marker changed September 2014
*Approved and issued letters for surgery September 2015
*Surgery Consultation November 2015
*Preop electrolysis October 2016-March 2019
*GRS April 3 2019
I DID IT!!!
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Oliviah

I wondered the same thing.   I think it is very possible that there are miss diagnosed people both ways.  Those who are DID diagnosed as trans and trans miss diagnosed as DID.  As with all conditions that don't present obvious physical or other characteristics they can be hard to diagnose. 

Then there is the harder part to deal with and that is childhood trauma  It is high in both categories.  Particularly sexual trauma.  There are higher than average rates of childhood sexual abuse particularly in DID, but also trans.

As for sex work and DID and Sex work and trans.  People often detach from the moment in situations where they are in pain.  Either emotional or physical.  Sex work is often humiliating and dangerous.  Sex workers also have a higher than average history of childhood abuse.

I find that the topic of childhood sex abuse is hard for the trans community to talk about.
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Carrie Liz

From what I've read about the disorder, DID comes about from traumatic life events and being unable to deal with that reality of life, so the mind creates different personas to protect the "host" persona from that pain. By feeling the feelings through the proxy of an alternate personality, it softens the blow, because it's not really happening to you anymore.

Being a pre-transition trans person can often mean significant amounts of emotional pain. Feelings that we're taught we shouldn't be feeling, tremendous shame and a feeling of being "broken" for feeling those feelings at all.

Is it any wonder why quite often trans people can develop an alternate persona, an identity that actually is that gender that we desire to be, to make sense of those feelings? To let us feel those feelings in an identity that actually makes sense to be feeling them?

That's how I see it at least. Correct me if I'm wrong or if I'm being offensive to those who do have DID.

Because although I don't have DID, there was a time where I went through a very similar coping mechanism, where I basically branched off all of my gender-nonconforming behaviors into a distinct alternate female self who was completely separate from the "normal" "male" persona I broadcast to the world, to the point where I even had arguments/conversations with myself in both voices sometimes, feeling like they were fighting for control over me. And my dysphoria didn't start out that way. It only became that way after years of repression and years of telling myself that I was a freak/broken for feeling the cross-gender desires and body dysphoria that I was constantly feeling. In order to see myself as "normal," my brain took what it viewed as that "normal" self and pieced it together into one persona, and took the desires that I saw as "abnormal" and pieced them together into another distinct persona. This dichotomy allowed that "normal" persona to exist in the first place, rather than forcing me to cope with the pain/reality of my core personality itself having parts that were "abnormal."
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Harley Quinn

I'm not a huge believer in psychiatrists, but have you thought of the possibility that you might be trying to be what you perceive you should be, and not allowing yourself to be you?

I do everything I used to enjoy, just do it in heels now... My lifestyle hasn't really changed. There are still the girly moments, but it's just who I am. I guess it's the "be who you want to be, just don't forget who you are". Embrace the new you, but don't shut the door on your past. You'll eventually long for a part of it.
At what point did my life go Looney Tunes? How did it happen? Who's to blame?... Batman, that's who. Batman! It's always been Batman! Ruining my life, spoiling my fun! >:-)
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Oliviah

Quote from: Carrie Liz on November 12, 2015, 08:06:09 AM
From what I've read about the disorder, DID comes about from traumatic life events and being unable to deal with that reality of life, so the mind creates different personas to protect the "host" persona from that pain. By feeling the feelings through the proxy of an alternate personality, it softens the blow, because it's not really happening to you anymore.

Being a pre-transition trans person can often mean significant amounts of emotional pain. Feelings that we're taught we shouldn't be feeling, tremendous shame and a feeling of being "broken" for feeling those feelings at all.

Is it any wonder why quite often trans people can develop an alternate persona, an identity that actually is that gender that we desire to be, to make sense of those feelings? To let us feel those feelings in an identity that actually makes sense to be feeling them?

That's how I see it at least. Correct me if I'm wrong or if I'm being offensive to those who do have DID.

Because although I don't have DID, there was a time where I went through a very similar coping mechanism, where I basically branched off all of my gender-nonconforming behaviors into a distinct alternate female self who was completely separate from the "normal" "male" persona I broadcast to the world, to the point where I even had arguments/conversations with myself in both voices sometimes, feeling like they were fighting for control over me. And my dysphoria didn't start out that way. It only became that way after years of repression and years of telling myself that I was a freak/broken for feeling the cross-gender desires and body dysphoria that I was constantly feeling. In order to see myself as "normal," my brain took what it viewed as that "normal" self and pieced it together into one persona, and took the desires that I saw as "abnormal" and pieced them together into another distinct persona. This dichotomy allowed that "normal" persona to exist in the first place, rather than forcing me to cope with the pain/reality of my core personality itself having parts that were "abnormal."

I think you are right.  I disassociated heavily to deal with dysphoria.
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Roni

I've read and gone through the entirety of every single post here. Thank you so much for the interesting read, ladies!

I've never thought of it that way---that perhaps we are not trans due to DID, but that some of us developed DID-like symptoms as a result of the pains of dysphoria, as well as being told by society we are one way when we are not. It certainly makes sense.

Regardless, there does seem to be a bit of an overlapping gray area, as Rose, Oliviah, and Carrie have all stated. I have not a single problem with being either trans or DID. I guess I created this thread to gain further understanding of my own mental state.

Quote from: Harley Quinn on November 12, 2015, 09:06:08 AM
I'm not a huge believer in psychiatrists, but have you thought of the possibility that you might be trying to be what you perceive you should be, and not allowing yourself to be you?

I have thought about this as well. The mind is a powerful thing, and is why to a certain extent, I am not entirely a believer of psychiatry. I feel like a lot of the times, there is a lot of misdiagnosing going around also. And while I do not self-diagnose, I am of the belief that you are your own best friend when it comes to understanding your brain. Therapists will only spew back what you relay to them, and will often diagnose you based on what you tell them.

As for not allowing myself to be me, I feel like that is part of the problem. I had some internalized transphobia going on, stemmed mainly from what society has taught me is normal. Don't get me wrong, I love being trans, but it wasn't always that way. I guess at one point I would rather have been DID than trans, because society as a whole seems more empathetic to the plights of DID people, while trans people are passed off as freaks. Transition has been such a huge mental and emotional challenge for me, but I am convinced I will come out stronger after the process.
On the wild journey to self-discovery. Free yourself.
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JLT1

I could not find an instance where a three or four year old child had DID.  Trans, yep...DID, nope.  DID seems to be acuired or develops over time.  Trans seems to be buried until it almost overwhelms.

Jennifer
To move forward is to leave behind that which has become dear. It is a call into the wild, into becoming someone currently unknown to us. For most, it is a call too frightening and too challenging to heed. For some, it is a call to be more than we were capable of being, both now and in the future.
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stephaniec

my personal opinion their just 90$ if not more different. DID affects one part of the body where as dysphoria  is the total individual. If I had DID I'd have to ask the surgeon to remove my brain because that's where the problem is and nothing else will relieve the pain. When I was in high school I always wished I could take my brain out and put it in a jar with fluid in it to rinse it out , now I know why.
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MarcellaJH

Hi ladies.  My name is Marcella, and this is my first post on any type of social media..  There is a trans woman on YouTube named Autumn Asphodel who has posted many videos dealing with a variety of psychological topics, including several on DID.  Whether you agree with her or not, she is knowledgeable accurate, and interesting.


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Roni

Quote from: MarcellaJH on November 13, 2015, 04:55:57 AM
Hi ladies.  My name is Marcella, and this is my first post on any type of social media..  There is a trans woman on YouTube named Autumn Asphodel who has posted many videos dealing with a variety of psychological topics, including several on DID.  Whether you agree with her or not, she is knowledgeable accurate, and interesting.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I actually watch her videos and was how I gained a lot of the things I know about disorders! She's great.
On the wild journey to self-discovery. Free yourself.
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Roni

Quote from: stephaniec on November 12, 2015, 07:37:19 PM
my personal opinion their just 90$ if not more different. DID affects one part of the body where as dysphoria  is the total individual. If I had DID I'd have to ask the surgeon to remove my brain because that's where the problem is and nothing else will relieve the pain. When I was in high school I always wished I could take my brain out and put it in a jar with fluid in it to rinse it out , now I know why.

You are correct in that gender dysphoria centers around dissatisfaction with the body, while DID is more of a mental issue than a body image issue, despite DID patients often feeling as if their bodies are foreign.
On the wild journey to self-discovery. Free yourself.
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