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I’m working through trauma from my childhood and my psychologist recommended I read The Body Keeps the Score.
I’m on p. 288 and reading about the parts work using the Internal Family System. I feel like I have parts that hold different responsibilities and that are different ages, but I’m quite sure I don’t have Dissociative Identity Disorder. Can parts exist on a spectrum? My head is spinning and I need someone to process this with tonight. My psychologist is out of town until Wednesday. Ugh. |
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100%, the approach is just a way to understand the complexity of our existence and it isn’t at all synonymous with DID. Think about how we talk sometimes: “part of me wants to work out, but part of me just wants to sit on the couch.” Or, “part of me is mad at her, but part of me understands why she did X and Y.”
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Echoing PP, absolutely having "parts" does not mean you have DID. We all have parts! I found "No Bad Parts" by Richard Schwartz (founder of IFS) and Dr. Tori Olds' you tube channel (link below) really helpful in understanding IFS.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLCJ2fBBavCJEoQPzbMIOuQ2luJDHrWPSL |
Thank you, this is helpful. One of my “parts” had an experience today and I am thrown off. I feel so confused. Usually, that part is buried. I don’t know what to do. I feel so scared. |
It is important to know that the popular portrayal of DID—as fully formed separate selves with things like different voices, handwriting, medical conditions, etc—is malarkey. There is enormous controversy within psychiatry about this diagnosis, with many scholars believing that “complex PTSD”—that is, PTSD originating from multiple/persistent adverse childhood experiences—is a better way to describe much of what is attributed to “DID.” It is not uncommon at all for someone with c-PTSD to have the experience you are describing of a buried part coming to the fore. Your therapist should be able to reassure you about this also and it’s worth a call. |
You are employing compartmentalization. It is a coping mechanism. |
| Is this book garbage? A bad therapist suggested it to my teenager which I think is wildly inappropriate. |
I do IFS work and its been very helpful to me. Like why do certain lilttle things trigger me into a tailspin yet other big thing I can handle with no issue? Why am I one person at work (super organized) but have an embarrassingly messy room at home? Those are simplified issues but exploring myself and my parts through IFS has been really eye opening and healing. There are IFS talks for free on the Insight Timer App. Here's a link: https://insighttimer.com/meditation-playlists/LLmvymnzkRjmrZlO26uD https://insighttimer.com/play/playlist/LLmvymnzkRjmrZlO26uD?track=m3v3u4y9y9h2v8m1p2c8e2z1g5h0f7s4r4c1x5j1 |
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The kids movie "Inside Out" is loosely based on IFS.
https://www.bethrogerson.com/inside-out-movie-ifs/ |
The book is excellent. Sorry your teen's therapist was trash. Don't take it out on the book.
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+1 Its actually a really interesting book with a ton of science backing it up. Its a shame that many of the therapies discussed in the book were not given additional funding when the results were so great. |
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I did not find an IFS approach helpful.
I did benefit from Somatic Experiencing Therapy and EMDR. I've read and am somewhat a fan of TBKTS but some of it, the MRIs, for example, have not been consistently replicated, so that undercuts a bit of the validity to me. IFST is somewhat controversial, Google it. Take what is helpful and leave the rest. You may wish to set the book aside until you have worked on inner resources, self soothing, compartmentalization, etc. Creating additional trauma responses is counterproductive. |
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I found the book useful but the science is not as solid as the book presents
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/08/02/body-keeps-score-grieving-brain-bessel-van-der-kolk-neuroscience-self-help/ |
Much of the science is actually not as the book presents it, alas...
https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/08/02/body-keeps-score-grieving-brain-bessel-van-der-kolk-neuroscience-self-help/ |
A book rec is wildly inappropriate? Or the therapist? |