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an attempt rule (lemmy.world)
submitted 17 hours ago by Stamets@lemmy.world to c/onehundredninetysix
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[-] Mouselemming@sh.itjust.works 60 points 14 hours ago

Along with the rest of the wrongness, he's calling DID schizophrenia

[-] zea_64 9 points 10 hours ago

Eh, DID is too narrow a scope. Being multiple people isn't automatically a disorder.

[-] Simulation6@sopuli.xyz 13 points 9 hours ago

Genuinely curious, when is being multiple people not a disorder (I am thinking Jason Bourne spy stuff)?

[-] IzzyScissor@lemmy.world 3 points 2 hours ago

When all the alters communicate with each other and work together. Most people have 'aspects' of their personality that they only show sometimes, and we call it 'code switching'. It also happens when speaking different languages, people's personalities change, but we think that's normal. In therapy, for most people it's called 'parts work' where you recognize that a part of you feels a certain way, but not all of you, and it's OK to hold both of those feelings at the same time.

DID is usually caused by trauma that causes rifts between those aspects/personalities/alters and doesn't let them communicate with each other. That's when you start dealing with lost time, and waking up in strange places, so the real problem comes with the lack of intercommunication, aka dissociating.

It's like a road trip with friends. If you're all communicating and you say 'Hey, I'm getting tired, can someone else drive?' that's fine. You might wake up somewhere new, but you can immediately ask 'Where are we' and get caught up. But if you don't know that there are other people in the car, and think you're doing the road trip by yourself, lose days of time and suddenly wake up somewhere that may or may not be the destination you were expecting, that's a problem.

We all have parts. People with DID had their parts forcibly separated.

[-] JackbyDev@programming.dev 2 points 44 minutes ago

I mean, when someone is able to manage a condition, it doesn't mean that don't have the condition.

[-] Simulation6@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 hour ago

I have to disagree with all this. What you describe either IS a disorder or not multiple personalities.

[-] IzzyScissor@lemmy.world 3 points 1 hour ago

I have a friend with DID, but I'm not an expert. The media also portrays DID inaccurately most of the time, so it's hard to explain when there's disinformation from multiple angles. I'd recommend doing some independent research or talking to your therapist about parts works as a way to understand more.

[-] bus_factor@lemmy.world 6 points 4 hours ago

I don't know about that specifically, but autism goes from a cute quirk to a disorder around when it starts affecting your life or the life of others negatively. Not sure how you could have multiple personalities without it affecting anything negatively, though...

[-] DrivebyHaiku@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 hour ago

It's like any neurodivergent situation where certain things just take work. There's specialized apps that allow alters (personalities) to communicate and co-ordinate things like scheduling. From folks I have talked to there's a lot of masking involved where folks with DID will collaborate across different alters to try to appear to be contiguous. A lot of the time from the outside they just seem kind of forgetful in a similar way that non-DID people can be. The source of DID is often severe trauma where the different personalities are created via partitions of memory so that no singular expression of self remembers everything all at once. This allows the whole to function as each peice has functionally a job to do. It's at it's core a coping mechanism taken to an extreme but it still functions as a coping mechanism.

Often times you really don't know someone you've been around for years has it because they are scared to tell you. DID has a fair bit of stigma behind the condition.

[-] eupraxia 4 points 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago)

I've known a few plural folks that seem to get on just fine. In all their cases it arose from trauma and was pretty disharmonious and confusing to begin with, but with time and awareness their alters work better together and by the time I met em I wouldn't have known if they didn't tell me. I don't know if they'd say it never affects them negatively but they certainly didn't need to be freed of it. If anything, plural identity seemed to be more of a solution than an active problem for them.

[-] ayyy@sh.itjust.works 3 points 4 hours ago

When you’re a teenager faking a quirk on the internet for attention. It happens more often than you’d think.

[-] Simulation6@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 hour ago

That is not multiple personalities, though, just something most people go through.

[-] Gork@sopuli.xyz 8 points 9 hours ago

Maybe if they were a legit collective consciousness hivemind

[-] Fuck_u_spez_@sh.itjust.works 2 points 4 hours ago

Resistance is futile

[-] JamesBoeing737MAX@sopuli.xyz 14 points 14 hours ago

Well, it's like comparing all neurominorities to down syndrome. That's why I need to fuck around with the genius political system I live in all the time.

[-] JackbyDev@programming.dev 2 points 45 minutes ago

And saying people with disabilities are inherently less sexy

this post was submitted on 28 Aug 2025
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