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Mental Illness Happy Hour

#677 Dissociative Identity Disorder - Holly Crumpler

Jan 5, 2024
Holly Crumpler, who lives with Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), discusses her frustration with its portrayal in TV and film. They explore the process of diagnosis, raising a child with DID, and the impact of therapy and filmmaking in healing and spreading awareness. They also touch on medical traumas, misdiagnosis, and forgiveness after abuse.
01:58:32

Episode guests

Podcast summary created with Snipd AI

Quick takeaways

  • DID is a coping mechanism for childhood abuse with separate identities encapsulating traumatic memories.
  • Discovering and communicating with different identities is crucial in healing and coexisting peacefully.

Deep dives

Discovering Dissociative Identity Disorder

Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) is a coping mechanism of the brain in response to childhood abuse. The brain creates separate identities to encapsulate traumatic memories. These identities have their own names, ages, preferences, and memories. DID is often misdiagnosed and individuals struggle with amnesia barriers between parts. The process of understanding and communicating with different parts is crucial in healing and coexisting peacefully.

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