Dissociative Disorders: When the Mind Disconnects

Dissociative disorders involve disruptions in memory, identity, consciousness, or perception. Understanding these often-misunderstood conditions can lead to appropriate treatment and recovery.

You zone out and suddenly hours have passed with no memory of what happened. You look in the mirror and the face staring back doesn’t feel like yours. The world around you seems unreal, like a movie or a dream. Sometimes you feel like you’re watching yourself from outside your body. These experiences of disconnection—dissociation—exist on a spectrum from normal to disorder.

Dissociative disorders are among the most misunderstood mental health conditions. Media portrayal, particularly of dissociative identity disorder, has created more confusion than clarity. Understanding what dissociation actually is, why it happens, and how it’s treated can help those affected find appropriate care.

What Is Dissociation?

Dissociation is a disconnection between things that are usually integrated: thoughts, identity, consciousness, memory, and perception of the environment or body.

Normal Dissociation

Everyone experiences mild dissociation:

  • Highway hypnosis (arriving without remembering the drive)
  • Getting absorbed in a book or movie
  • Daydreaming
  • Zoning out during a boring meeting
  • Feeling temporarily unreal during extreme stress

This normal dissociation is temporary, limited, and doesn’t cause problems.

Pathological Dissociation

Dissociative disorders involve dissociation that:

  • Is severe or prolonged
  • Causes significant distress
  • Impairs functioning
  • Occurs involuntarily
  • May involve loss of memory or identity disruption

Types of Dissociative Disorders

Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID)

Previously called multiple personality disorder:

Key Features:
– Two or more distinct personality states (alters)
– Gaps in memory beyond ordinary forgetting
– Disruption in identity and sense of self
– Significant distress or impairment

Misconceptions:
– Not “split personality” (schizophrenia confusion)
– Not dramatic personality shifts like in movies
– Not dangerous or violent
– Very real despite media sensationalism

Understanding Alters:
– Different personality states, not completely separate people
– May have different names, ages, genders, characteristics
– Developed as survival mechanism, usually from childhood trauma
– Switches may be subtle or dramatic

Dissociative Amnesia

Key Features:
– Inability to recall important personal information
– Usually related to traumatic or stressful events
– Too extensive to be ordinary forgetting
– Not due to medical condition or substance

Types:
– Localized: Can’t remember a specific event or time period
– Selective: Can remember some but not all of an event
– Generalized: Can’t remember entire life history (rare)

With Dissociative Fugue:
Some people with dissociative amnesia also experience:
– Confused wandering
– Travel away from home
– Assumption of new identity
– Memory loss for past identity

Depersonalization/Derealization Disorder

Depersonalization:
– Feeling detached from yourself
– Feeling like you’re observing yourself from outside
– Feeling like your body isn’t yours
– Emotional numbness
– Feeling like a robot or automaton

Derealization:
– The world seems unreal, dreamlike, or foggy
– Surroundings seem artificial
– Objects seem distorted (size, shape, color)
– Feeling like you’re in a movie

Key Features:
– Episodes are distressing
– Reality testing remains intact (you know it’s not actually unreal)
– Not better explained by other conditions
– Causes significant distress or impairment

Other Specified Dissociative Disorder

Includes presentations that don’t fit other categories:

  • Chronic and recurrent dissociative symptoms
  • Identity disturbance from prolonged coercive persuasion
  • Acute dissociative reactions to stress
  • Dissociative trance

Symptoms Across Dissociative Disorders

Memory Symptoms

  • Gaps in memory for personal history
  • Inability to remember important information
  • Finding evidence of actions you don’t remember
  • Others telling you things you did that you don’t recall
  • Time loss

Identity Symptoms

  • Confusion about who you are
  • Feeling like there are different “parts” of you
  • Marked changes in sense of self
  • Feeling like you’re different people at different times
  • Internal voices or conflicts

Consciousness Symptoms

  • Feeling detached from yourself
  • Watching yourself from outside
  • Feeling like you’re in a dream
  • Emotional numbing
  • Feeling unreal

Perception Symptoms

  • The world seeming foggy or distant
  • Objects appearing distorted
  • Feeling separated from surroundings
  • Time feeling distorted

Causes of Dissociative Disorders

Trauma Connection

The strongest risk factor for severe dissociative disorders is childhood trauma:

  • Physical abuse
  • Sexual abuse
  • Severe neglect
  • Emotional abuse
  • War or natural disasters
  • Medical trauma

How Dissociation Develops

Protective Mechanism:
Dissociation is believed to develop as a way to cope with overwhelming experiences:

  • The mind “escapes” what the body cannot
  • Memory and experience are compartmentalized
  • Survival is possible by not fully experiencing trauma
  • Initially adaptive, it can become maladaptive

In Childhood:
– Identity isn’t yet integrated
– Dissociation during abuse prevents full integration
– Different states may develop to handle different situations
– Pattern becomes entrenched

Not Always Trauma-Related

While trauma is the primary cause of DID, other dissociative experiences can arise from:

  • Extreme stress
  • Sensory deprivation
  • Substance use
  • Certain medical conditions
  • Sleep deprivation
  • Anxiety disorders

Depersonalization/derealization in particular often occurs with anxiety and panic.

Assessment and Diagnosis

Challenges

Dissociative disorders are often:

  • Underdiagnosed
  • Misdiagnosed as other conditions
  • Not recognized by providers unfamiliar with them
  • Hidden by patients due to shame

Common Misdiagnoses

  • Schizophrenia (voices interpreted as hallucinations)
  • Bipolar disorder (mood shifts)
  • Borderline personality disorder (often comorbid)
  • PTSD (frequently co-occurs)
  • Depression

Proper Assessment

Includes:

  • Comprehensive clinical interview
  • Trauma history
  • Specific dissociation screening tools
  • Rule out medical causes
  • Assessment for comorbid conditions

Treatment for Dissociative Disorders

General Principles

Phase-Oriented Treatment:
Treatment typically follows phases:

  1. Stabilization: Safety, symptom management, skill-building
  2. Trauma Processing: Working through traumatic memories when stable
  3. Integration/Reconnection: Building integrated identity and life

Safety First:
Before processing trauma:

  • Establish safety
  • Build coping skills
  • Develop therapeutic relationship
  • Stabilize symptoms

Psychotherapy Approaches

Trauma-Focused Therapy:
Various approaches adapted for dissociation:

  • Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) (modified)
  • Cognitive Processing Therapy
  • Internal Family Systems (IFS)
  • Sensorimotor Psychotherapy

For DID Specifically:
– Working with all parts/alters
– Improving communication between parts
– Processing trauma when appropriate
– Working toward integration or cooperation

For Depersonalization/Derealization:
– Grounding techniques
– Anxiety management
– Cognitive approaches
– Mindfulness (carefully applied)
– Addressing underlying anxiety or trauma

Medication

No medication specifically treats dissociation, but medications may help:

  • Co-occurring depression
  • Anxiety
  • PTSD symptoms
  • Sleep problems
  • Mood instability

Treatment Duration

Recovery from severe dissociative disorders is typically:

  • Long-term (years, not months)
  • Phase-oriented
  • Requires specialized expertise
  • Possible but demanding

Grounding Techniques

Essential for managing dissociation:

Physical Grounding:
– Feel feet on floor
– Hold ice cube
– Splash cold water
– Notice five things you can see
– Focus on breath

Mental Grounding:
– Name the current date, time, place
– Describe surroundings in detail
– Count backward
– Play categories game
– Say name and affirm safety

Soothing Grounding:
– Self-compassion statements
– Comforting images
– Safe place visualization
– Positive self-talk

Living with Dissociative Disorders

Daily Management

  • Use grounding techniques regularly
  • Maintain routines
  • Practice self-care
  • Keep a journal
  • Use reminders and lists
  • Build support system

Self-Care Priorities

  • Adequate sleep
  • Regular meals
  • Stress management
  • Avoiding triggers when possible
  • Limiting substances
  • Maintaining treatment

Communication

Telling others about dissociation:

  • Decide who needs to know
  • Educate them about the condition
  • Tell them how to help
  • Set boundaries about questions

Work and Functioning

Many people with dissociative disorders:

  • Work successfully
  • Maintain relationships
  • Appear “normal” to others
  • Function despite symptoms

Getting appropriate treatment improves functioning.

For Family and Friends

Understanding

  • Dissociative disorders are real, not invented
  • Symptoms are involuntary
  • It’s usually rooted in trauma
  • Recovery is possible but takes time

Supporting

  • Learn about the specific disorder
  • Be patient and consistent
  • Help with grounding if asked
  • Don’t demand memories or details
  • Support their treatment
  • Take care of yourself

What Doesn’t Help

  • Pushing for trauma details
  • Expressing disbelief
  • Treating them as fragile
  • Playing along with dangerous behavior
  • Ignoring warning signs

Controversies and Misconceptions

Media Portrayal

Movies and TV often portray dissociative disorders inaccurately:

  • Dramatic, obvious switches
  • Violence associated with alters
  • Theatrical presentations
  • Quick cures

Reality is more subtle and complex.

DID Controversy

Some have questioned DID’s validity, but:

  • Research supports its existence
  • Brain imaging shows differences
  • It’s recognized in major diagnostic systems
  • Clinical experience confirms it
  • Trauma connection is well-established

Recovered Memories

Related controversy about whether traumatic memories can be:

  • Repressed and later recovered
  • Created through suggestion
  • Both are possible, requiring careful clinical assessment
  • Trauma history should be explored carefully without suggestion

Finding Help

What to Look For

  • Therapist trained in trauma and dissociation
  • Experience with specific disorder
  • Phase-oriented approach
  • Not rushing trauma work
  • Specialization recognized

Resources

  • International Society for the Study of Trauma and Dissociation (ISSTD)
  • Sidran Institute
  • Trauma-focused treatment centers
  • Support groups

Moving Forward

Dissociative disorders, while challenging, are treatable. The mind that learned to disconnect as a survival mechanism can learn new ways of coping. Integration—whether full or functional—is possible with appropriate treatment.

If you experience dissociation, know that:

  • What you’re experiencing is real
  • It likely developed for protective reasons
  • Treatment can help
  • Many people recover

The disconnection served a purpose once. With proper support, you can learn to feel connected and present in your life—safe enough now to stay.

This article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional mental health treatment. If you’re struggling, please reach out to a qualified mental health provider. Arise Counseling Services offers compassionate, professional support for individuals and families throughout Pennsylvania.

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