Want this question answered?
Some experts believe that dissociative identity disorder is the patient's way of dissociating himself or herself from previous traumatic experiences. Others have proposed that dissociative identity disorder is caused or made worse by certain types of therapy.
Great material for a joke, but multiples (Dissociative Identity Disorder/DID) are not funny. The exact number is unknown. There were a lot of diagnoses back in the '90's, some of which were discredited, and the actual number is though to be much lower than was formerly reported. There is no question, however, that DID cases exist. The writer is personally acquainted with one person with at least three multiples and complete dissociation among all three -- meaning that none of the three are aware of the others, and there is complete amnesia between personalities.
Hospitalization would be recommended for anyone whose mental disorder is so severe that the person in question is dangerous to himself or others.
Whens these person felt not comfortable close with around others that doesn't know them much well, sometime they like to behave not the same maybe to impress the new persons they meet so them can make sexy time.
Dissocial personality disorder
Schizophrenia is a psychotic disorder, not a personality disorder. However, there are some personality disorders that have similar symptoms to schizophrenia: paranoid personality disorder, schizoid personality disorder, and schizotypal personality disorder.
A disorder that makes people not wish to get on with others.
include a combining of one or more dissociative and anxiety symptoms with the avoidance of reminders of the traumatic event. Dissociative symptoms include emotional detachment, temporary loss of memory, depersonalization, and derealization
They are not dangerous by themselves. To be dangerous to anyone, a person has to be invloved.
Our individual identity is greatly constructed by how others perceive us.
IDENTITY is: Who you REALLY ARE; How YOU see yourself. Identity is: Substance; Enduring; Active. IMAGE is: Who others PERCEIVE YOU to be; Hoe OTHERS see you. Image is: Appearance; Superficial; Passive.
The four aspects of identity include personal identity (sense of self), social identity (group memberships), collective identity (shared beliefs and values), and relational identity (how we define ourselves in relation to others).