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loveourkitties
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Default Nov 09, 2010 at 04:41 PM
  #41
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Originally Posted by Miracle1986 View Post
The Renfrew Center
475 Spring Lane
Philadelphia PA 19128
Phone 800-RENFREW (736-3739)
Phone 215-482-5353; fax 215-482-7390
http://www.renfrewcenter.com/
treatment: trauma, dissociation, eating disorders, other (panic/anxiety, depression, compulsive disorders, etc)
Programs: in patient, out patient, day
Population: women only
Inpatient, outpatient, transitional living, and day programs for women with eating disorders and survivor issues, including dissociative disorders, depression, and anxiety. Track for abuse survivors. Substance abuse. Also has centers in New York and Florida.

*taken from here: http://ptsdme.blogspot.com/2005/11/c...treatment.html
thanks, but apparently they've changed everything there. looks like it's just for girls/women with ED's...
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Default Nov 09, 2010 at 04:43 PM
  #42
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thanks, but apparently they've changed everything there. looks like it's just for girls/women with ED's...
Ugh... I'm so sorry...

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Default Jan 01, 2011 at 08:52 PM
  #43
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Originally Posted by (JD) View Post
www.manyvoicespress.com

This resource by Lynn W. began as a mailed out newsletter (still available) and has articles by those who have Dissociative Identity Disorder and many resources from books and tapes to seminars for professionals to inpatient treatment centers.

This is a wonderful newsletter and the Sidrian(spelling may be incorrect) foundation and its books are wonderful. Five stars or A+++ or thumbs up for the two sites.
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Default Feb 14, 2011 at 06:59 AM
  #44
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Default Mar 31, 2011 at 04:38 AM
  #45
Whoever was asking about Pennsylvania trauma units. There are none. The two closest are Shepherd Pratt in Baltimore and Princeton in NJ. There used to be Pennsylvania Psychiatric in Philly, but they switched their name and it's now Brooke Glen and they lost their unit. Renfrew is for people with co occurring eating disorders.
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Default Apr 07, 2011 at 04:07 PM
  #46
This is such a great list of links. I love all the books that are listed...some of them I have never seen so I will have to check them out. I really liked The Dissociative Identity Disorder Sourcebook.... I remember we read that quite a few years ago.
Also have to say that I love Kathy Broady's website as well, her Discussing Dissociation Blog has SO much good information-- I've learned so much from her.
I definitely need to check out the other websites listed too-- thanks for posting these.
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Default Apr 13, 2011 at 09:27 PM
  #47
Feeling Unreal by Daphne Simeon and Jeffrey Abugel.

A technical book that just about covers everything related to dissociation including research from brain imaging. The book is also cheaply available on the internet.
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Default Apr 19, 2011 at 01:21 PM
  #48
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Originally Posted by lauren_helene View Post
http://sfhelp.org/site/map.htm

I really like the information on this website about sub personalities. Peter Gerlach put it together and has a book too that I plan to get.

You can click on so many links and get detailed descriptions/examples of sub personalities.

I am learning a ton from it and recommend it to anyone with DID, thinks they might be DID or has ego state issues.
I clicked the first link and it went to a weird page. Are you sure this is the right address?
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Default Apr 19, 2011 at 02:32 PM
  #49
Echo1958, try this address, "same" site: http://sfhelp.org/gwc/IF/innerfam.htm

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Default May 26, 2011 at 05:49 PM
  #50
I recently bought the book and am finding it very useful. I don't believe I am DID, but I am definitely dissociative and know I have seperate ego-states ... and I do dialogue with myself out loud and in writing.

Gerlach's language of "subselves" makes a lot of sense to me and I can "give myself" permission to pursue understanding of my inner "parts" without having to use the DID label. Although his main focus is on working with divorced and otherwise fractured families, his basic theory about the wounded child and the inner "commmunity" are probably useful to anyone who experiences dissociation.
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Default May 27, 2011 at 09:46 PM
  #51
good resource Perna................thank you
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Default Jul 07, 2011 at 08:08 AM
  #52
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Originally Posted by DocJohn View Post
Other than Psych Central, what are your favorite or top resources/blogs/news sites/etc. you visit regularly for this disorder or issue? Please reply to this thread and list a few of what you consider the best of the best online today.

Thank you!
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Here are a few that I have looked at...they are books I found online. I don't know how good they are as I am new to this whole thing.

http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&...page&q&f=false

The dissociative identity disorder sourcebook

I'd like to read the fractured mind as well

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Default Jul 13, 2011 at 01:49 PM
  #53
I would like to add the book "Herschel Walker's - Breaking Free, My Life with Dissociative Identity Disorder and the not yet released movie Frankie and Alice. ty

Quote:
Originally Posted by (JD) View Post
<font color="blue"> Here is my updated, alphabetized list of resources. Resources for Trauma, Dissociation, and Treatment
[b]

A Safe Place, Leston Havens
Adults Molested as Children, Connie Saindon, MA, MFCC, CTS
American College of Physicians complete home medical guide
American Psychological Association
Amongst Ourselves, Dr. Tracy Alderman and Karen Marshall
Assessment and Treatment of Multiple Personality and Dissociative Disorders, J. P. Bloch
Attachment, Trauma and Multiplicity, Valerie Sinason

Beauty for Ashes, Receiving Emotional Healing, Joyce Meyer (abuse survivor)
Becoming Kate, Theodore J. Jansma, Jr., Ph.D. and Katharine St. Clair
British Psychological Association

Can I Look Now, Rachel Downing MSW, LCSW
Canadian Psychological Association
Childhood Antecedents of Multiple personality Disorder, Richard Kuft
Clinical Features and Treatment, Colin Ross M.D.
Colin A. Ross Institute for Psychological Trauma

Del Amo Hospital Torrance California
Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Personality Disorder, Frank Putnam
Dissociation - a Journal put out by ISSD
Dissociation in Children and Adolescents, Frank Putnum
Dissociative Disorders a Clinical Review, David Spiegal
Dissociative Identity Disorder: Diagnosis, Clinical Features, and Treatment, Colin Ross, M.D.
Double Vision, Anna Richardson
DSM IV - Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 4th Edition
DSM IV TR - Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 4th edition Text Revised

E Pluribus Unum, Out of One...Many, Sandy Sela-Smith, Ph.D. & Benjamin B. Keyes, Ph.D.
European Federation of Psychologists' Association
Faith Trust Institute (religion and abuse)
Family Secrets, John Bradshaw
First Person Plural, Cameron West, Ph.D.
Forest View hospital Grand Rapids Michigan
Free of the Shadows: Recovering From Sexual Violence, Caren Adams and Jennifer Fay
Free Your Mind, Ellen Bass

Getting Through the Day, Nancy J Napier
Girl Interrupted, Susanna Kaysen

Handbook of DSM IV - TR explains DSM IV
Healing the Divided Self
How Long Does it Hurt?, Cynthia L. Mather

I Cant Get Over it, Aphrodite Matsakis
I Never Told Anyone, Ellen Bass
I Thought We'd Never Speak Again, Laura Davis
Imagery in Healing, J. Achterberg.
Invisible Heroes, Belleruth Naparstak
ISSD- International Society for the Study of Dissociation website

Journal of Trauma and Dissociation, ISSD
Joyce Meyer Ministries, Abuse and the Miracle of Recovery

Laura Davis Website
Life After Trauma: A Workbook for Healing for Survivors of Sex Abuse, Lynn Finney JD, MSW
Little Girl Fly Away, Gene Stone

Managing Stress through Art, SIDRAN
Many Voices, Newsletter and Website for Hope and Recovery, Lynn W.
Mary Ellen Copeland website
Memory and Abuse: Remembering and Healing the Effects of Trauma, Charles Whitfield
Moon Shadows, Collin Ross, M.D.
More Than One, Terri A. Clark, M.D.
More Than Survivors, James G. Friesen, Ph.D.
Multiple Personality Disorders from the inside out by Barry Cohen
Multiple Personality, Reality and Illusion, Video Narrated by Chris Costner Sizemore..
..(The Real Eve of the Three Faces of Eve)
Multiple Selves, Multiple Voices, Phil Mollon.
Multiples Guide to Harmonized family living, Tammy Colleen Whitman and Susan Shore

NAMI - Website and nation wide agencies
Nancy J Napier website
New York Society for the Study of Multiple Personality and Dissociation

Our Stunning Harvest, Ellen Bass
Outgrowing the pain by Eliana Gil
Overcoming Anxiety, Panic and Depression, James Gardner M,D.
Overcoming Panic, Anxiety and Phobias, Shirley Baboir LCSW, MFCC

Reach for the Rainbow, Lynne D. Finney, J.D., M.S.W.
Reaching for the Light, Emilie Rose
Recreating Yourself, Nancy J Napier
Relax into healing, Nancy Hopp
Repressed memories. Renee Fredrickson

Secret Survivors, E. Sue Blume
Self Hypnosis in 2 Days by Freda Morias
SIDRAN website
Silencing the Voices, Jean Darby Cline
Songs for Two Children, Colin Ross, M.D.
Stedman's Medical Dictionary 27th edition
Sybil, Flora Rheta Schreiber

The Age of Terrorism, Walter Laqueur
The American Psychiatric Association
The Anger Workbook by Lorraine Bideau
The Anxiety and Phobia workbook, Edmund Bourne
The Big Book of Relaxation, Robert Epstein
The Body Remembers, The Psychophysiology of Trauma and Treatment, Babette Rothschild
The Castle of the Pearl,Text and Workbook, Christopher Biffle
The Courage to Heal, Text and Workbook, Laura Davis
The Depression Workbook, Mary Ellen Copeland
the dissociative identity disorder sourcebook, Deborah Bray Haddock, M.Ed. M.A., L.P.
The Gayle Encyclopedia of Genetic Disorders
The Haunted Self: Dr. Onno van der Hart &
The Merck Manual of Medical information
The Myth of Sanity, Martha Stout
The New Personality Self Portrait, John Oldham
The Obsidian Mirror, Louis Wisechild
The Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Sourcebook, Glenn R. Schiraldi, Ph.D.
The Relaxation and Stress Reduction Workbook, Martha Davis Ph.D.
The Relaxation Response, Herbert Benson
The Scarred Soul, Tracy Alderman, Ph.D.
Through the Open Door - Secrets of self Hypnosis, Kevin Hogan
Timberlawn Mental Health System Dallas Texas
Too Good for Her Own Good, Claudia Bepkjo and Jo-Ann Krestan
Too Scared to Cry, Psychic Trauma in Childhood, Lenore Terr
Trauma and Recovery, Judith Lewis Herman, M.D.
Treating Dissociative Identity Disorder, Ivan Yalam and James Spira
Treatment of Multiple Personality Disorder, Bennett Braum

Understanding Self Injury, Kim Trautman and Robin Conners
United We Stand, Eliana Gil
Unity and Multiplicity, J. O Beahrs

When Going Through Hell Doesn't Stop, Douglas Bloch
When Rabbit Howls, Truddi Chase
Women Who Hurt Themselves, (Traumas Reenacted), Dusty Miller

For reading beyond the usual:
The Abuse Excuse (people who only use being abused as an excuse for crime), Alan M. Dershowitz
The Gift of Fear Survival Signals That Protect us from Violence, Gavin DeBecker
The Lucifer Effect Understanding How Good People Turn Evil, Philip Zimbardo

The Feeling Good Handbook, David D. Burns, M.D.
Breaking Free, Beth Moore
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Default Aug 09, 2011 at 09:36 AM
  #54
Nami was a huge help to me when we first realized my husband had DID. It helped knowing we werent alone in the world.

I have also read some real life stories of people who have been treated with DID, of course the names have escaped me.
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Default Aug 19, 2011 at 01:46 PM
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Default Sep 19, 2011 at 10:21 AM
  #56
For the comment about Many Voices. . .it is an exceptional newsletter. They're on FB too. . .especially nice for Gracey is that they are based out of the Cincinnati area, and I have made MANY IRL friends through MV.

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Default Sep 27, 2011 at 07:55 PM
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Question Sep 29, 2011 at 06:49 PM
  #58
Hey does anyone have any up-to-date information on the hospital that is under the Hardvard Teaching Hospital's Dissociative Disorders Unit?

Anything I need to know like are they any good NOW any way I can find out w/o calling them directly. Just trying to find some info from a "patient's point of view." I am going to call them I just wanted ppl to tell me there expierences b4 I dig deep.

Thanks for anything anyone has, it would be greatly appreciated!
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Default Dec 08, 2011 at 08:08 PM
  #59
Treating Dissociative Identity Disorder: The Power of the Collective Heart, Sarah Y. Krakauer

...briefly...I am reading this book and find the area of 'working through' a more methodical integration quite helpful. My own non-traumatic 'trauma therapy' is 'quite different from hers but very effective for me.

But, the way she discusses and works through 'integration' with her clients is helping me see it in a bigger picture kind of way and did actually open doors for a few of my parts to interact/discuss together.

I want to say more but it is personal to me so just trying to clear here without going into detail. There is way more to the book but the integration focus has been helpful to me. Hope it helps someone else. It may have been listed elsewhere but it just is pertinent to me at this time.

All the best.
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Default Dec 18, 2011 at 03:50 PM
  #60
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