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Old Aug 18, 2018, 07:07 PM
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mostlylurking mostlylurking is offline
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Member Since: Jul 2016
Location: US
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Quote:
Originally Posted by abusedtoy View Post
I am wondering why splitting consciousness is only possible during early childhood chronic trauma, but not beyond the age of 5?
I think the creation of a new, split off consciousness is a coping skill the brain can acquire in early childhood when the brain is malleable. If this ability to divide the consciousness is not learned before the age of about 5 or so, it can no longer be learned because the brain / mind is not flexible enough.

However, once the brain has learned how to use a partitioning of the consciousness like this, it retains that ability. So if a person is already multiple (has DID / multiple personalities) and they suffer a severe trauma at age 13 or 23 or 33, a new division and new consciousness may come into being.

A new consciousness can even come into being in the absence of a specific trauma, in a person who is already multiple. But none of this happens unless it began with severe and/or chronic trauma in very early years. This is just my personal understanding, but I hope it helps.
Thanks for this!
Calla lily12, Michael W. Harris