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Member Since Jun 2015
Location: Somewhere
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#1
Can we talk dissociation pretty please?
I will spare you the life story but I am currently freaking out due to my usual fears of being a big liar / faker and I really really need the validation I will possibly get from you guys in order to be able to engage in therapy So what does dissociation feel like to you in session? Do you 1) completely check out and go blank, like you forgot your body is still there and that your T can still see it because you got so uncomfortable that your mind left and you stay like that until your T tells you that you’re ‘gone’ ? Or 2) Can you talk and act sort of normally but you are extremely spacey and not really taking anything in? Kind of hearing things are being said but not processing it at all and having to ask for things to be repeated ? My T calls what she is observing when 1) happens, dissociation (but I have my doubts) and has said that 2) is my brain protecting me (without calling it dissociation) Please share if you experience anything similar to either or if you experience it differently. Thank you so much ❤️ |
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LostOnTheTrail, ScarletPimpernel
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LostOnTheTrail
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Human Feeling
Member Since Aug 2011
Location: England
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#2
Hi Ana,
I commend you for making this post. The second option you describe resonates with me, even though my therapist hasn't labelled it. It's a kind of survival mode, I think...that might be related to the freeze response. Hope that helps, and thank you. You really helped me. __________________ 'Somewhere up above the great divide Where the sky is wide, and the clouds are few A man can see his way clear to the light 'You have all the grace you need for today, and today is all that matters.' - Steve Austin |
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AnaWhitney
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AnaWhitney
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Wise Elder
Member Since Nov 2013
Location: US
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#3
For me it's like #2. I also get nauseous. That's usually my first sign. I also look down and can't make eye contact. And I usually stop talking. I can hear her talking but it's like she's far away from me. And I can respond. The worst I've had it (not in therapy), I couldn't do or say anything. I was completely aware of everything, but I was literally frozen.
And yes, L labels it as dissociation. She says there are stages and can be different for different people. __________________ "Odium became your opium..." ~Epica |
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AnaWhitney
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AnaWhitney
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Member
Member Since Sep 2022
Location: Eire
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#4
For me it was smiling and making light of something profound I was talking about that I'd been through..
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AnaWhitney
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AnaWhitney
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Monster on the Hill
Member Since Sep 2020
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#5
Depends on the type of dissociation. Depersonalization feels like I’m disconnected from myself and nothing is really coming in/out. I might talk but it’s just “from the neck up” there is no presence of emotions. I walk out wondering what we even talked about.
I also experience hypnotizability and then I don’t talk or listen and it’s a total waste of time unless my y successfully grounds me out of that state. If I’ve switched usually in therapy my hyperthymic part comes out and she thinks I’m manic when really it’s just her temperament. Sometimes the part that holds the shame comes out and there’s a lot of crying and “it’s not your fault”s. It doesn’t get through. We’re doing DBT for half the session to reduce dissociation and trying to learn about the system with hopes that we’ll be less shattered the other half of the session now. Made a lot of progress since getting an accurate dx. __________________ [Insert thought-provoking and comedic quote here] |
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AnaWhitney
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AnaWhitney
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Grand Poohbah
Member Since Apr 2017
Location: In a land far far away
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#6
It depends. It can feel like not hearing properly, although I understand all the words. If I have my eyes open, sometimes I don't recognize parts of my own body or surroundings. I might also see my T differently. Other times itt's more that I can't concentrate, can't focus on any one particular thing. Usually my voice gets more "flat". When I have my eyes closed, sometimes it feels like falling into a neverending hole. I feel detached from my emotions and surroundings, but I can follow instructions usually, like sitting upright, opening my eyes...
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AnaWhitney
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AnaWhitney
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Member
Member Since Jun 2015
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#7
Thank you for the replies and for sharing your experiences.
Yeah that’s what I was afraid of. Everything that can be read online makes it sound like 2. So what the heck is happening when I experience 1…. T has been asking questions about it and it makes me panic that it’s not relatable to anyone |
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Human Feeling
Member Since Aug 2011
Location: England
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#8
Hi Ana,
I'm sorry you feel anxious when your T asks questions about your experience. I have a sense that she's just trying to understand what you're experiencing more, because she's not in your body. It seems to me that 'depersonalisation' might capture what you're experiencing better, if you don't feel 'real' when it is happening. Our providers ask questions to understand mostly, rather than to cause distress. I hope you can figure this out in a way that makes you feel comfortable. Take care, Lost __________________ 'Somewhere up above the great divide Where the sky is wide, and the clouds are few A man can see his way clear to the light 'You have all the grace you need for today, and today is all that matters.' - Steve Austin |
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AnaWhitney
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Member Since Jun 2015
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#9
Thank you, Lost! Yes it’s such a me thing to panic and think that providers think I’m lying if they ask a question. I will have to work on this
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LostOnTheTrail
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Veteran Member
Member Since Mar 2014
Location: UK
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#10
It's like going into freeze mode. Can't speak, can't move. Barely aware of my surroundings or of being spoken to. On returning to the present, I don't remember anything that takes place during those episodes.
It's a scary situation to be in, but you only realise it afterwards because of how vulnerable you are when it's happening. Sent from my SM-A526B using Tapatalk __________________ To the world you might be just one person; but to one person you might be the world. |
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AnaWhitney
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#11
I have DID . So I am dissociated most of the time. Thankfully I have a therapist who specializes in DID so its no big deal.
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AnaWhitney
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Monster on the Hill
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#12
I don't even know what I "have" (cPTSD w/dissociative amnesia? DID? BPD? been dx'd with all at some point or another and I'm seeing someone new soon so we'll see) but I feel like it's important to make sure your therapist can recognize your dissociation symptoms. It might be useful for him or her to write down a summary of the session for you (that's what I'm going to ask when I restart therapy because treatment is a necessary trigger for me).
But yesterday for example I looked at the clock and it was 8:30PM and we were talking about world languages, and then all of a sudden I was confused and they were discussing God and Jesus and it was 9:20ish. __________________ [Insert thought-provoking and comedic quote here] |
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