The Dissociation Spectrum + What Causes Dissociative Disorders?

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Kati Morton

Kati Morton

9 ай бұрын

Let's talk about dissociation & the dissociation spectrum. I get asked a lot do you have to have trauma or have had PTSD to experience dissociation? The answer is no. I like to think of dissociation as a spectrum where we have extreme dissociative identity disorder and then we have the other side of the dissociation spectrum where we just blank or phase out in certain situations, or maybe it's dissociative amnesia. We'll talk all through the different types of dissociation, what switching and amnesia are. What causes dissociation or what dissociation looks like for people. This explained video will cover so many types of dissociation. This may sound confusing, so stay with me here and watch the video to hear more about what I mean when I say the dissociation spectrum and the different types of dissociation within the dissociative responses to life events.
More videos about dissociation, dissociative identity disorder & types of dissociation:
5 types of dissociation: • 5 Types Of Dissociation
Why dissociation happens: • Dissociation: why it h...
Answering your dissociation questions: • DISSOCIATION - Your Qu...
What is dissociative identity disorder (DID): • Dissociative Identity ... MY BOOKS (in stores now)
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Пікірлер: 886
@LP-zc4gy
@LP-zc4gy 6 ай бұрын
I’ve always disassociated and I never realized how abnormal it was until I found out other people don’t have entire separate worlds in their minds and don’t have periods where they feel like the world around them isn’t real. Sometimes, I have dreams that feel more vivid than the “real” world and I have to spend a few days trying to determine if I’m awake or asleep.
@leoluv822
@leoluv822 4 ай бұрын
Me too! I’ve always done this, I didn’t know it was abnormal.
@coreycox2345
@coreycox2345 3 ай бұрын
I have ADD, and it is often hard not to tune out of things that don't interest me. That must be a state of disassociation, but that's sometimes where I get my best thinking done. Because I can immerse myself in thought. I haven't found a way to not do it, and I have read I likely never will.
@annemurphy8074
@annemurphy8074 3 ай бұрын
I (we) have D.I.D from all the trauma. Our system has hundreds of alters. I can interact with alters in dreams, I'm the main front alter, it took a long time to realize I was part of the system too.
@coreycox2345
@coreycox2345 3 ай бұрын
Alters@@annemurphy8074?
@megan7292
@megan7292 3 ай бұрын
Me too. I had a marijuana overdose in August of 2021 and every day since then I feel like i’m dreaming 24/7. I had to drop out of college and i’ve been unemployed for a year because it effects me so much I can’t function properly but it’s not a valid/reasonable enough excuse for people when I can’t go to work or class
@plasticfrank
@plasticfrank 9 ай бұрын
My mother doesn't remember my childhood. I can't talk to her about my father's abusive behavior because I'm pretty sure she disassociated through my entire childhood.
@brandi-leighmccray6265
@brandi-leighmccray6265 9 ай бұрын
Honestly this is super relatable.
@greyladydamiana
@greyladydamiana 9 ай бұрын
I feel like mine has dissociated since her own childhood
@phishcatt
@phishcatt 9 ай бұрын
I feel like it's bs, a cop out that some parents make up. I don't think it's very common to dissociate to the extent of not remember anything at all.
@dariosergevna
@dariosergevna 9 ай бұрын
@@phishcatti almost don’t remember my childhood until maybe 6-7 and then only some short memories…
@minnesotajude8447
@minnesotajude8447 9 ай бұрын
She allowed it. It made her life easier. You were a pawn.
@PhilosopherScholar
@PhilosopherScholar 8 ай бұрын
"Our brain's gonna pull the rip cord on reality." Great quote.
@kaitlynboss3497
@kaitlynboss3497 2 ай бұрын
And very accurate to the feeling.
@AmeliaOak
@AmeliaOak 9 ай бұрын
I have maladaptive daydreaming. It started in my childhood which was...um...stressful...and I still do it all the time.
@Pushing_Pixels
@Pushing_Pixels 6 ай бұрын
Me too. Checking out to go somewhere better can be comforting.
@m00nwalker32
@m00nwalker32 5 ай бұрын
Same I remember it used to be worse when I was 13 though because I’d just pace around imaging it Now I try and escape somewhere alone to think about it I usually just go to bed I don’t think it gets in the way of me living though and I’m embarrassed about it so idk if I need fix it or
@terryberryere629
@terryberryere629 4 ай бұрын
Maladaptive daydreaming saved me from the effects of major trauma as a child. It returns as a coping strategy as an adult during times of high stress. It helps and doesn’t hurt anyone so I’m not sure it is maladaptive…..?
@valethewolf49
@valethewolf49 3 ай бұрын
Same
@mckennasweda3614
@mckennasweda3614 3 ай бұрын
I had maladaptive daydreaming until I was 28. Then my reality changed and I realized our imaginations might not be ours when my daydreams were cut off. Like I could not longer daydream. And then everything was replaced with terrifying things when it wasn't there at all. Part of me thinks it was a training sessions to make certain synapses in our brains stronger (also so we wouldn't spend as much time around people and pretty much anything else that resulted from the daydreaming)
@LizNeptune
@LizNeptune 5 ай бұрын
I’ve been saying for the past three years that I pretty much live in a semi disassociative state 24/7. If something stressful happens, I’ll feel even further outside of my body, but generally I feel very numb most of the time. I haven’t felt like myself in a really long time, and I feel like I don’t even know who that is.
@Liisa_011
@Liisa_011 3 ай бұрын
The Pandemic shutdown n Covid brought a Lot of this on.
@deja3963
@deja3963 3 ай бұрын
You put it into words. This is how I’ve felt for about 15 years. I don’t even know if it’s possible to feel real again. About once a year my brain slips up and I feel real for about five seconds and it’s so overwhelming that I get yanked back into dissociation.
@MISNM0
@MISNM0 3 ай бұрын
You beautiful human....🫂🫂🫂🫂 ❤
@DoriterEater
@DoriterEater 3 ай бұрын
Same, for over 7 years. I’m on low dose naltrexone with the hope to fix it but no such luck yet. Maybe more time required. I think feeling real again would be scary overwhelming.
@sokken_4464
@sokken_4464 3 ай бұрын
This! When she said "days, weeks, months" I went "how about years??" I'm sorry that you guys also experience this, but it feels good knowing I'm not alone. I've felt like I'm watching a movie of myself for the past 10 years or so and I can't even pin down what might have caused it. I also think that if someone invented a pill that would snap you out of dissociation tomorrow I would be terrified to take it.
@angelcollina
@angelcollina 9 ай бұрын
Sometimes when I try to bring up a situation where my mom was abusive, bringing it up tactfully without aggression or blame just talking, she’ll have no memory of it and usually says something to the effect of “I’d never do something like that!” Which is why I can’t really discuss things in my past with her. Not only was I hurt in the past, but brushed off and gaslit in the present. It hurts real bad. 😢
@wabi_sabi52
@wabi_sabi52 9 ай бұрын
Is she gaslighting you, as in lying about the memory of the last? Or do you believe she has no memory?
@greyladydamiana
@greyladydamiana 9 ай бұрын
One more reason why you can’t discuss abuse with your abuser: they’ll never acknowledge it
@angelcollina
@angelcollina 9 ай бұрын
@@wabi_sabi52 You have a point, it’s probably not gaslighting if she doesn’t remember. I guess it just feels that way. Also the not believing me when I bring something up is disheartening.
@romanyroi1
@romanyroi1 9 ай бұрын
If she doesn't validate that you went through trauma, she's gaslighting, and most likely narcissistic or has narc tendencies. Even if she blocked it out, it should be validated, not dismissed. I have a narc mother. I'm sorry you're being and feeling dismissed. It's horrible. Mothers are meant to be the one person in the world that loves you no matter what. It's a horrible wound to heal. Sending you love ❤
@berlinetta____2680
@berlinetta____2680 9 ай бұрын
Same. But healing 101 is to admit a problem exists. So in the end I cut contact with them. My entire family hate me and they think I am a narcissist. Anyway, I have finally put myself first. All the best.
@Cass_772
@Cass_772 9 ай бұрын
If you can’t fight or flight, you’ll dissociate
@suehowie152
@suehowie152 Ай бұрын
Which is part of the freeze response.
@Cass_772
@Cass_772 27 күн бұрын
@@suehowie152 exactly :(
@Twinmama143
@Twinmama143 11 күн бұрын
This
@Pushing_Pixels
@Pushing_Pixels 6 ай бұрын
Inattentive ADHD is either a lot like, or is a kind of dissociating. I have that and ptsd, and sometimes it's hard to know which is causing me to check out mentally at any given time. I think one feeds into the other.
@mylink.orb17
@mylink.orb17 3 ай бұрын
I can relate
@brooklynndossey4183
@brooklynndossey4183 3 ай бұрын
me too!
@Mortequal
@Mortequal 3 ай бұрын
Yes, I got it too. RSD is also a common thing for people with ADHD, and research has shown that we generally experience trauma several times more than neurotypicals of the same age. Mainly because of the ADHD symptoms such as trouble with social interaction. So there might indeed be a connection.
@Beth_Amphetamine
@Beth_Amphetamine 3 ай бұрын
Same. ADHD and cptsd.
@ChakkyCharizard
@ChakkyCharizard 3 ай бұрын
i have combined type, and...yeah. i pretty much dissociate through social interactions w/strangers and unpleasant situations and the memory of it will feel so...dreamlike?
@stoffls
@stoffls 9 ай бұрын
I am a master at maladaptive daydreaming and I never realized how much it disrupted my real life until I saw your videos. Though I am mostly aware of my surroundings, guess I implement this into my daily life quite good.
@NatOfTheManyCats
@NatOfTheManyCats 8 ай бұрын
Right? I was like, oh, cool, so that's an unhealthy coping mechanism too? Fantastic.
@micaellucas2877
@micaellucas2877 5 ай бұрын
Do you find that your MD helped prevent disassociation in any way? Or that it served as a way of processing information?
@ShaniseHarry-wu9om
@ShaniseHarry-wu9om 3 ай бұрын
At least your inclined with your surroundings
@furiousdestroyah9999
@furiousdestroyah9999 2 ай бұрын
Same. For me it's the same as a young person wearing headphones and listening to music. It's basically my auto pilot mode that I can always take control of, except if I'm doing something too boring to do manually, then I'm straight up locked out of control until I decide to do something else 😂
@Cafeallday222
@Cafeallday222 Ай бұрын
Yes - it’s not separate for me, either.. so I’m not annoyed if someone snaps me out of it, because I can just go back and forth 🤷🏻‍♀️
@APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU
@APOLLINAIREBARTHOLOMIEU 3 ай бұрын
Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
@Jennifer-bw7ku
@Jennifer-bw7ku 3 ай бұрын
Can you help with the reliable source I would really appreciate it. Many people talk about mushrooms and psychedelics but nobody talks about where to get them. Very hard to get a reliable source here in Australia. Really need!
@elizabethwilliams6651
@elizabethwilliams6651 3 ай бұрын
Yes, dr.sporesss. I have the same experience with anxiety, depression, PTSD and addiction and Mushrooms definitely made a huge huge difference to why am clean today.
@patriaciasmith3499
@patriaciasmith3499 3 ай бұрын
I wish they were readily available in my place. Microdosing was my next plan of care for my husband. He is 59 & has so many mental health issues plus probable CTE & a TBI that left him in a coma 8 days. It's too late now I had to get a TPO as he's 6'6 300+ pound homicidal maniac. He's constantly talking about killing someone. He's violent. Anyone reading this Familiar w/ BPD know if it is common for an obsession with violence.
@Jennifer-bw7ku
@Jennifer-bw7ku 3 ай бұрын
Is he on instagram?
@elizabethwilliams6651
@elizabethwilliams6651 3 ай бұрын
Yes he is. dr.sporesss
@cindygould1261
@cindygould1261 9 ай бұрын
I only remember small bits and pieces of my childhood. I protected myself from the severe emotional and extremely inappropriate behavior of my alcoholic father. I am one of 6 kids. 2 girls. 4 boys. My brothers are alcoholics. My sister has OCD and none of us are close in any way. My sister was also a victim of our father. My brothers attacked her verbally when she tried to tell them. Dissociation can happen at any time in your life. You are protecting yourself and don't need to know what you have forgotten. I am so happy I don't remember but also feel like I had no childhood at all. Years completely lost. ❤
@MISNM0
@MISNM0 3 ай бұрын
All the best to you to start. Truly, the best! Would you like a resource on sexual assault that is wildly good to have but maybe not for everyone at the time Im asking.
@aya_scratch2853
@aya_scratch2853 3 ай бұрын
wishing you strength. 💙
@HeatherFaraMS
@HeatherFaraMS 3 ай бұрын
I dated a person and everytime l put a demand on him (like what are your feeling, lets go there now, or stay over tonight) he would go silent and then say he doesn’t remember what he did…no way to have a relationship as a result. Is there a path to healing?
@donedennison9237
@donedennison9237 9 ай бұрын
Had a series of panic attacks and went to counseling. I started to realize, I'd been having "fainting" disassociation spells all my life. Listening to this video, I realized something that maybe other people need to know. I feel there are many times where I "spaced out" but left my listening behind. It was UNSAFE to just space out completely. It's apart.. like a dream.. what is REALLY happening. But I knew what was said. I played possum. I used to feel this meant I was "faking" the event. I see now... that it was such a defensive, self preserving act.
@bellapullman10002
@bellapullman10002 9 ай бұрын
I faint with panic attacks as well. Also suffer from dissociative episodes.
@jennag.5125
@jennag.5125 3 ай бұрын
Did you literally faint? What do you mean exactly? Looking into the freeze or shutdown part of polyvagal theory may be helpful for you!
@donedennison9237
@donedennison9237 3 ай бұрын
Faint as freeze response. Traumatic stress comes out in unusual ways. Little need to reach for complex answers this instance.
@eleanqr
@eleanqr 2 ай бұрын
Take a look at psychogenic non epileptic seizures
@donedennison9237
@donedennison9237 2 ай бұрын
​@@eleanqr In this case, once again, it is a trauma response. Tracking that down is hard enough without bringing in esoteric medical disorders.
@NilasJunkyard
@NilasJunkyard 5 ай бұрын
I do maladaptive daydreaming when I'm alone. I always did that when I was a child to not 'annoy' my parents.
@clury9477
@clury9477 2 ай бұрын
Same. Still do it to this day and it’s taking over my life. It’s all I want to do
@RebeccaLee_81
@RebeccaLee_81 2 ай бұрын
I feel this is common amongst people who were emotionally neglected as kids. To create world's where we felt we were actually important enough. I did this too, still do at 43
@clury9477
@clury9477 2 ай бұрын
@@RebeccaLee_81 does it get better though? Or have you found ways to control it?
@RebeccaLee_81
@RebeccaLee_81 2 ай бұрын
@@clury9477 yes and no, depends. I also have inattentive ADHD so boredom is a trigger for me as well. I've had to get very firm with myself at times when I realise I'm doing it and tell myself "not now" and have to physically touch my surroundings to ground myself. Sometimes it works, sometimes not
@clury9477
@clury9477 2 ай бұрын
@@RebeccaLee_81 same here. Thank you for your answer hope you have a great day :)
@LuunaticLuna
@LuunaticLuna 9 ай бұрын
Dissociation feels like a wild rollercoaster, in the beginning you are just confused because you don't understand what's happening, then you figure out that it's Dissociation and you hate Dissociation for all the things it took from you, and finally after you start to get better you understand that Dissociation is not the enemy and is just your brain shielding you and you understand that it saved your life. You go from confusion, to hate for the things it took, to appreciation for the life it gave you.
@whathandleUtalkabt
@whathandleUtalkabt 9 ай бұрын
Wow as a Capricorn where pluto has returned and wiped me out since 2008, I can agree with you. Can't wait for pluto to destroy all aquarians in jan for 20 years instead of us Caps .
@SickandTired95
@SickandTired95 9 ай бұрын
Wow idk if it’s because I’m high, but I found this to be quite profound. I can definitely relate.
@cameronpitcher4024
@cameronpitcher4024 Ай бұрын
This is an awesome way to look at it, I have often resented that I do not feel as I used to, or that I hardly remember that feeling anymore. This gives me another way to look at as though if my body had not done what it has done, I may have gone down a path of self harm or whatever else may happen in life. I hope that one day I can reach a safe enough place in life to where my brain feels safe enough to reconnect, but I am unsure if that will happen. Thank you for the thoughts tho I will try and apply it.
@teschchr122
@teschchr122 Ай бұрын
I can’t remember huge chunks if my childhood. It’s as if it didn’t happen. I was in foster care, adopted to abusive parents and, thank God, put back into foster care. I didn’t get the help I needed for years and I’m 62 and finally for the last year been present in my own life. If you’ve gone through something PLEASE get the help you need. You are worth it!
@chezamayukitsukanii4416
@chezamayukitsukanii4416 5 ай бұрын
I remember experiencing something like this during the time when I was severely burnt out from work. It felt like my life wasn't real, that I was watching myself from the outside.
@JeffinerM
@JeffinerM 9 ай бұрын
I think it's important to emphasise that dissociation in itself is not dangerous, and that just because you've had a dissociative fugue it doesn't mean that you will develop dissociative identity disorder further down the line. It's unpleasant and can be frightening, but in itself isn't dangerous or a symptom of something worse. There are ways to manage it if you dissociate frequently, and it doesn't mean that you're weak or broken ❤
@kaitlynboss3497
@kaitlynboss3497 2 ай бұрын
Most of the time when you develop DID it’s because of something that happened when you were young. When you’re young you have even less coping skills the average big person has and so the only thing your brain can think to do is to separate the memory so completely that it builds another personality to carry it. It builds someone who can carry that trauma. I think it is possible to develop DID later in life but if it is, it’s very rare.
@thecatdragon589
@thecatdragon589 2 ай бұрын
dissociation made me walk into oncoming traffic more than once so.... maybe you could word that a little better
@9liveslisa
@9liveslisa 3 ай бұрын
I was diagnosed with DID over 40 years ago during a 2 month hospitalization. (BTW, I'm so glad they changed the name of the disorder to DID). I had lots of trauma as a child and I finally hit the wall at 25 years of age. It was explained to me that it was a coping and survival mechanism. I could have conversations let's say at work with managers and then walk away and know that I had a conversation but I didn't walk away with the conversation in my mind. It was like I went on auto-pilot. No one was the wiser except me. The worst time I had with it was when I was hospitalized and one afternoon I was thinking about stuff and I said to myself, "LIsa, you've never been afraid of anything in your life." The next thing that happened was it was like a movie reel went on in my head of everything I had ever been afraid of in my life. It was quite shocking and gave me pause. It was definitely discussed in therapy. Now I'm in my late 60's and I successfully retired and I am enjoying my life, but I do go on "auto-pilot" sometimes if I am stressed about something or overly tired. I also had an instance after my hospitalization where I was talking on the phone with my sister and my sister was talking about something that happened at my grandmother's house and I didn't remember. My sister was like, "What do you mean you don't remember? You were the one who called for an ambulance." I had forgotten all about that incident until she talked about it. It was again like a movie went off in my brain. When I called my therapist (I was out of therapy by this time) and told him what had happened, we talked about it and I asked him "what the hell else am I going to remember?" He just told me that it's important that I don't remember it all at once because that would not be good. But the hope is that I remember things slowly, some maybe never, and then I will eventually integrate myself. It's good that the brain has coping mechanisms, but it can be a bitch to untangle the ball of yarn.
@michelleallen2294
@michelleallen2294 3 ай бұрын
Mine went on so long after traumatic grief, loss of my partner, that I, how can I put it, "came to" in an apartment I had somehow rented on my own with no recollection of getting the lease. This happened while frying up breakfast food and voices in my head told me to wake up. They told me what was going on and I booked my therapist ASAP. Apparently I'd already been seeing her for 6 months. I've come such a long way in the past 5 years, the voices are gone and I'm a nursing student with a mortgage. It can get better. Still feel so sad for the woman I used to be and have no idea of the journey she went through til that point or exactly how long it went on for, but I'm forever grateful she held on and got through it. We are now one again ❤
@eyecandie2004
@eyecandie2004 9 ай бұрын
Clients have mentioned dissociation happening while having anxiety.
@antecansada
@antecansada 3 ай бұрын
During my adolescence, sometimes I used to become physically unable to hear my environment. I would see people's lips moving, but I would not hear a thing. It happened so often, especially in school. I don't suffer from it anymore, but I still freeze out when I am faced with a confrontation. It is so frustrating because I want to defend myself but feel unable to.
@flora.garden
@flora.garden 3 ай бұрын
😮 this happend to me too. Wow
@mckennasweda3614
@mckennasweda3614 3 ай бұрын
This right here, giiiiiirl. Not being able to defend myself from physical or emotional attacks. It did possibly keep the situation from escalating but it's like why do people get to do this to me? My overall viewpoint of it has changed a lot over the last 3 years including believing that everything is lined up to fit together in like a cosmic script but sometimes I look back and think I really should have been allowed to respond to shitty people in a way that was productive and made me feel better
@mattsmith5704
@mattsmith5704 Ай бұрын
The examples you gave for dissociating “besides from trauma” are absolutely traumatic, just to a lesser extent than fearing for your life
@hairyfrankfurt
@hairyfrankfurt 9 ай бұрын
Being in a conversation with my boss, him telling me "What's wrong, you look like a deer in the headlights?" and then in a moment of pause I realise I don't know who was supposed to make me respond but I knew that Kate needed to do it so guess we'll send a message to the body to coordinate motor function for responding. Or getting a text saying "session cancelled" sending back "Sure, see you next week", then getting dressed and leaving for the session but not knowing why or where I was going and being so AFK from my body that I couldn't emote or re-direct myself to do something different. Or looking at my hands and thinking "Who owns those?" Yeah, dissociating fkn sucks.
@darkstarr984
@darkstarr984 3 ай бұрын
See, I have “maladaptive daydreaming” constantly by the descriptions in your video… but I have never, ever felt like I was actually not in my body, or not in my environment. More like layering over it and ignoring inputs from other people. But I have always been solidly aware of the environment and what is happening around me at the same time as I am daydreaming. I can’t block it out, I am in my body, in this reality, just also having fantastical conversations happening in my head where I am envisioning other people who do care about me and will talk through the situation on the outside with me.
@furiousdestroyah9999
@furiousdestroyah9999 2 ай бұрын
It's crazy what a guy has to do to get some basic human necessities met huh
@heatherbrenner8275
@heatherbrenner8275 9 ай бұрын
Dissociation is been a big problem for me and apparently my entire life because I have a memory of being in middle school and I sat down next to the wall in the gym and the next thing I knew I was in some office with a bunch of adults and I had no idea what was going on. I also have big black holes in my memory especially a childhood but it has continued into my adult life too. And it's really weird because I have almost a photographic memory, so those gaps in my memory are really, really obvious to me. It's been something I've been trying to work through and have found it pretty difficult.
@ThePersonalDevelopmentSchool
@ThePersonalDevelopmentSchool 9 ай бұрын
I hope you can find some relief, as that sounds very challenging ❤
@benuchytil7003
@benuchytil7003 9 ай бұрын
Hi Heather: This is something to explore with a therapist. Once you feel safe and supported in therapy, you can feel safe enough to begin to make sense of those episodes. But do work with a true trauma therapist.
@heatherbrenner8275
@heatherbrenner8275 9 ай бұрын
@@benuchytil7003 don't worry I am working with a therapist. He's awesome he's the first person I ever was able to explain what was going on with me too and not have them act like they had no clue what I was talking about.
@martuut.9404
@martuut.9404 7 ай бұрын
Sounds familiar. I'm 27 and barely remember anything from my childhood or school days. Everyone else remembers names, events, faces, feelings, while I make false memories based on what they say. I've found my diary recently and I refuse to believe that it was me writing that and living through it. It's completely unfamiliar and I feel sad, as if another life and personality escaped my head and was unavailable forever
@adiitiwalke7015
@adiitiwalke7015 Ай бұрын
I relate to you so much..I have the same experiences..I feel like so much of my childhood c ptsd also made it so that i further allowed trauma and abuse in my life to the extent I completely had a mental break. I feel like I have lost years of my life..I don't know who I am anymore..the vague memory of who I was. The out of body experiences of watching myself hide n cower n lay still..unable to comprehend. The black outs I am too scared to remember. The paranoia. The co-dependancy I formed with my abuser. The abusive eating n starving myself. Lost my creative and ambitious self...I am still unsure of who I am n what I want in life. N only recently realising DID, because of Ian. My mind hurts every time I talk about any of this..n I keep shutting down n crying. M scared. N I feel so trapped. I wish I could be who I was before I broke.
@boofriedmann2980
@boofriedmann2980 9 ай бұрын
It is so so important to understand that DID stems from childhood trauma only. Other types of dissociation can occur after a traumatic event in adulthood. The reason i stress this is because people faking this disorder has made mental Healthcare professionals disregard, ignore, or disbelieve those who truly need help. Thank you for listening.
@SweepTheLeg2023
@SweepTheLeg2023 9 ай бұрын
Like watching your friend get run over by a car within a few feet away at age 7? By watching your 2 year old sister fall out of a moving car then rolling down a hill to oncoming cars? Being trapped in a field of fire 5' sawgrass as the crackling surrounds you then running for your life age 7? Watching your mother potentially lose her mind on a daily basis for no reason 5-18? - Thank God we all made it out of all that unscathed.
@benuchytil7003
@benuchytil7003 9 ай бұрын
It amazes me that many psych professionals do not "believe in DID." New patient #1: "I hear voices and see flying blue dogs. They have wings and talk to me. They bark their messages but I understand their language. Oh, and did I tell you that I work for a Secret Government Agency? We are investigating the Dog Planet. That's why the dogs visit me." Professional believes patient and diagnoses him with schizophrenia. New patient #2: "I often cannot remember where I have been or what I have been doing for days at a time. Last week, I woke up in a hotel and did not know where I was or how I got there. I found strange clothing in my closet that I did not buy, yet my credit card statement proves that I did buy them. Strangers come up to me, seem to know who I am, but address me by a name that is not my own. People tell me I have done things that I do not remember doing." Professional disbelieves patient, and notes in her file that patient fabricates fantastic stories and stands by them. She must truly be Borderline because, you know, DID is "not a thing." Patient is diagnosed with BPD. Go figure.
@taylormichellecoffey3978
@taylormichellecoffey3978 9 ай бұрын
Agreed. It's repetitive trauma before age 9.
@hayleym7770
@hayleym7770 3 ай бұрын
I'd like to argue here, that regardless of whether someone is faking DID, the people who do this also "truly need help". If you are faking a disorder, there is something going on inside that requires serious help and treatment
@claire4234
@claire4234 9 ай бұрын
My mum had a major stroke when I was 25 became disabled, lost most of her speech and had a change in her personality. The years that followed I forgot what she sounds like and was like before the stroke - like my brain almost didn’t want to remember because it was too hard. It’s only now that she passed (2 years ago) that I have started remembering how she was 15 years ago. I’m not sure if it counts a disassociating but I’m sure it’s related.
@edbrown5956
@edbrown5956 8 ай бұрын
Sounds like a trauma response. Not maybe exactly this but none the less caused by the trauma and the brain trying to protect itself.
@oakfat5178
@oakfat5178 3 ай бұрын
I can't remember any traumatic even before I 'discovered' dissociation. There's [plenty of reason to think it's possible, but I can't believe there no clues or hints around such an event, give4n how profound it'd have to have been. As soon as I started learning arithmetic, I found that if I didn't pay any attention to my brain adding the numbers up, it got the right answer every time, even though I had no memory of anything except passively 'watching' the numbers add up in my head. All I had to do was stop thinking (making successive decisions about what each number added to the previous one came to. I couldn't get it to work with anything but adding columns of numbers,but it shaved 2/3 of the time I needed to do those sums. There were a couple of instances where I saw a "bird's eye view" of myself - once age 8 at the end of a near-drowning incident, and also several times while playing violent field sports at a macho boys-only private school. Then I noticed that if I got into a really risky situation while driving, I would have no memory of hearing anything until the risk was over. Although I'm no 8-ball genius, I had one magic night with just enough alcohol in me to 'let go' of concentrating on my shots, and let my body go through the motio9ns by itself. I won 13 successive games on a bar-room challenge table. i could remember making the shots, but not calculating the angles and forces. I could remember seeing myself on the sports field, but nothing about taking any control over what I did. Bottom Line: A decade ago, I heard a psychologist talking about how sporting and creative people sometimes report that kind of positive circumstance fugue state. Apparently, the hippocampus is involved in decision-making as well as managing memory storage and retrieval. My hypothesis is that when some people are in situations where maximum decision-making can help, their hippocampus shuts down some or all of the memory-recording function so it can focus on decision-making. In some traumatic situations, perhaps this is to focus on the fight/flee/freeze decision that must be made, at the expense of having no memory of making decisions, or even the entire traumatic episode. Obviously that's not an entire explanation of fugue and similar levels of dissociation, but it could be at least part of an explanation.
@mckennasweda3614
@mckennasweda3614 3 ай бұрын
My hypothesis is that there is no free will of body or mind and that everything is lined up in this sort of cosmic script. Every action, thought perspective and emotion fits together like a puzzle. Which is why all of these supposedly strange things can happen and we are made to look for an explanation sometimes
@sambojo250
@sambojo250 9 ай бұрын
I had this happen to me. My dad held a knife to my mums throat ,I threw a vase as him and my mum lashed out at me because it was a wedding present I broke, she slapped my face and scarred my check with her nails,accidently in a rage or fright, the next thing I know my nan's hugging me ,telling me it's OK and to just stay away and ignore them and lock my self in my room in the future. My whole bedroom was chucked around ,posters pulled from walls ans stuff thrown everywhere,my nan said I did it and to this day 40 years on I have no recollections of doing it
@brittanywilcox7377
@brittanywilcox7377 9 ай бұрын
Thank you Kati! I am diagnosed with DID. I love these videos explaining what causes dissociation. I would love to watch a video that explores coping mechanics and how someone can function in society with this type of mental illness. It's possible- I've done it! But it's taken years of hard work to get there.
@MISNM0
@MISNM0 3 ай бұрын
No freaking doubt! I hope that you have a beautiful life absolutely plastered with wonderful moments. ❤
@deluxeassortment
@deluxeassortment 4 ай бұрын
I have to rewind this video 20 times because I got so stuck in my thoughts while she was describing the problems.
@JasmineJ-SuDirector
@JasmineJ-SuDirector 2 ай бұрын
Saaaaaammmee! Great Comment 😅
@KJ-qc8kq
@KJ-qc8kq 20 күн бұрын
Lollllll I literally got halfway through the video and started having a mental conversation with someone I had an argument with yesterday and the ad break in the video knocked me out of the daydream.
@aya9af
@aya9af 14 күн бұрын
😂 🙋🏽‍♀️
@EmmA-ln9he
@EmmA-ln9he 9 ай бұрын
I have been realizing for the past 3 days that I have been in dissociation in probably 70-80% of my life. It's a very scary realization. I started noticing it when I was driving the other day with a friend next to me and once again, I started telling her about one of my trauma stories and when I was done, I realized for half a second that I had no idea where I was or who I was with. And since then, I started seeing the thousands of time this had happened and Oh my God, I am just mortified, I feel awful. I found out at 32 that I was HSP and a highly gifted adult, so I have been living under the assumption that my difficulties to interact with others was due to that. But ever since I found out that it was mostly my trauma, Jesus, I feel like ripping out my insides because I can't imagine what people on the receiving end of my one way interactions have felt or thought of me. And yesterday, I actually found out there is a unit that specializes in ptsd in a hospital just an hour away. I called and had a chat with the nurse who said I definitely qualify and just needed a letter from my gp or from a therapist I've seen. God, finally, some tangible hope 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
@leeannsummerfield3989
@leeannsummerfield3989 8 ай бұрын
Not your fault
@EmmA-ln9he
@EmmA-ln9he 8 ай бұрын
Thank you. But I'm still tired of living with the consequences, mostly self destructive behaviors and the rejection of other because of my deregulation. Imagine sitting in front of someone you're hanging out with for the first time and they start telling you horror stories from their past and talk straight for one hour? I don't blame them. BUT the big difference since the incident I described in my previous message is that now I don't blame myself either, because I finally know that that's not who I am but a symptom of ptsd. I got the letter from my gp and the ptsd unit told me I'd be seen for a first appointment in the next two weeks 🤗 I'm glad to be living in a country where this exists and is totally paid for by free health care and sympathize greatly with those who don't 🙏🏼 Have a lovely day
@mylink.orb17
@mylink.orb17 3 ай бұрын
Yes, a literal fog. People mention brain fog all the time (which I can also relate to) but I experience an actual fog/haze. My vision is normally excellent, but when I start to stress/dissociate I just can't see properly
@lornatw
@lornatw 9 ай бұрын
As well as daily life stresses or changes, I also see panic attacks as one place where a dissociation can happen. Thank you for showing a wider perspective of how and where symptoms can happen without being black and white about disorders vs experiences. I think it's important to normalise our mind and bodies reactions in life that dont necessarily lead to or mean a longterm condition is present ❤
@foreversweaterweather
@foreversweaterweather 9 ай бұрын
This started happening to me when I turned 18. The first time lasted for months. Luckily it happens way less now and when it does happen it's usually a really short time. When it first happened I thought I was losing my mind. But I spent my entire childhood maladaptive daydreaming 😅
@ThePersonalDevelopmentSchool
@ThePersonalDevelopmentSchool 9 ай бұрын
thanks for sharing, super happy it's not as frequent anymore ❤
@jessicac.9992
@jessicac.9992 9 ай бұрын
Kati- Thank you for breaking it down. My mother passed away a few years ago and for almost a year I "functioned" like normal, but I couldn't remember anything significant of that whole YEAR. After lots of trama therapy, I realized basically I'd been living on level 8-9 in stress and had basically shut down. I didn't realize there were so many levels, and that puts even more into perspective as to how I am able to manage my life day to day. Thank you! Extremely helpful!
@benuchytil7003
@benuchytil7003 9 ай бұрын
Kati: Please add more extensive commentary for those on the more extreme end of the dissociative spectrum, those whose dissociation has moved past the point of maladaptive daydreaming. At what point does dissociation cross the line between so-called 'normal dissociation' and truly maladaptive dissociation indicative of a true psych disorder? Please juxtapose normal dissociative amnesia (e.g., due to spacing out while driving) against pathological dissociative amnesia (e.g., one who 'loses,' say, five days at a time, or even months/years at a time). Thank you.
@nchewing
@nchewing 9 ай бұрын
First grade for me is a black hole of memory. I remember nothing from that school year. I've always wondered if something traumatic happened to cause my mind to wipe it out.
@jeniferfrabetti1941
@jeniferfrabetti1941 9 ай бұрын
I too struggle with memory loss, I don't remember nothing from my 18 years and prior!! I do think I space out a lot but makes so hard to know why all this happens when I don't record anything from it lol!!
@siennaskye_journey
@siennaskye_journey 9 ай бұрын
My life between the ages 6-12, I don’t remember at all. It’s just gone. Anything before 6 feels like someone else’s life. I don’t remember that kid being me. If someone asks, my life began after 12. That’s when it feels like I was born.
@ILikeBigCatsAndICannotLie
@ILikeBigCatsAndICannotLie 9 ай бұрын
I have had dissociation with trauma but also an issue caused by my vision in which my brain was overwhelmed by too much visual stimuli, as soon as I touched something cold I snapped back into by body. I just wanted to share that can also happen.
@ceebee2447
@ceebee2447 9 ай бұрын
OMG! I'm a Dissociatiator! How have I never known this before?! I've always chalked it up to "Early Onset Alzheimers". True, this EOA began when I was in elementary school, making it an unlikely diagnosis, but it's always been my go-to explanation for the life-long, persistent memory lapses.
@TheTruthAboutSolipsism
@TheTruthAboutSolipsism 9 ай бұрын
I really love her demeanour or delivery (?I'm not sure how to say that) She's the kind of therapist I could totally feel comfortable speaking with.
@pool8party
@pool8party 2 ай бұрын
I used to feel myself disassociate from happy times. They felt so abnormal that i couldn't cope.
@heatherbrenner8275
@heatherbrenner8275 9 ай бұрын
I really appreciate you making videos like this because it's been my experience that the more I learn the more I'm able to get help for myself. I can remember conversations I've had with people where I tried to explain to them how I felt like something was up with me but I couldn't explain it in a way that made any sense to somebody who doesn't experience it. But I found out there was a word for this experience, that changed everything for me.
@mmisskriss1590
@mmisskriss1590 9 ай бұрын
This unlocks many vulnerabilities I'm too nervous to share, but I want to comment anyway to say, without specifics, I relate, and I'm so frustrated with this issue controlling my life.
@user-zw8lw3cv7l
@user-zw8lw3cv7l 9 ай бұрын
i experienced this a lot through my life. no childhood memories, a few about teen life. then i found better enviroment and got out of my trauma situation, but i needed to work too much for it, so, again - faced dissotiation, this time because of being overworked and having very little time to sleep/eat. after that got a stable home, found a good partner - but got so scared of good things in my life that got into a fog for a year - just to adapt. now i am quite okay. good life, good partner, friends, i even have a future - but i feel like a tree with no roots. i have very few memories compared to other people i know. and i've been through a lot. i know facts about my biography - and this is quite a story. but i will never feel it, and it is sad. i did it all by myself, i am proud, but it's just feel like it's not mine and i cant remember. i dont feel bad because of it. i am just a very "now" person, because i have no past. it is just sad sometimes
@dana0x164
@dana0x164 8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for talking about this. About a year ago I finally realized what was happening to me, thanks to your videos and podcast. It was really difficult and draining to find the words to talk about how I was feeling.
@silver_crone
@silver_crone 9 ай бұрын
Today is a deeply dissociative day. And I find that putting on your videos on the subject helps a great deal in coming back to myself. Almost like a call into the wild, reminding me to come home. Watching this was soothing, and calming, and though I don't know that that was the purpose of it, know that your work on here helps this one girl to find her way back when the mind leaves the room. :) I've had decades of therapy off and on, have studied psychology and have to work every day on making sure I take care of my mental health. But bad days still happen. Tomorrow will be better. And your videos are often the catalyst for that. Thank you, for putting yourself out here, and for being that little light in what feels like insurmountable darkness.
@blackwidow17
@blackwidow17 9 ай бұрын
it’s 6:45 am and i have yet to go to sleep but sure i’ll watch this video and inevitably go down a rabbit hole about this bc i suddenly need answers!
@vivianp5962
@vivianp5962 9 ай бұрын
👍🏾
@dariosergevna
@dariosergevna 9 ай бұрын
I also fall asleep often only in the morning. Same for you?
@blackwidow17
@blackwidow17 9 ай бұрын
@@dariosergevna yup🥲i’m such a night owl haha
@dariosergevna
@dariosergevna 9 ай бұрын
@@blackwidow17 do you work night shifts then?
@blackwidow17
@blackwidow17 9 ай бұрын
@@dariosergevna i mean i work evenings but the latest i’m usually at work is midnight💀what about you haha
@donatodiniccolodibettobardi842
@donatodiniccolodibettobardi842 9 ай бұрын
What about emotional dissociation? Not feeling emotions, or feeling emotion dull, muted, or not being able to connect the emotions to events that caused them? Without losing any memories: is that a dissociation or something else?
@gemgwilliam
@gemgwilliam 9 ай бұрын
You might want to look up anhedonia & alexithymia, one or both might explain
@nancye66
@nancye66 9 ай бұрын
Yes! I just asked a similar question 👍
@chumburohizaruzz3644
@chumburohizaruzz3644 9 ай бұрын
I think it's all connected. If it's the same diagnosis, it all starts from being emotionally numb and then affects your memory later on
@tiffanyhau1254
@tiffanyhau1254 9 ай бұрын
I think it might be all related
@benuchytil7003
@benuchytil7003 9 ай бұрын
When one does not feel emotions due to stress/trauma, that means one has broken the ceiling on the emotion spectrum. You've gone over the '10' mark. This could be considered depersonalization, which is a form of dissociation. Watch the video again and concentrate on the part about depersonalization.
@carlahelin5203
@carlahelin5203 9 ай бұрын
Kati, I had derealization after the birth of my 3rd baby. I have watched LOTS of videos over the years including yours in the past. But THIS one really helped me understand better why I had the DR. I thought it must be from trauma as that is what I primarily hear. It makes more sense that my body just couldn’t handle the stress (combined with a huge hormone dump after birth) that I went into DR. It lasted for months and can reoccur but with medication and lots of tools, today I am good. Thank you. I really appreciate you. ❤
@serenediipity
@serenediipity 8 ай бұрын
we really do appreciate you putting dissociation into the context of a spectrum. hopefully it can help further destigmatize dissociation as a whole
@lilflowerbud
@lilflowerbud 5 ай бұрын
Thank you for going into detail Kati! Sometimes can be very difficult to understand and explain how complex trauma can be, even our own!
@johnheav
@johnheav 3 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting this, Kati. Reading the comments on this and similar videos of yours is heartbreaking; I'd no idea this was so common.
@charlescale1013
@charlescale1013 9 ай бұрын
Your videos have great clarity. I turn to them to get general review of the topics while I chill out! Thank you!
@kerriwolfton3195
@kerriwolfton3195 9 ай бұрын
I live with both BPD and migraine disorder. Both can cause disassociation. I have big chunks of childhood that I really can’t remember. I know I was severely bullied in school and not only by my fellow classmates but by several teachers as well. I do maladaptive daydream, as my inner world is much better than the life I actually live. But by developing migraine disorder my mind has gone back to some form of dissociation because the physical pain is overwhelming as is the depression and anxiety that I deal with because of said pain. Most times I can’t tell if it’s because of the pain and stress that migraine disorder causes or my BPD. I don’t lose time/ memory from it, I just feel spacey/numb/floating feelings.
@chinesekungfu2031
@chinesekungfu2031 7 ай бұрын
Thank you for explaining that. Your explanations simplify the way I would want to share with people about my condition.
@user-jt5fs9qu9u
@user-jt5fs9qu9u Ай бұрын
I had a dissociative amnesia event. I flew from Sacramento to Boston with absolutely no memory or awareness. I have no idea how I changed planes on my layover. I was taken to the hospital from the airport in Boston. It took me a full day in the hospital to be able to tell the doctors where I was. I kept telling them I was in a city in California I had only been to once. It was frightening how easy my brain pulled the plug on reality. My mother had passed away from Brain Cancer 29 days after she was diagnosed. I took care of her so she could stay in her home. I had never seen someone die before. Brain cancer is absolutely devastating. I watched it take everything from my mom. It was just too much for me to cope with
@leoluv822
@leoluv822 4 ай бұрын
Ok so I have been having maladaptive dissociation since before it had a name. I’m pretty sure it started when my mom died when I was young. But it’s been my go to method for coping. I actually look forward to it. Also, happens more frequently when I’m in a bad depressive episode. It even helps me to fall asleep at night. Interestingly, I often wake up like I was yanked from a deep dream and I am incredibly foggy and slow to fully awaken. It has caused me to constantly be late for work. Great way to explain it, good job and thank you.
@lisamoulton2540
@lisamoulton2540 3 ай бұрын
Thank you, thank you. I struggle with dissociation due to childhood trauma. This video helped me discover something that I need to work on dealing with from my past. ❤
@BroonParker
@BroonParker 9 ай бұрын
I find Kati's work interesting and often very helpful. When focused on specific issues like this she is positively illuminating. She conveys ideas so clearly and really establishes rapport with her audience through this medium. A natural communicator who maintains a focus on the practicalities of therapy and its importance. This video was especially hrlpful in giving me the words to describe a condition I had experienced a while back after a difficult bereavement, and a great deal to consider. Just one little caveat though. I really don't like the cutaways to models in these showroom-like surroundings, though. They tend to break my concentration on what is being said, and I really cannot identify with these perfect looking people. Is it just me? Maybe this is a visual grammar specific to US or KZbin audiences? This style just makes it harder for me at least but I remain subscribed for Kati and thecwork she does best.
@chezfavi
@chezfavi 2 ай бұрын
SO clear and helpful, thank you! I particularly love the ‘woop’ sound, it makes the whole thing a lot less dramatic, approachable and easier to relate to, with less judgement.
@SammiJarrad
@SammiJarrad 9 ай бұрын
I never knew I’d done this most of my life.. until my late 30’s when visiting with my sister and mom and I remember them “snapping” me back from a “space out” they were freaked out by it.. I am sometimes thankful that my brain does this. It knows what I can and cannot handle.
@LushDanielSon
@LushDanielSon 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for covering this 🙏 Glad to be reminded I'm not alone when it happens.
@ThePersonalDevelopmentSchool
@ThePersonalDevelopmentSchool 9 ай бұрын
You're definitely not ❤
@wildfireswildfires6792
@wildfireswildfires6792 2 ай бұрын
I have been dissociating more or less for as long as I can remember. In fact the first thing I remember thinking was "what would my life be like if..." at 6 yo. Thinking of it as a spectrum makes a lot of sense, thank you for yet another piece of the puzzle on my way to healing❤
@twirsty5391
@twirsty5391 3 ай бұрын
for me my dissociation started last year when my brother died. i don’t remember most of my junior year because of it. i look a lot of pictures at the time, so i remember small moments but that’s it :/. luckily i’ve gotten better but i had a really bad episode yesterday on his birthday, the worst it’s been since this summer, so it’s nice to know other people go through this too
@marlonmacneish1586
@marlonmacneish1586 2 ай бұрын
I’m sorry about your brother.. it makes sense that you struggled on your brother’s birthday. It’s okay if you’re still not with it. Grief is painful. Take your time
@jenniferlynn329
@jenniferlynn329 6 ай бұрын
When I was about 9, i was in the living room watching TV. Then at commercial, i realized my mom was on the left side of the room. The only door into the room was on the right. I legitimately asked HOW and WHEN she got over there, because i never saw her walk in front of me. I was intently watching the show and didn't notice my physical surroundings. (Now, since then, I've seen other children not pay attention to people in the same room, even saying their name. But as a child who went through it and remembered it, i am still flabbergasted at my own dissociation from the real world that day. Over 40yrs who. I can still feel the shock and surprise of seeing my mom in a location that my own eyes should have seen.)
@butchog3146
@butchog3146 Ай бұрын
Thank you Katie for being here. I don't have enough resources to talk to a therapist but you being greatly helps for me to move little by little. I just got my certification as a Barista. I wouldn't be able to make it without your help.
@nancye66
@nancye66 9 ай бұрын
I tend to under react to trauma. When I get bad news I show no emotion. Is this a form of dissociation? I was on vacation with friends when they found out their son died by suicide back home. I froze, mentally and physically. No emotion and could not move to go hug them for what seemed like 5 minutes…we were thousands of miles from home and I had to kick into survival mode to find us a flight home asap. That was part of the trauma.
@benuchytil7003
@benuchytil7003 9 ай бұрын
Freezing is a natural response to such events. It is not dissociation per se. When one does not experience emotion, generally that means one is over the top of the emotion chart - over a '10' with painful emotion.
@stephdalek4273
@stephdalek4273 9 ай бұрын
I hear a lot about DID and spacing out and daydreaming and these feel like the two very ends of the spectrum. DID is "interesting" and spacing out is relatable. I rarely hear about experiences of people with actual dpdr. When we say "I don't feel connected to my body" people take that rhetorically like oh you must feel uncomfortable or spaced out. No. It's literal. It's the most horrifying experience, when it feels like someone else is moving your body and you're not in control. Like your body could do something horrendous any second and you'd have no way to stop it. When the face in the mirror is a complete stranger's. When a stranger's voice speaks what you wanted to say. When people call you by a name that isn't yours. Like you've swapped lives with some stranger. When every moment feels exactly like a dream but you can't wake up. And then the intrusive thoughts... Not the ones from tiktok but the excruciating repeating thoughts. And all throughout you KNOW that it's in your head, so you're not psychotic. But that doesn't help and people won't take you seriously because they think you're being metaphorical. It's not the same thing as making coffee on autopilot on a groggy morning. It was the most horrifying period of my life.
@benuchytil7003
@benuchytil7003 9 ай бұрын
What you described sounds like depersonalization and derealization. DID encompasses all four of the dissociative disorders: depersonalization, derealization, dissociative amnesia, and fugue. If you lose time (i.e., experience dissociative amnesia) and periodically find yourself in strange places - in addition to the symptoms you mentioned - you may have DID.
@vaivaignataviciute5026
@vaivaignataviciute5026 3 ай бұрын
yes,that was me, it was the darkest period of my life, but I am recovering :)
@shannonbest106
@shannonbest106 3 ай бұрын
Excellent explanation… appreciate the refresher… you really know and apply complex context to easy to understand real life situations. Thank you.
@fiberpoet6250
@fiberpoet6250 3 ай бұрын
I have a ridiculous amount of trauma especially from childhood and my young adulthood There are literally years I don’t remember much from. It gets weird tho when I try to talk about movies from that time and I’ve watched them but don’t remember them. I’ve been recovering from escaping my mom’s abuse for a few years and honestly.. my brain just wants to be in a fog and use the internet as a means to escape reality. I’m finally beginning to come out of it.
@maryannevasilakopoulos2362
@maryannevasilakopoulos2362 8 ай бұрын
This happened to me after the birth of my first son. Suffering from post partum depression i can not clearly remember the first 6 months of his life. It truly scared me because i had no idea so thank you for this.
@samanthap.879
@samanthap.879 3 ай бұрын
Same here, we had moved to another city when my son was only 4 months old from a townhouse to a house and I have memories of coming home from the hospital to the house. I have barely any memories of my Son ever being in the townhouse it was like it never existed.
@mxandrew
@mxandrew 3 ай бұрын
learning about dissociation changed my life and path toward healing ive also used maladaptive daydreaming to discover things that are important to me and the ways that I am outside of societal pressures.
@user-kp8do9bp8c
@user-kp8do9bp8c 9 ай бұрын
School has been a problem for me I had social anxiety disorder, autism, where I pretend to pay attention in class, standing on the back of the classroom, looking at the floor, hiding face with hair, I had failing grades and certain people at school would avoid being near me and I had crush on boys that I was attracted to but they ignored me and avoided me cause I never talked to them. I got suspended for three days after I girl lied to the teacher that I hit her and she was kicking my legs from under the table. My parents want me to move out by the age of 18 but I have no friends or relationship to move out with. My mom resorted to foster care cause of my failing grades. I was dangerously abused by my abusive parents that would call police on me and stab my arm and use their fists to beat me up if I smash a vase, break a mirror in the bathroom or hear a scream from me.
@Liisa_011
@Liisa_011 2 ай бұрын
I hope you can get Compassionate care for your PTSD. Also D B.T.theapy can help and it's offered online in local communities w mood disorders,mental health places,and online here. Dialectical Behaviour Therapy. Sucks having abusive parent that scapegoat you. I know.
@TerrariaGolem
@TerrariaGolem 3 ай бұрын
I have DID diagnosed, among other things, so I was excited to see this reccomended.
@kristinwuori3769
@kristinwuori3769 9 ай бұрын
Thank you, Kati. This may help me explain what I'm dealing with to my husband.
@robertgranat9185
@robertgranat9185 3 ай бұрын
I realized deep in my 20’s that the “superpower” I had developed-retreating into my head-as a result of severe, severe adverse circumstances in childhood…it caused me to miss out on most of my own life. I can only recall slivers. I know I was there but the memories weren’t encoded where they otherwise would be. It’s a very jarring experience to find yourself in that position. This is doubly true when you are attempting to “come back”, so to speak; to be present from this point forward. I’ve heard this best described in John Steinbeck’s East of Eden, in which we read that the protagonist begins seeing the world “as through the bottom of a well”. We’re told that this distance “did not protect him from assault but it allowed him an immunity.” Once the dissociation becomes more than a retreat, but rather a comfort and a refuge, it can feel startling to actively reengage with the world around us.
@abby4027
@abby4027 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting. I struggle with dissociation and fell like I’m the only one.
@kikiuniki3406
@kikiuniki3406 3 ай бұрын
The one time I truly dissociated, was right after a doctor told me my son was probably going to die. I remember briefly I lost my hearing- everything sounded as if underwater- and I just sort of...floated out of my body. I watched myself go lie down on a hospital couch. And then I remember nothing, for days. The next memory I have is about 6 days later, shortly before he actually woke up out of the coma. He's fine now, thank God. But anyway, I did notice, that I seemed to drift in and out of reality for many months after that. It wasn't as pronounced as the first time, but I no longer felt like myself. It took me a couple of years, some therapy, and a lot of mental introspection to start to feel normal again. I do worry sometimes, that it could happen again. The brain is a very strange thing.
@Flutistno3
@Flutistno3 Ай бұрын
I feel like the world isn't real all the time. I thought this was normal. I don't remember anything before I graduated high school... I had a traumatic childhood (mentally, not physically). I served in the military, and now I can't deal with basically ANY aggression. Working in customer service, I'd be fine after it happened for a while, until I got a break, and then came the mental breakdown. I had days where I couldn't even eat on my lunch break because I'd sob the entire time. Now, the VA has me on service-connected disability, because I just can't deal with life, and the human race outside my door. Know, in your heart, that it doesn't matter how good of a person you are. I'm terrified of ever meeting you.
@katariina7697
@katariina7697 7 ай бұрын
I've lately had two "episodes", the other one this morning, where a familiar place changes to an unfamiliar place somehow, and becomes very dream-like. They both have to do with a person who was important to me. Today I imagined that I told him that I don't want to tell him how I feel because I'm scared of fighting with him, and at that thought I didn't know where I was for a brief moment. I thought I'd taken a wrong turn and got lost, and I just didn't recognize where I was. I stopped for a second and found my bearings again. A really shocking reaction, dissociation, because it's just so bizarre.
@anastasiamurawski6179
@anastasiamurawski6179 2 ай бұрын
I have mental health problems and I do a lot of research into psychology, and i thought I had heard of ever disorder or what have you out there, then my son had a dissociative episode, so now I have been learning more about it. He had to move out of his grandmother's home and into a new house that is practically unlivable. He was so shocked by the conditions there that he became overwhelmed and had to go to the ER. He was diagnosed with personalization and derealization. He was put on some kind medicine that helps but he still needs to get out of there. It's a long story. But now I realized that I saw him "space out" once when I went to visit him at school. He just couldn't handle school and sadly , even though he's considered gifted and talented, he dropped out of school around 7th grade. He is now 21 yrs old, he doesn't want to live with me due to my mental illness but he's now sick like me, very depressed and anxious. I want to help him but he has become hard to communicate with. will only talk via text, will only call once in a great while. I also wonder is dissociation is a precursor to something more serious like schizophrenia?
@rollingcoach9680
@rollingcoach9680 9 ай бұрын
Thank you for another great video!!! It has helped me understand a lot.
@rycroftphilostratem3536
@rycroftphilostratem3536 3 ай бұрын
I saw someone in the comments say that their dreams are too real. So I felt like sharing my experience too. I remember all of my dreams since I was 4yrs old, I also remember many things and specific details about my childhood (like memories from when I was 2 and etc) but I can't recall about *things*. I always forget where I put my keys, I lost like a dozen rings on my work, I keep stumbling onto things, just in general I'm pretty goofy (don't trust me with glass cups or stuff like that). And the real thing is that, some days I don't know whether I'm dreaming, no not some days I don't know at all! Everything feels so pointless... This life only feels a little bit more real because I recall more stories from it and because my emotional connection with people feel deeper... Yet, I can't seem to forget the many lives I've experienced so far,; a few days ago I went on a crisis because of my son, and I'm a virgin 18 year old. At least I'm good at surviving...idk
@Liisa_011
@Liisa_011 2 ай бұрын
Hi,that sounds like ADHD or ADD to me,as I have it and ptsd and have the same things happen w my mind n body.
@amandamcandrew263
@amandamcandrew263 5 ай бұрын
I have recently had this diagnosis. I'm 48 and have felt this way my whole life. My long-term memories are none existent. I've never questioned it as I always felt this way. Now I feel damaged and beyond repair.
@ladeybugg1
@ladeybugg1 4 ай бұрын
That’s a good thing, finally getting a diagnosis. It’s the start of healing. Just knowing what’s going on is progress. Continue educating yourself, and work with a trauma therapist who understands this nightmarish disorder. Not an easy road but you’re on it now. Good luck to you, and stick with it.
@timothystvincent418
@timothystvincent418 9 ай бұрын
I've been experiencing an unusual, (sub-clinical) form of disassociation that seems to have been caused by Jan. 6 and the covid pandemic--it often seems to me that we have all been transferred into a parallel universe!
@davidryan8269
@davidryan8269 9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the validation and insight...... much love
@mikedenham5882
@mikedenham5882 14 күн бұрын
I’m 72 years old and have had experiences like that in my life,when I was not comfortable where I was at,not just uncomfortable but like I wasn’t all the way there.Hard to explain.So there’s actually something like that! Good to know I’m not the only one!
@lizashuttleworth5673
@lizashuttleworth5673 3 ай бұрын
Katie I absolutely love your channel and all your videos. Please can you do something on the difference between a “gradient” and a “spectrum” when the terms are used in psychology or neurodiversity? ASD for example is on a spectrum but not a gradient from “mild to severe” like we’re looking at here with disassociation. This is more of a gradient than a spectrum (I think?). Thank you and please keep up the incredibly valuable content!!!
@riyap1922
@riyap1922 5 ай бұрын
thank you for making videos they help me so much :) sending you positive energy
@GodHelpMe369
@GodHelpMe369 4 ай бұрын
The noble mirage: Enlightenment... To end all suffering! I get to bypass all emotional pain and trauma… Until... My body or my mind remind me they are there! I then feel like a failure-I need to seek more, try harder or even: “I am already enlightened I just have to be it.” More trips around the transcendence mountain. The only way off the trail is inside out. I must face my pain, look at my repressed emotions, and rediscover my authentic self...
@meredithgreenslade1965
@meredithgreenslade1965 2 ай бұрын
I can relate to this. I have experienced it many times. Worse time was after a minor car accident caused by my mother, the second in a month. The first accident the car rolled. We were ok. But after the second accident I went around in a total daze. I don't remember what I did just walked around and didn't speak. This lasted a couple of days
@zethcrownett2946
@zethcrownett2946 3 ай бұрын
I've spent most of my life dissassociated, but I remember most of it. A lot of how I've experienced it is Depersonalization. It's a sliding scale. At the extreme end, it's being entirely removed from my body and watching everything from above. Sometimes I can even feel myself at different stages of "pulling out of myself" I guess. Like, pulling out of my extremities, into my chest, then towards my head, and then above my head, watching from above. And at the lesser degrees, but things that cue me into knowing I'm dissasociated, I can't really smell very much (even though I'm breathing fine and not stuffy at all), and I can't taste flavor much at all. One thats harder to pick out because I already have a high pain tollerance, but it goes up even farther. Sometimes it'll even be hard to speak, like I don't have access to moving the muscles to get words out. There's a distinct difference in feeling of actually being present in the moment vs feeling disconnected from the moment and it being really hard to connect. Like visual unfocused to clear and attentive.
@josephmartin1540
@josephmartin1540 3 ай бұрын
Clearest presentation I've seen. Yep. Been there. I don't really remember it, though.... Thanks!
@sleiva346
@sleiva346 9 ай бұрын
I have a history of dissociation., but I have two scary things happen to me and Im not sure what it is. One time I went to the food store and when I got back to the car I had completely forgotten how to start my car. I just sat there and had to call my husband. The other time I was outside my house with the keys in my hand. I looked at them for a long time and my head said to me those are all wrong ones. Had to call my husband again... What is that? Is it dissociation?
@zehel368
@zehel368 2 ай бұрын
Throughout childhood, I would daydream sometimes during an entire class and have no memory of the entire 2 hours. I didn't know until recently it wasn't normal. I spent months in the military feeling like I wasn't really in my body while wishing that I wasn't in my body. Even after finally coming home, I go through phases where I feel like I can't feel any connection to my hobbies, loved ones, etc; I feel like my body is there, but "I" am so far away that I can't receive love or joy. I've felt depressed because of how lonely it feels, even though I'm right next to my loved ones.
@isartoxic3481
@isartoxic3481 2 ай бұрын
it's really nice seeing a ranking of the symptoms of disassociation - i wish you would've gone more in detail on the different stages
@ObsessedwithZelda2
@ObsessedwithZelda2 2 ай бұрын
There’s this thing I always call disassociation because it fits the word, but I honestly have no idea what it is. It goes like: be in a stressful situation, and just mentally remove self from it. I can remember it and still reason etc, but I feel a click in my brain and my self move a step back in my body, and I am just fully detached. I tend to choose to do this. I still have control but the mental state is fully different and emotions are out. I get emotional amnesia (I can remember a lot of things but never how I felt) and used to ‘delete’ emotions on a whim. There was a time where the emotional amnesia got so all encompassing for like 6 months that I couldn’t actually ‘remember’ any of my friendships. I kind of had to pretend to be who I used to be when I could act based on built up time together etc, but I actually didn’t know how to react to anything anymore because all of that was just gone. I can never find a word for this stuff which is a bit frustrating
@vcorlett
@vcorlett 2 ай бұрын
I have DID and dissociative amnesia along with childhood onset PTSD. I also see now where I still do the maladaptive daydreaming, something that has carried over, at least since my teens and probably early childhood. Thanks to your video, I think I’m understanding the initial causes that started this stuff. I have few to no memories of my childhood. Few memories of my preteen years. Few more of my teens into my early 20s. It just seems like I lose a little bit more of my life as I get older. I had hoped I could uncover some of my lost memories. Instead I recovered my system of alters! Well, it does make life more interesting.
@hishouha
@hishouha 5 ай бұрын
The longest I have spent in dissociation was… multiple months, maybe 4 ? Or more ? During the deepest of my depression in high school. Throughout my teenage years I’ve spent so many times dissociating and I never knew what it was until my psych told me what it could be when I got hospitalized. And still to this day it happens to me very frequently. I do have multiple traumas from my childhood but also from later in life. So it makes sense
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