Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Dissociative Identity Disorder essays
Dissociative Identity Disorder essays    Multiple Personality Disorder (Dissociative Identity Disorder) is the     existence within a person of two or more distinct personalities.  The different     personalities are referred to as alters.  Alters may have experienced a distinct     personal history, self-image, and identity, including a separate name, as well as     age.  At least two of these personalities recurrently take control of the persons     behavior.  There are a few typical types of alters that they multiple would produce     such as a depressed, exhausted host, a strong, angry protector, a scared, hurt     child, a helper, and an internal persecutor who blames one or more of the alters     for the abuse they have endured. Sometimes patterned or named after the actual     	Individuals most likely to develop MPD share several common factors.      They have endured repetitive, and often life-threatening abuse during a     developmental stage of childhood.  The type of abuse can vary or be a     combination of physical, extreme emotional, sexual or Satanic Ritual Abuse.  How     a multiple creates their own inner families is as individual as each person.  Even     though symptoms vary from person to person, there are some basic     	First one is voices.  Multiples do hear voices, but are merely the     personalities within, communicating with one another.  Often times, the MPD is     diagnosed as a schizophrenic due to hear voices, but the multiple personality     hears the voices inside their head in contrast to the schizophrenic which hears     them from outside of themselves.  Often a multiple before diagnosis will speak of     noise or clatter inside making it difficult for them to concentrate.  It is possible for     the multiple to hear many distinct and separate voices, of all ages talking at the     	Another symptom is physical differences.  Each alter within a multiple has     their own history, personalities that are uni    ...     
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.