I have had a hard time coming back to this thread. I appreciate all the replies, it is just taking me some time to digest each one.
Quote:
Hey, Denim ~
If agreeing/accepting that you have DID is too big of a leap for you right now - or you're not convinced, or it is too scary or overwhelming - how would it sit with you if you accepted that this professional you trust [to whatever extent] believes she can assist you in dealing with and overcoming those problematic symptoms that *she* refers to as DID?
I have taken this perspective quite a bit out of a reluctance to put a label on my symptoms. I think of the blind mice describing an elephant so that their descriptions for the same thing are so different based on what part they are looking, depending on what angle they are approaching the elephant. The main reason I have stuck with therapy is out of a resistance to put a label on my symptoms because in the past as soon as my dissociation is brought up, I don't want to talk about anything anymore. Even while hospitalized I have indicated that I will only discuss certain things (discharge) while I refuse to speak about other things at all. It is my choice what I talk about and I can limit a discussion to those things I am okay discussing in therapy. Although I am not sure I believe that this therapist will be able to help me, I can trust that she will allow me to change the subject or limit what I am willing to talk about so that I can tolerate therapy better.
Quote:
How 'bout you accept that you do dissociate, it developed as a survival mechanism, it is problematic, and can be treated.
I think that is where I am at in a nutshell. As long as I can keep my value judgments about myself out of the picture, I can accept these things.
Quote:
Denim,
I have noticed that you prefer that special accommodations not be made for you. I can see that this therapist offering to reduce her fee for you touches directly on that.
Tell me if I'm wrong, but another thing I see is a sense of foreboding in you about doing work around DID -- it could take a long time, it could take you places you're not sure you want to go, it could simply not help. I see that you would like to either get better quickly or just forget the whole thing and keep on as you are.
One thing I've learned as I've addressed my own issues is that things always get worse before they get better. Do you think you can become willing to go through difficulty on the road to getting better?
I am that transparent, eh?! LOL I have a hard time with the willingness for things to get worse in order to get better. It is like trying to schedule major surgery and knowing that there is going to be a higher cost before any benefit is obtained. I tend to prefer to "wait it out" rather than to decide that now is the time to do what may eventually need to be done. My hope is that I will die first and it will then be unnecessary to even consider therapy.
Quote:
I totally agree with your T that you are not a freak, that you are not crazy. You are an amazing woman with the capacity to do much good in the world. The DID label just means to me, like your T says, that you have found a coping mechanism that works for you. But it doesn't always work, does it?
Things are really messed up right now and I thought I could handle it but it turns out that the "out of control" feeling is overwhelming enough for me to want to "check out" completely. I feel "exposed" having people know about my mental condition. It is very hard to talk about such personal things so that I can get help. My instinct is to hide the problem and hope that no one can see that there is a problem.
Quote:
You have a chance to really heal with this T. You aren't needy, but you need therapy. That's a big difference. You're capable of many wonderful things, and not needy, but in order to fix what's wrong, you have to deal with your past. I think I can imagine why you would rather die than go there. It's uncharted territory for you, and will be scary. But you won't be doing it alone. Your T sounds like someone who will understand how difficult it is for you, and will take it slowly. You've also got this board for support.
The most interesting thing is that I can be so high functioning that people would never suspect I am mental in any way and yet I can also come completely unglued so that I appear as if I am totally incompetent. Taking away the glue that holds me together will leave me in fragments and that scares me more than anything. I want to keep filling the cracks as they become visible rather than to try to rebuild my self again. I am also terribly afraid of looking at the past, even though I know logically that it can't kill me (it obviously has not done me in yet). I don't want to see what is lurking there because of what I already know is in my past. I don't want to even think about it so that talking about it becomes mental torture for me. I want to let it go and not have to deal with it anymore.
Quote:
You're a highly intelligent person and your reasonable, rational mind accepts and knows the way to proceed. But I know very well what the emotional mind can do. It can sabotage the whole effort! Do you think you can listen to your rational mind and go for it? I want that so much for you, Denim. To take one step at a time, trust this T, and move forward even though you are afraid. I think there's a book called "Feel the fear, and do it anyway!" I know you don't want to die; you're just afraid, and that's SO understandable. To reiterate, you're NOT crazy and you're NOT a freak. You've just got challenges, like every one of us has. With hard work and determination, you can overcome them.
I do have the ability to think and reason in very logical ways and I know that there are things I must do because they must be done. At the same time I don't want to do those things and so I am doing what I can to avoid doing what I need to do. My former therapist said that I tend to do things to avoid negative consequences rather than to do things for positive consequences and she was right about this. It is hard for me to decide to do something that has negative consequences in order to eventually have positive consequences because my tendency is to avoid the negative consequences and never get to the positive consequences that way. Being on one side of Hell and looking across at Heaven, I am content to stay where I am so it takes being in the middle of Hell for me to be willing to go through Hell to get to Heaven. I am successful enough at avoiding the flaming inferno that I am stuck at the edge getting burned but not completely consumed by the flames in the crucible.
Quote:
The way I see it, it's by accepting that you have DID, and that there's no quick fix, that you can, in the long term, make it go away. There's no quick fix. You can't make it go away in any short term, quick sort of way.
It's the difference between accepting that you have it now, and accepting that you will always have it. You don't have to accept that you will always have it. There's no reason to. But accepting that you have it now is the first step in the journey of getting to that place where you don't have it anymore.
I seem to want the "quick fix" or else I don't want anything to do with the journey! I think of my daughter's friend who is going through chemo therapy in order to kill the cancer in her body. The treatment makes her sick in many ways and yet if she does not go through it her body will die. I tend to think of DID as the "cancer of mental illness" because it is such a long painful course of treatment. It would be so much easier to just let it kill me. I have wished for cancer to kill me so it is no wonder I am just waiting to die so I don't have to deal with this stuff. I don't know what is is about life that makes people want to live.
Quote:
Denim, I can empathize with you. When my T first told me I had BPD, I didn't believe him. I argued with him. I told him it wasn't possible. It took me MONTHS to accept the diagnosis. I wasn't thinking suicide - it just didn't seem possible to me.
However, no matter what your diagnosis is, you still have the problems. No matter what you call them, you still need to deal with the issues and how to live healthily and safely.
I personally would take the T up on her offer. She must think she can help you if she would agree to a pay cut. That said, she also seems committed to helping you and wants the best for you. I would definitely go for it. She's offering you a gift and I wouldn't turn it down. I'd accept it and try to work as hard as I could.
I know that I am fortunate that my therapist does not see me as a "hopeless case" when I tend to see myself that way. I have next week off from therapy and then the following week we are going to have a conference call with my former therapist so my current therapist will have a chance to talk to her in a way that I will know what is being said about me. At that time I will need to decide if I want to go through with the recommended course of treatment.
Quote:
I don't see why you need to accept the DID label, because the whole point of therapy is that one day you won't have this label anyway. Besides with the kind of treatment needed for the post-traumatic and dissociative disorders, building up trust and establishing safety should be the main focus of treatment to begin with, not upsetting a client with labels. I know that I spent a good 18 months or longer in this stabilisation period.
I think my therapist has been trying to establish trust with me since I began seeing her. She has also held off on pushing the issue with me because she knows that I am likely to flee from therapy (I have already "quit" a couple of times, LOL). When she brought up the whole "parts" thing I told her that I wanted her to tell me that I don't have DID and she said that she could not do that. I have denied her access to any of my mental health records because I did not want her using them against me and yet she has come to the same conclusion that so many others have before her. I am at the point where it is not working to deny the problem anymore. I am going through some unconventional therapy with another woman and she talked to me about my having different "parts" as well. She works for the Department of Social and Health Services in a Child Study and Treatment Center but the work she is doing with me is outside of her regular employment at no cost to me. She has experience working with abused women in this context and has been successful so I am hoping this help supplement the "talk therapy" somewhat and speed up the process.
Quote:
I so wish you could get past seeing the DID label as being a "freak." You're just a wounded person as far as I can see, but a very lovely wounded person. I remember way back when you & I first knew each other and I remember you using the "freak" label with me when I spoke up about "parts of self." I remember how much it hurt me to be called that (I took it personally) and I wonder how much damage you are doing to yourself using the same label.
I don't recall ever thinking of you as a "freak" but I may have referred to myself that way on a number of occasions. I regret having hurt your feelings that way and I am glad that we can still be friends regardless of some disagreements we had in the past about the whole "parts" thing. I may have made invalidating statements to you as a means of denial of my own issues and I hope you can forgive me for my insensitivity to what you were going through at that time. It is likely that I have damaged myself with such invalidating statements as well.
Quote:
DenimBlue - I had a severe dissociative disorder myself, with the whole needyness, fragmentation, dissociation thing going on and I sure know how frightening it is to face all of that, but here I am a few years later and I am doing a whole load better. I have pretty much integrated most of the parts of self, except for one that we just started working on this week. Do you read my words and think "Amanda is a freak." I mean DID is only one step further along the continuum from Complex PTSD - Both involve fragmentation of the emotional part of the personality.
I initially told my therapist that I have issues related to PTSD because I was hoping she would use PTSD as the diagnostic label for billing and not mention anything about a dissociative disorder in my chart. In the USA there is technically no such thing as Complex PTSD (it is not listed anywhere in the DSM) so that is only a label used in other countries. What I have been diagnosed with in the past is "chronic" PTSD, meaning that the symptoms are ongoing as opposed to transitional following a single traumatic event. I know that dissociation is on a continuum with DID being the most severe as my former therapist said that DID was a "severe" form of BPD and Chronic PTSD was a suggested label for people who have symptoms of BPD as a result of trauma rather than as a disordered personality. I don't think you are a freak because you have dissociated emotional parts. It is the MPD type of dissociation that freaks me out about DID (DID used to be called MPD). The treatment for DID tends to be too long-term but perhaps I could get through it faster. My therapist keeps cautioning me to "take it slow" and to "take care" of myself but maybe I could go at a faster pace than what she thinks I should do in order to get it over with faster. I think she is afraid that I will become suicidal if we go too fast.
Quote:
Acceptance work, requires accepting things as they are, without judgement, without labeling. It doesn't mean you have to like it, but you accept that it just is.
I am trying to do the acceptance thing without thinking too far ahead of that initial step. I keep thinking I am there, but then I have not been able to move on because I end up dealing with acceptance again every time DID is mentioned in therapy. I think it is my judgement about my own behaviors related to DID that keeps me stuck because I still have the "freak" mentality no matter how many times I think I am ready to move on.