Plurals / Clusters / Systems - Pronouns: we / us / ours

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Also jess's trauma is that her grandparents died (not seeing them die or anything) when she was young and did not get enough asspating aka. soothed
ergo DID. 13:21
That actually was the plot about an older book on a woman with M.P.D. where she claimed it was due to her mother dying and not being able to attend the funeral as a child. Course then you have the "Three Faces of Eve" which was proved to be unreal where she had D.I.D. because she had to kiss her dead grandmother.
 
Grim, but I don't think that's enough to give someone DID.
Doubt she ever was she even said she had no "symptoms" until the doctor told her she did. The same doctor that sold rights of her life story to 20th century fox with no legal representation and supposedly "by her alter's wishes" in 1956. She found this out in 1988 . She finally won her legal battle against the studio for the rights to her own life story. Seems it was the docs way to get a quick buck since he got 3 books and a movie deal out of it.
 
That actually was the plot about an older book on a woman with M.P.D. where she claimed it was due to her mother dying and not being able to attend the funeral as a child. Course then you have the "Three Faces of Eve" which was proved to be unreal where she had D.I.D. because she had to kiss her dead grandmother.
at 14:25 she said that it wasn't the be all and end all of her trauma, but "that could be enough for someone to develop DID" (doubt that).
I dont think she was saying that her grandparents dying gave her DID, she just worded it like ass.
 
Some people are claiming you don't need to have had trauma to be plural
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"My dad's forcing me to watch a show, except I could leave at any time, and that's abusive. Also I split off some imaginary friends because it was so traumatic to watch a TV show." View attachment 1434656View attachment 1434660

You feel scared to leave. That is force enough.

These spaces are legitimately just giant circle jerks to affirm neurotics. You feel uncomfortable? Yes, that is trauma. You don't like a show? Yes, also trauma. You are around your Father who may be an asshole but right now is literally jut watching television? Yes, trauma.

Based on her post, the name Sonnie comes from a character in the first episode of Love, Death & Robots. If you're unaware, Sonnie was assaulted and left for dead. Her consciousness was transferred into a robot lizard dog or some shit, and her body is basically being Weekend At Bernie'd but with technology. She lives in the robot dog and fights against other robot dogs and always wins because if she loses she will literally die as that's where her consciousness is stored. Why she participates in fights is unclear but it has something to do with her rage - I wasn't all that invested. They all speak in the ugliest English accents you can imagine and it is exactly as stupid as it sounds. But... clearly very relatable to this very traumatised teenager.
 
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Is headspace something actually recorded by reputable (or any) psychologists?

As a mechanism for coping with this concept of multiple personalities, yes, but it doesn't involve these wacky adventures "DID" people ascribe to them: it's more often described as a kind of structured space where someone with DID can interact with their other personae consciously. Speaking of: the top thing that these people with DID lack is the characteristic compartmentalization of memories: generally, the "foundational" persona does not remember the actions of other personae, such as the "child" persona reverted to in order to process overwhelming negative emotions, or the "guardian" persona reverted to under stress to "defend" the foundational persona. However, things like this are made a bit more complex by...

Some people are claiming you don't need to have had trauma to be plural
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They're (kind of) right. There are a number of culture-bound equivalents to DID that have been observed. For example, in some African tribes, it is considered somewhat normal to hold conversations with a guardian spirit under ritual circumstances (that, I want to stress, do not involve the consumption of psychedelics). A large number report the guardian spirit physically manifesting before them and speaking audibly to them, despite no such thing occurring from an outside perspective. Western occultists have reported similar experiences in summoning their "holy guardian angel". In both cases, the spirit doesn't, generally, actually say anything that would suggest it's a real, discrete entity separate from the person's own consciousness, but instead expresses intuitive conclusions or thoughts that wouldn't be consciously-acknowledged.
From a secular perspective, some authors who work on long novels report that, occasionally, they will develop the psychology of one of the primary characters so much that they will begin to hallucinate the character communicating with them, despite no history of hard drug use or prior mental disturbances. Once again, these experiences are very real to the person experiencing them and seem more to be an expression of subconscious thought than a real, independent entity. Many young children, likewise, have "imaginary friends" that they report, very insistently, as being real, visible, and audible to them. Children tend to naturally grow out of this phase of development, but it is quite common (in fact, not having one of these friends can be an auxiliary indicator of Asperger's Syndrome- whereas the persistence of these friends into the early teens or later is a sign of an eccentric personality cluster issue or a considerable developmental disorder such as more profound forms of autism).
Then, of course, there's the wave of MPD in the 90's, where films like The Three Faces of Eve caused a massive spike in the public consciousness of MPD: and a spike of MPD cases that seemed to very much be real and not malingerers followed. Most of these people would be later diagnosed with Borderline Personality Disorder instead.

Some people categorize these things as separate and unrelated phenomena, but in my opinion, they aren't and instead point to a general norm:
- The required circumstances for the formation of auxiliary personae are the combination of a weaker-than-normal sense of self (the rituals to contact a guardian spirit often involve ecstatic practices that push oneself to mental exhaustion, talented writers often intentionally try to remove their own ego-bias when writing other characters, and children and BPD persons have weak senses of self normally) and a cultural context where an auxiliary persona is seen as normal.

This isn't to say that 99% of these "plurals" aren't making up their experiences for asspats: just that this issue is more complex than most people on any side want it to be.
 
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Could someone explain to me what’s the point of censoring words? Like you read it as a said word anyway. If you’re so triggered by a fucking word, you need help.

Edit: grammar
Supposedly magical asteriks turn bad triggery words into magical unicorns....

Seriously though they really think in the real word people do that to not be triggered. Good way for them to control narratives. If you can't talk about faking DID how canyou accuse them of faking DID.
 
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