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Dissociative Identity Disorder (Multiple Personalities) Christian Support

Updated: 18 hours ago

Answers to Every Question


Find the Help You Need Quickly


The dream of this webpage is to push Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) to the extreme of quick access to answers to almost every question anyone could ever ask about Dissociative Identity Disorder.


Learning about Dissociative Identity Disorder in general, is best done through entertaining, informative and highly readable articles. I urge you to give them priority.


This webpage, however, fills a very different role. It is more like a search engine or encyclopedia devoted to D.I.D., empowering you to quickly locate the information you need about a precise aspect of D.I.D.


IMPORTANT: After locating the relevant section of this webpage, getting the maximum benefit is possible only by visiting every link listed there. Since some of the links are to lengthy webpages, this could take more than one session. Ensure you have bookmarked the original section or have some other foolproof way of finding it, so that you don’t miss the other links.



When an Alter is Seriously Planning Suicide or Something Dangerous


1. For Immediate Action


Early on, alters often do not realize they share their body with you and other parts and so have no idea that harming themselves or any part of you would harm every part of you. This might take some explaining as it might initially be a difficult concept for your alter to grasp, but once grasped it could lessen the danger.


When you think the alter might not be present, hide knives, pills, keys, money and other things that could be used to directly harm yourself or to gain access to things that could harm you. Once hidden, the chances are that the alter will not be able to find them.


It is not ideal, but it might be possible to temporarily confine this alter within you so that he/she cannot harm you or other alters.


Next to God, your greatest source of help is always your alters. So do everything you can to elicit their help in this situation.


So as not to freak them, try to keep as calm as possible, but inform all of your alters of the situation. Ask them to be kind and gentle toward the alter who is creating the emergency and help them understand that the alter is deeply hurting and confused and is trying to do his/her best in a situation he/she finds overwhelming, even though in reality things are not nearly as bad as the alter supposes.

It is quite likely that some of your alters know of other alters they have not yet told you about, so ask them to spread the word to as many other alters as they can. When you are asleep or oblivious to what is happening, some of your alters are likely to be alert, thus enabling them to be your eyes, ears and hands; waking you and warning you, or otherwise intervening, if the alter is about to do something dangerous.


Seek their ideas as to how to deal with the situation. Some alters could be better than you at identifying which alter is the source of this danger and/or be better able to communicate with that alter. They might also know more than you about what is driving the alter to act this way, or be better than you at guessing what it could be, or, through their network, be better at gleaning this information to discover from other alters additional relevant information. Some might be better than you at seeking God and receiving his wisdom and direction.


Brief summary of action


Find out as much as you can about the troublesome alter, such as why he/she feels this way and then address those issues. All information about the alter has the potential to better understand him/her and so help all of you be better equipped to calm the alter.


Can you discover what recent event triggered the alter to consider such drastic action? That could be a vital clue as to what is upsetting the alter and therefore what might be done to calm the situation.

Don’t assume that the alter knows even basic things that are obvious to you. Quite possibly, for example, the alter is unaware of what year it is and thinks he/she is back decades ago when you were in great danger. Let the alter know how much safer he/she now is and how much things have changed for the better. Comfort the alter. Boost the alter’s self-esteem. Show that you care not merely for your safety, but for him/her. Ask if he/she feels you have let him/her down. If so, apologize and do all you can to put things right. Help the alter realize that the abuse etc was the abuser’s fault, not this alter’s fault nor that of any other alter. Ascertain lies the abuser has told the alter and then help him/her see through them.


Having parts of you isolated from the love, wisdom, comfort and support of the rest of you is a major reason for alters being in horrific pain, so simply encouraging these alters to share and you listening to them and sympathizing with them will significantly lessen their pain. It is especially important that you help them discover that they are greatly treasured by God and that he is safe and longs to be their best friend and that Jesus suffered on the cross to be their alter, taking their pain upon himself.


If your attempts to help the alter are insufficient or the alter cannot be identified, you might need to activate an anti-suicide plan. This has four levels, depending on the seriousness of the situation:


(1) Break the isolation. Don’t be alone, even if it is only going to a store so that you are around people (unless this itself is triggering for you).


(2) Call a friend and speak to him/her without mentioning the suicidal thoughts.


(3) Tell the friend you are feeling suicidal.


(4) Urgently call a counsellor or a suicide helpline.


2. Important Help and More Details


Regardless of how aware you are of it, you have suffered horrific things. So it understandable that parts of you could be hurting so much that they feel suicidal. The fact that you are still alive, however, proves that you are a survivor and an overcomer. And things will get better. You have commenced a healing journey. It will be bumpy at times but you are on the way to peace and fulfilment. Nevertheless, parts of you are almost certainly unaware of these positives and know only of the times when things were horrific. Some are also driven to drastic measures because they mistakenly think their abuser will do even worse things to you if they don’t do things that hurt or harm you; not realizing that the abuser no longer has (or perhaps never had) the power to carry out his/her threats. Continually informing your alters of these positive things will do much to calm them.

Self-esteem is a key issue. It is not uncommon for alters to have such abysmal self-esteem that they do not even think they are human. If they think of themselves as not part of the human race, they will be less motivated to display (or even think themselves capable of) the kindness, gentleness and so on that humans are capable of. Instead, they are more likely to act like animals, machines, demons or whatever being treated cruelly has led them to think of themselves as being.


How they see themselves will also greatly influence their ability to believe that they are capable of being loved and valued by God and anyone other than abusers. Helping them realize that they are of great value to you and to God and capable of achieving great things will obviously increase their desire to live. Before you better understood Dissociative Identity Disorder you probably contributed to the alter’s low self-esteem by despising him/her or trying to suppress or ignore him/her, thereby treating the alter as if he/she is nothing or unimportant. If so, you should begin to undo the damage by apologizing to him/her and show that you have totally changed your attitude.


Resolving the issue of blame is also critically important. We humans are strongly driven to assign blame. Alters who blame themselves (a mistaken view often strongly reinforced by abusers) are likely to have little desire to live and/or low self-esteem and little hope of achieving anything worthwhile in life. It is also common for alters to blame other alters. They are usually not aware that this is a form of self-blame, but it could drive them to want to hurt or kill a part of you. If they blame God, this will cut themselves off from their Healer and the ultimate source of love and wisdom that they desperately need. For invaluable help with resolving the blame issue (regardless of who is blamed).


To children, abusers are typically seen as sources of authoritative truth. This makes alters highly vulnerable to accepting the abuser’s lies and values. They might, for instance, have been taught that they have given their lives to Satan and so cannot have God’s love and acceptance, or that Jesus approved of them being abused. Helping alters see through the lies can be very important.


As already alluded to, until confirmed, do not assume the misguided alter knows even the most basic things. The alter might, for example, be terrified of an abuser’s punishment; oblivious to the fact that the abuser no longer has any access to you. The alter might have no idea of good things that have happened to you over the years and of how much you now have to live for and how that there is more reason for hope than there was when you were a child. Gently correcting any such misunderstanding could do much to diffuse the situation.


Some of the following suggestions are extreme and might not necessarily work but desperate times call for desperate measures.


If you would be safest in your house and an alter wants to leave it to do something dangerous, you could consider deadlocking yourself into your room or house and hiding the key from the alter. The problem is that you might later switch alters and be unable to remember where the key is when it is genuinely important for you to leave. You would need to prepare for this possibility. Perhaps you could leave a spare key with a friend or you could tell the friend where the key is hidden and in an emergency you could contact him/her so that he/she can relay this information to you. Another possibility is to use a combination lock or keypad to lock yourself in and tell your friend what the number sequence is. Or store the vital information in a password protected file. Of course, this depends on you being able to remember at least some things. If the main danger is during a certain time period (such as nights) another possibility might be to arrange for a friend to email you or phone you with the information after that period has lapsed.


In emergencies, taking a large but safe dose of sleeping pills might knock out not just you but the alter who could do something dangerous at night.


For further help see:




Additional help continues below for several sections.


Evil Alters


Some alters enforce the values of the abuser simply because it was once the only way to protect the entire system from being severely punished by the abuser and they are not aware that they are no longer subject to the abuser. Certain alters go even further and take on the abuser’s entire identity so that they actually believe that they are that person.


It is not unusual for some alters to crave sex – sometimes even grossly perverse sex – even though other alters sharing the same body hate and/or fear it.


Still other alters might be convinced they are forever bound to the devil. Despite the slanderous lies they might have been taught about him, however, Jesus is safe and he can completely rescue every such alter and break the power of every vow or deal made with evil. Because Jesus is not an abuser, he will not force any of us to be good but he is powerfully able and eager to save all who want it, no matter what they did or committed themselves to in the past.


The stark truth that few people face is that without Christ, even the most saintly of us is hopelessly evil. None of us, however, need remain without Christ, and with him we can become pure and good and able to be an immense blessing.


God’s Word is emphatic that we all belonged to the kingdom of darkness and were slaves to evil but slaves can be bought and sold, and Jesus has bought you by paying the ultimate price of his own life. Because Jesus is not an abuser, however, he gives you the choice: by submitting to Jesus you can be free of evil and rule over it or, if you prefer, you can break his heart and choose to let evil forces dominate you.


For help with learning how to be free from demons and powerful evil forces, see:




For more help, keep reading below for several sections.


Alters Hurting Other Alters


Until you gain a deep understanding of alters, you might think it madness to always think the best of them. Nevertheless, the Christlike attitude of striving to see them in the best possible light will end up bringing rich rewards.


It might well seem as if a particular alter is your worst possible enemy. Despite appearances, however, alters actually try their best to be helpful. The tragedy is that they have been left terribly misinformed as to what actually helps. Having been cut off from critical information that you have gained by maturing, they have had no alternative but to accept as truth atrocious lies told them by abusers in an attempt to intimidate, manipulate and confuse them.


A common reason for alters hurting other alters is that they are desperately trying to protect you, or other alters, from the abuser’s wrath or punishment by enforcing rules set by your former abuser. Their goal is not to hurt you but to spare you from being exposed to the abuser’s wrath and punishment.


Obviously, what motivates this behavior is the alter believing that the abuser can still enforce his/her threats. If this belief is no longer valid, gently explain this to the alter. The alter might need a fair bit of proof. Showing the alter today’s date would be a good start.


Alters physically hurting you could simply be a form of self-harm. An alter might cruelly treat another because he/she blames the abuse on an alter being weak or duped when, in actual fact, anyone of that age or in that situation would have been overpowered or tricked. An example is an alter too young to know it was wrong who was seduced by an abuser who was gentle. This lulled the alter into having no qualms about the advances of another abuser, but this other abuser turned out to be terrifyingly aggressive. The actions of the accused alter are excusable but the alter who wants revenge needs to understand that we all stand guilty in the eyes of God and need mercy, not justice, and that God is eager to forgive the angry alter of all his/her sins as well as the alter who is being blamed.


Forgiving others becomes much easier when a person discovers that God forgives him/her. So work on helping the alter see how much God has forgiven him/her and has also forgiven the other alter.

A less common reason for an alter being malevolent is that the alter’s self-awareness has been so twisted that he/she has been tricked into thinking he or she is literally the abuser you once had. They act like a former abuser because they actually believe they are that abuser.


For still more help, keep reading below.


Angry, Nasty, or Terrifying Alters


Pouring unconditional love upon a particularly obnoxious and dangerous alter until he/she changes into your loyal, trusted friend is one of the most rewarding things you can ever do. Once you commit yourself to loving the alter with Christlike persistence, the astounding transformation can occur remarkably quickly.


There is nothing more disconcerting – and dangerous – than having an enemy inside you. The only satisfactory way to end this alarming predicament is to win your enemy’s loyalty and friendship. Despising him/her or trying to use force will only increase his/her hate for you and turn the alter even more against you. Any enemy within can be won over, however, because:


1. Even the most hardened alter is secretly desperate for your love and approval.


2. He/she is a part of you.


Being a part of you means that he/she can see things your way if he/she has all the information you have and if you have all the information he/she has. This exchange takes place by calmly talking to each other. Gaining all the information the alter has is not only critical to your full healing by filling in gaps in your knowledge about your past suffering, it alerts you to any misinformation the alter has been fed, so that you can gently help him/her know the liberating truth. It will also help you understand him/her and so find him easier to love. Moreover – as explained below – without this critical information, you might be unknowingly doing foolish or dangerous things that are justifiably alarming and antagonizing the alter. We can only be certain of making wise and safe decisions if we have all the facts, and some of the critical information you need to make safe decisions is locked inside this alter.


Alters who are currently wreaking havoc and seem your greatest enemies are the very ones you will most benefit from befriending. Your unconditional, Christlike love for them will end up melting their love-starved, terror-driven hearts, transforming them into your greatest allies, most valuable assets and best friends. Being kind, gentle, patient, considerate, compassionate and understanding toward them is your opportunity not only for peace and healing but for spiritual growth.


It turns out that the better you understand what seem to be particularly obnoxious alters, the easier they are to love. They are worthy of immense compassion as they have been cruelly mistreated and misunderstood and they are actually doing his/her best in the midst of having been isolated, flooded with misinformation and cut off from every source of help. Moreover, they spared you much pain and trauma by bearing it instead of you.


Alters are typically so love-starved that they are quite quick to forgive if they at last see in you a change of heart but until then they might have very legitimate reasons for being furious with you. You might, for example, have thought you were acting very spiritual and “fighting the flesh” when you were actually perpetuating an alter’s abuse. Solitary confinement is renowned for being a cruel punishment, and yet by suppressing or ignoring an alter, you could have forced him/her into the equivalent of solitary confinement, not just for days or weeks or even months, but possibly for years.


This is an alter who was already reeling in emotional pain and trauma, which was further intensified to almost intolerable levels by no-one believing him/her, or even offering a listening ear. Moreover, as bad as it would be to treat an adult this way, this alter, having been cut off from your understanding, has been left with nothing more to help him/her bear the torment than the intellectual and emotional resources of a child, and without your understanding of God.


And the pain you might have unknowingly inflicted on an alter could even extend way beyond this.


Consider this scenario:


A mature woman suffered horrific abuse from her father throughout her childhood but her host – the alter who is most often in control – is so much in denial that she is barely aware of what happened. Her father now lives quite a distance away and she decides to visit him and stay with him for a few days. A terrified alter who is aware of the immense danger tries desperately to warn the host not to go but the host not only dismisses the alter’s concerns as ridiculous, she shuts out the alter’s protests so effectively that she hardly remembers them. “In any case,” she assures herself, “I’m an adult now and can protect myself.” The first night she is in her father’s house, he enters her bedroom and somehow triggers the host so that she loses control of her body. This forces the other alter to alone consciously suffer the horrors that follow. The host does not regain consciousness until the next day and remains oblivious of what happened. Can you understand the alter being furious with the host over her foolish disregard of the warning?


The above is just one of thousands of possible variations on this theme but it illustrates how an alter’s intense resentment of you might be far more justified than you realize, and how you could be in serious danger until you regard this alter not as an insufferable nuisance but as a friend who alone has the potential to spare you much suffering.


Other possible reasons for alters being furious at other alters might not be accurate but could seem equally real to the alter. For example, an alter might think a child was abused because the child did not fight the adult abuser hard enough. This, of course, is a failure to consider just how much stronger than the child the abuser was. Another possibility is that a little alter who knew no better was seduced by an abuser who was gentle and this lulled the alter into having no qualms about the advances of another abuser, but this other abuser turned out to be terrifyingly aggressive.


God is love. So none of us should even try to pretend to ourselves that we have begun to be godly unless we are truly loving. A key facet of love is that it bends over backward to see other people in the best possible light. Love does not judge. It forever strives to give people the benefit of the doubt. It chooses to believe the best of a person. In the words of 1 Corinthians 13, love believes all things (verse 7) and “it keeps no record of wrongs” (verse 5, NIV).


God loves his enemies. This is so fundamental and it is critical to our salvation because each of us has at one time been God’s enemy. Over and over the Bible says we, who so desperately need God’s forgiveness, are to do our utmost to forgive others. So for many vital spiritual reasons – to say nothing about it being essential for your own healing and emotional well-being – you need to be loving and forgiving and understanding. This process of being like God must begin with your attitude toward your alters, including those parts of you that currently infuriate you or seem to endanger you. This involves all of the fruit of the Spirit – being kind, gentle, patient, compassionate, and so on.


We need to start living such Scriptures as:


Proverbs 15:1 A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.


Romans 12:17-19,21 Do not repay anyone evil for evil. . . . If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone. Do not take revenge . . . Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.


1 Peter 3:9 Do not repay evil with evil or insult with insult, but with blessing, because to this you were called so that you may inherit a blessing.


Despite it often seeming impossible (until alters reveal precisely what is motivating them) alters can genuinely believe they are helping you, even when doing things that appal you. In fact, there are several different ways in which this can come about.


Keeping Dangerous Alters out of Harm’s Way


As much as possible, alters must not be restrained, but gently reasoned with and shown so much love and tenderness that they want to please you. You and your alters (including this one) have already suffered far too much bullying. Every part of you desperately needs love and kindness and understanding.


However, sometimes an alter is not just annoying or embarrassing, but highly dangerous. This could necessitate temporarily restraining the alter so that he/she cannot take over the body or hurt other alters.


Just as it is possible to use one’s powerful imagination to create a safe internal place for an alter, one can fit strong external locks to keep the alter there. Confining dangerous alters to a place where they cannot cause harm is an extension of the individual places of retreat described in A Safe Haven for Alters to Retreat to.


I use the word prison because it might help some people who think in those terms to find this section, but even though the alter is likely to initially object to being briefly restrained, I consider the term so misleading as to be inappropriate. It should not to be thought of as a prison, nor a punishment. It is very temporary protective custody in a place that is made as comfortable and cozy as possible. It is a place to heal that will also keep other alters safe. It should be the nicest, happiest place possible under the circumstances. It might, for example, be a fairly large area with lots of beautiful, entertaining things inside, surrounded by plate glass walls allowing the alter to see and hear the rest of the internal world. The glass should be one way, however, so that only authorized alters only see and hear the one inside by pressing a button. This is for the protection of vulnerable alters outside the protected zone.


There are several dangers with confining any alter, however:


The alter might be forgotten about, either because the alter who put the alter there goes into hiding, taking the knowledge with him/her, or simply because once the situation is stabilized one feels less pressured to deal with the matter.


The alter is already angry and the main reason why he/she remains such a danger is that he/she has been cut off from the rest of you. It is not in your interest to perpetuate or even inflame this.


You need every alter.


Because of these issues:


Confinement should be avoided if at all possible.


It should be a very temporary arrangement.


Other alters should be informed about this alter so that he/she is not forgotten.


Alters who are emotionally strong enough to do so, need to speak with the alter as often as possible, helping him/her come up to speed with current circumstances (how much safer life is now than it used to be, etc) and helping the alter learn about Jesus – that he is stronger than evil and wants to remove all guilt and to be the alter’s best friend, and so on.


Not only is it critical that the confined alter not be forgotten, but working toward removing the need for confinement must be top priority so that the alter is there for a minimum time – typically only a day or so.


Usually, the alter has been duped into thinking that hurting other alters is a regrettable necessity, but with your help, within a day or so the alter should calm down and realize there is no need to hurt others and that all promiscuous or dangerous behavior must cease.


Release the alter as soon as you are sure that he/she is no longer a danger to himself/herself or to others and that the alter understands the importance of not taking over the body without the permission of alters who are more experienced in safely relating to the outside world. The alter is not to be released, however, until all the other alters agree that it is safe to do so. This is to stop the alter inside from tricking an inexperienced alter into releasing him/her prematurely. Some sort of compromise will need to be worked out if some alters remain scared of this alter even though he/she is now safe.


Anti-Christian Alters


Jesus treasured you and gave his life for you long before you ever became a Christian. Now it’s your turn to follow his lead by loving your alter and believing in him/her now, even before that alter discovers that Jesus is the most wonderful friend and not the hateful enemy he/she has been tricked into believing Jesus to be. The alter will be much easier to love after he/she changed but what glory is there for you in that? “If you love those who love you, what credit is that to you? Even ‘sinners’ love those who love them” (Luke 6:32). Moreover, the alter is unlikely to change unless you love him/her before he/she changes.


In my section about journaling, I wrote:


Don’t censor language or anger or even blasphemies that offend your Christian sensitivities. Understand that rather than trying to force alters to act as if they were Christian, the most powerful thing you can do spiritually is to tap the depths of their depravity so that eventually you can gently lift them up to Jesus. Your mission must be to help them fall in love with Jesus so that they end up so spiritually transformed that they want to delight God. Trying to suppress or force or manipulate them will only hinder their spiritual advancement and, ultimately, your own. And for you to lead them to Jesus, you must first get to know and understand them and win their trust. And this is what journaling is all about.


Include in your journal lots of questions you would like answered about God, your past, about why you do certain things, and so on. Also include regular indications that you would like alters’ feedback and contributions.


Don’t think that an anti-Christian alter could keep you out of heaven. If you were to die still having some parts of you opposed to Jesus, those fractured parts of you would instantly heal and by doing so they would gain your understanding of, and love for, Christ.


For encouragement, see “I Kept Trying to Force God to Reject Me”. Although not specifically mentioned in the testimony, this friend of mine has D.I.D. and much of his repeated rejection of God was initiated by his alters, but God remained steadfastly faithful.


Inappropriate Sexual Cravings or Behavior


It is not unusual for some alters to crave sex – sometimes even quite perverted sex – even though other alters sharing the same body hate and/or fear it. Often people/alters crave sexual encounters only because they crave love and approval and have been brainwashed by their abuser’s lies that they cannot receive love and approval any other way. Precious parts of you have been starved of love. As it says in Proverbs 27:7 “. . . to the hungry even what is bitter tastes sweet.”


Abusers exploit children who have been starved of unconditional love and they do all they can to crush their self-esteem until they think they are of no value except as sex objects. Through word and/or action, they are forced to the devastating conclusion that they could never be loved and that they have no alternative but settle for the attention received by degrading themselves sexually.

Abusers do all they can to confuse the notions of love and sex, making them think that sexual abuse and exploitation is love. Parts of you have been cut off from your insight that has enabled you to see through these lies. So these parts need you to gently, patiently and lovingly explain the truth to them. And both in lessening sexual cravings and in skyrocketing self-esteem, they will immensely benefit from discovering how loved of God they are.


For help with this, see:



Sex addicts might convince themselves that they love sex but don’t take this at face value. Many years ago, when the dangers of smoking were less publicized, psychologists brought together a group of smokers. They asked the smokers to describe how much they liked smoking and then subjected them to a strong presentation on the dangers of smoking. A follow-up study revealed that those who kept on smoking despite increased awareness of the danger, claimed to enjoy smoking more than ever.

People who think they are hopeless slaves to a particular sin or habit typically do their best to fool themselves into thinking they are enjoying their bondage. So the first step in helping these alters is to teach them that God is able and willing to set them free from any bondage. Help them realize that God loves them and longs to heal them and that his healing is a far better and safer alternative to sex.



Inappropriate sexual cravings or behavior could be a form of self-harm or (especially in the case of masturbation) it might be an attempt to dull the pain by mixing traumatic memories with pleasure.


Viewing porn might likewise be an attempt to desensitize oneself. Both self-harm and attempts at desensitization are understandable and are likely to have been driven by desperation. Nevertheless, such behavior is likely to traumatize certain other alters. You might be consciously unaware of what it is doing to them but ultimately, if one part of you suffers it ends up adversely affecting you all.


The other important issue is that such behavior corrupts a person and is sexually damaging. For example, the mixing of perversion (such as violence) with pleasure further perverts one’s sexuality. You have already suffered greatly because of a pervert, so let that motivate you to not in any way become one yourself, even if the perversion is not acted out with anyone.


It is tempting to fall into defeatism by telling yourself that you are already ruined, but this is a lie. If you give God a chance, your ability to heal is amazing. Moreover, God forgives and cleanses. He sees you as being purer than the purest virgin (if that virgin has not been cleansed from her sin).


Dissociative Identity Disorder Explained


When people suffer something so horrible that their mind recoils from the very thought of it, we can understand their mind trying to suppress all memory of the event. A simple blocking of the past would not work, however, if a person were continually reminded of the trauma by, for example, the trauma being repeated every few days. When the trauma is on-going, the mind has to employ a more sophisticated approach to maintaining sanity by giving itself as big a reprieve as possible whenever the trauma is not occurring. The mind divides itself so that part of it is kept unaware of the bad times. That way, whenever the bad times are not occurring, part of the mind can function without being oppressed by an awareness of the horrors that occurred yesterday nor by the paralyzing fear that the horrors might be repeated tomorrow.


Additional sources of trauma can cause further fragmenting of the mind. The advantage of fragmentation is that the mind-crippling task of trying to cope with an awareness of everything at once is broken down into smaller, though still highly challenging, pieces. It is not only memories that are divided up, but with them go other intellectual abilities as well. Some abilities can be replicated in another part of the brain, just like right-handed people can further develop the side of their brain that controls their left hand so that they can write with their left hand almost as well as with their right. Not all abilities are replicated, however. Some parts of the person end up with skills that other parts do not have. As a result, people with Dissociative Identity Disorder are usually more skilled than they realize until they become fully aware of all their other parts.


Previously known as Multiple Personality Disorder, the newer term sounds like gobbledygook but it is actually more meaningful than it first seems. If you were suffering, you might make it more tolerable by seeking to lessen your awareness of your current situation and imagining you were somewhere nice. This is called dissociation and although it would not stop all pain, it is likely to genuinely help. Instead of thinking of yourself as being somewhere else, an alternative is to think of yourself as being someone else – someone who is never subjected to this distress. That is called taking on a dissociative identity. This would become an obvious choice if, for example, you were a little child singled out for severe beatings simply because of who you are – the child of an abusive parent.


This coping mechanism becomes a disorder – a disadvantage rather than an advantage – if part of you got trapped in that dissociative state and could not return to normality even when external circumstances become normal. Becoming permanently disconnected from part of yourself would not be because of an inadequacy in you but because of the severity and prolonged nature of the trauma you suffered and because it began in your formative years.


On-going disconnection could occur if, for example, you remained too scared to let yourself remember what happened when you were in that dissociated state. Being unable to access unpleasant memories might superficially seem desirable but it is likely to keep you from ever healing from those memories. How could anyone resolve a problem that he refuses to think about? To live in denial is to let a problem grow. Moreover, you would probably lose not only access to certain memories but to skills you had developed while you were in that state and to certain intellectual potential that this part of you has. So remaining disconnected would prevent you from being as consistently skilled as you have the potential to be and keep you from accessing the full extent of your intellectual capacity.

If you have Dissociative Identity Disorder, healing involves reconnecting with those parts of you that had become disconnected from you. False healing occurs if a person is still disconnected but mistakenly supposes nothing is missing, simply because the person has lost all awareness of disconnected parts.


As a child’s brain grows it becomes increasingly rigid and the ability to compartmentalize itself through Dissociative Identity Disorder is lost if the process is not initiated by around about seven years of age. If someone learns the technique when young, however, the person can continue further compartmentalizing his/her brain later in life.


Far from being freaks, people with D.I.D. have, from an early age, stumbled upon an ingenious mental strategy for coping with situations that are almost beyond human endurance. It is an emergency response to an extreme situation, however. There are significant disadvantages to remaining fragmented, such as the inability to simultaneously draw upon one’s full intellectual resources to solve problems and heal from trauma.


Not as Weird as You Think


An older term for Dissociative Identity Disorder is Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD). Regardless of name, its existence has been recognized by researchers at least as early as the 1800s.


Explaining Dissociative Identity Disorder to Alters


Through no fault of your own you suffered something very traumatic. It is probably your first memory. This was so upsetting that it caused a temporary form of amnesia. With this type of memory loss you don’t forget all of the past, only part of it. In fact, you recall some of the past so vividly that it seems to be much more recent than it actually is. It’s rather like being Rip Van Winkle, who slept for years and when he woke up what seemed like yesterday was actually many years ago and the world had moved on without him being aware of it. It might be, for instance, that today’s date is much later than you suppose. What year do you think this is? I can show you a calendar or newspaper to prove to you the correct date if you wish. You probably also lost memory of your life before the trauma. Even if you have a good memory up until the present, there are probably many years of childhood memories that you are currently cut off from.


You are presently conscious of an important, irreplaceable part of you, but there is more to you than you are presently aware of. You have memories that you cannot currently access because the trauma you suffered caused you to become disconnected from the rest of yourself. You disconnected in a courageous attempt to protect the rest of you from dealing with the upsetting experience you suffered, but since that event the rest of you has gained information and skills that will comfort you and allow you to heal. Though you have fractured, this brokenness can be restored. Other parts of you can tell you things about you that you currently don’t know. Better still, those memories and skills you have temporarily lost will become your very own when you reconnect with the rest of you. Other parts of you might seem like other people but they share your body.


This disconnectedness has previously caused isolated parts of you to have little awareness of you, or little understanding of who you are. This lack of understanding could have caused them to treat you with less love and respect than you deserve. If so, this is most unfortunate, and they probably already regret their mistake and as they get to know you they will certainly regret any hurt they have caused.


Helping Younger Alters Understand


You know that something very scary happened to you. It was such a shock that it is as if a part of you fell into a deep sleep, like sometimes happens when someone has been hit hard on the head. You are now awake, of course, but while you were sleeping another part of you stayed awake each day and kept growing. You were asleep for so long that what seems like yesterday was actually years ago. Things that you have feared have gone forever and you are now very safe.


You are now as strong as a grownup, and God – who can do anything – has become your best friend. He loves you so much and if you let him he’ll take away your pain and make you happy.

I can tell you some of the good things that have happened since you were asleep, but there is something even better. In time, you will be able to join up with the part of you that stayed awake so that all that has happened while you were sleeping will become your memories and you will be as smart as a grown up and good at all the things the awake part of you learned while growing up.


See also:



Who am I?


It is distressing but not unusual for people with D.I.D. to suddenly not know who they are. If you are feeling this way now and have found yourself here, is very likely that there is more to you than you realize – that there are parts of you that you have not yet connected with who are more experienced and very capable and have been looking after you. It is also very possible that very many years have passed without your awareness and that you are now safer than you dare dream.


The Surprising Power of Journaling


Keeping a journal is an excellent way to make contact with alters and to come to grips with deep issues in one’s life. Let’s begin with a list of the benefits:


Like working on a jigsaw, a journal can bring together all possible clues about forgotten events and what might be troubling you. Moreover, even without the memory problems commonly associated with D.I.D., some clues – such as fleeting thoughts and dreams – are, by their very nature, quickly forgotten unless almost instantly written down.


A journal is insurance against losing valuable information. At almost any moment, the host or other alters might suddenly be triggered or overwhelmed and retreat to some inaccessible place deep within, taking their knowledge with them. This means that unless you are quite advanced in your healing you can alarmingly lose all memory of things you would never expect to forget until that part of you resurfaces. Of course, included in what could possibly be lost for who knows how long is all the information you have been painstakingly accumulating about alters and clues about your past.


Alters themselves might end up reading and contributing to your journal.


A journal might even move beyond rare entries by an elusive alter to becoming like a message pad, allowing you to communicate back and forth with one or more alters. Such communication might involve a time delay and this delay can sometimes be advantageous. Let me explain:


“When alters are with me, I am overwhelmed with severe anxiety, sadness and turmoil,” complained a woman when detailing why she was making so little progress in speaking with her alters.


“What you feel at such times is a normal consequence of Dissociative Identity Disorder,” I replied sympathetically. “When alters are close, you feel their emotions and these dear parts of you are currently in such inner pain, fear and confusion as to be almost brain-numbing for anyone hit by the full intensity of these feelings. It’s no wonder that you find yourself unable to communicate at such times. One of the things making journaling so helpful is that it can let an alter express herself/himself and then withdraw, allowing you to later read the alter’s words and respond with a helpful message to the alter when you are more clear-headed.”


Let’s move on to some helpful tips about journaling.


Keep your journal private. You might at some time choose to share a small extract with a therapist, but essentially it is for your eyes only. Even if you trust your partner, you might later discover a part who has not reached this level of trust. Secrecy inspires honesty. And God loves honesty. He is not afraid of truth nor surprised about your deepest doubts and concerns. So let go of inhibitions and pour out your heart – your feelings, your fears, frustrations, suspicions, childhood memories, how you feel about family members, and so on. Whether it comes in drips or gushes, don’t evaluate its accuracy or in any way analyze it – you can do that another time. Abandon attempts to correct it grammatically.


Just let it flow. Don’t even censor language or anger or even blasphemies that offend your Christian sensitivities. Understand that rather than trying to force alters to act as if they were Christian, the most powerful thing you can do spiritually is to tap the depths of their depravity so that eventually you can gently lift them up to Jesus. Your mission must be to help them fall in love with Jesus so that they end up so spiritually transformed that they want to delight God. Trying to suppress or force or manipulate them will only hinder their spiritual advancement and, ultimately, your own. And for you to lead them to Jesus, you must first get to know and understand them and win their trust. And this is what journaling is all about.


Dreams and flashbacks can be exceedingly unpleasant, so don’t waste them. They contain valuable information, so record them. The obvious place for this is in your journal. Writing them out and thinking about them when relaxed and fully conscious can help remove some of their terror and might possibly prove beneficial, should the dream recur. The practice also provides a good opportunity to ask alters about the dream or flashback – what does it mean to them, how do they feel about it, and so on.


Dreams can sometimes be like flashbacks – accurate memories of past events that you may or may not be aware happened. Alternatively, some dreams are the mind trying to come to terms with things that have been bothering you. Sometimes you were not even conscious that these matters were bothering you. Both of these types of dreams can be valuable in giving you insight into what some of your alters might be coping with. However, some dreams can actually be alters seeking to communicate with you, either by symbolically revealing how they feel or by sharing accurate memories. Additionally, some dreams are alters trying to come to terms with things by imagining themselves in various scenarios.


Include in your journal lots of questions you would like answered about God, your past, about why you do certain things, and so on. Also include regular indications that you would like alters’ feedback and contributions.


Different alters are likely to be active at different times of the day or night and can be triggered by different events into hiding or becoming active. To make the most of this, try to journal at various times of the day and night and maintain this practice over a long period, preferably indefinitely. Keep the journal handy throughout the day, and especially by your bed at night. If you are reluctant to take it to work, that’s not too critical because shy alters are more likely to be active at other times. However, some thoughts could come to you when you are at work that are worth jotting down so that you can copy it into your journal later.


Every now and then, read through all you have written. Even if you get no response, try discussing their content with alters.


Some entries might use different (often more child-like) spelling and grammar to what you would normally use, or the content might surprise you. If handwritten, you might notice a different handwriting style. It might take months for anything significant to appear but keep it up.


Try to make a copy of what you journal and store the copy elsewhere because it is quite possible that at some point an alter might destroy it in a cleaning spree or a moment of panic. Possibilities for creating a copy include photocopying, scanning or typing it into a computer and putting a copy on a USB (thumb) drive.


Retain copies of such things as emails that you send, and treat them as additional sources of information. If you already have writings from the past – even if it is just such things as old e-mails to friends or counsellors – treasure them. They can end up being valuable sources of information.

In the hope that the message eventually gets through to relevant alters, your journal should be interspersed with several entries emphatically stating the current calendar year. Merely writing today’s date is unlikely to suffice. For example, a number beginning with 20 might not even seem like a date to an alter used to seeing years starting with 19. Learning that it is many years later than he or she had supposed is likely to be such mind-boggling information for an alter as to stagger belief. You should therefore include instructions as to how this can be verified, such as where a calendar is located. You might also paste in your journal a portion of a newspaper that mentions the date, and so on.


Since, unknown to you, an alter could be terrified of a former abuser’s threats, list in your journal every reason why it is now safe to tell. Reasons might include the fact that you now have an adult body, that you are no longer financially dependent on your parents and you live independently, that some people (name them) from your past have died or are now feeble or live a long way from you or they do not know your present address or you have not seen them for a certain number of years (be specific). Provide as much proof as you can, such as an obituary or photo of a grave if the person is dead. Remember that people you are currently convinced were safe, might have actually terrified your alters.


Another important message to include is that unless they give you their permission, you will not blab anything that alters reveal. If they cannot trust you to maintain their confidentiality, do not expect to hear from them. Yes, it might be nice if you could pass on the information to a counsellor/therapist but you will never get any more information to pass on if you betray them. By all means, after they reveal themselves, try to persuade them to give permission, but say nothing until they agree.


In addition to recording the above matters in several places in your journal, keep reminding yourself (preferably out loud at times) of these facts, especially at times when you feel on edge. One of the times that you do this an alter could be listening for whom this information will remove the pressure to keep secrets from you.


List in your journal good things that have happened and how things have improved since they were last out and keep reminding yourself of these things from time to time.


A shared journal is important but, in addition, reserving journals for the private use of individual alters can also be beneficial. Another friend of mine with Dissociative Identity Disorder writes:


We offer a drawing pad/journal/notebook to alters that they can keep private from the rest of us if they wish. We have a basket of journals. Sometimes we share but we never read without permission. Often alters who had been asleep for years journal a lot privately for the first bit before they start really sharing with us in other ways. It’s kind of like learning you can trust the others by making sure they keep their promises in not reading what you write.


About the Host


The host is that part of a person who most often relates to the outside world. This is not necessarily the same part throughout a person’s life. A crisis might cause a host to go deep inside for many years, forcing another alter to fill the role.


It is tempting to think of the host as the ‘real person’ but a person is actually the sum of all of his/her parts, including alters that are as yet unknown. The host is often thought of as the most mature and capable part of a person but this is only because other parts have not yet had the opportunity to fully develop and reveal their abilities.


It is also tempting to think of the host as the most important part of a person but this is inaccurate. It is much more helpful to regard each part as irreplaceable and worthy of equal love and attention. In fact, as a baby usually receives more attention than other members of a family and might grow up to be more capable and ‘important’ than other members, so it is with alters.


Who are Alters?


Alters are often called personalities. Therapists commonly refer to each disconnected part of a person that has its own consciousness as an alternate personality, though they can also refer to them as alter egos or alter identities. These terms are usually shortened to alter (spelled with an e). In some ways, this term is unfortunate because it sounds like altar, which has scary connotations for some whose trauma had religious (often satanic) overtones. Some people use the term insider but this, too, is confusing because any of these parts has the potential to relate to the outside world. Sometimes they are referred to as dissociated parts.


Alters might not necessarily believe they have all the abilities of a full human. Some might even be convinced they are an animal or an object or a headless body or a ghost or whatever. Nevertheless, all alters have the potential to discover they are able to have a full range of human emotions and do everything we associate with humans.


Alters deserve to be regarded as fully human, and this is important for their healing.


Why You Desperately Need Every Alter


Without your every alter, you might survive but you cannot thrive. Every alter is a precious, irreplaceable part of you, no matter how obnoxious and useless some alters might seem before they heal.


As babies are initially weak and helpless and require huge amounts of care but they grow up to develop amazing abilities and can become enormously helpful and a huge support, so it is with alters, even if they currently seem useless and nothing but trouble. Each alter is unique and a vital part of your intellectual capacity.


You can never find full healing, reach your full potential and achieve your maximum without every one of them.


Alters can be angry, hateful, dangerous, anti-God, addicted to sin, sabotage much of the good you do and/or deeply embarrass you, but, with your help, every one of them can discover God’s love and become good, kind, loving and supportive.


In Jesus’ parable of the talents (Matthew 25:14-30), one man, instead of developing and increasing what had been entrusted to him, buried it. Your loving Lord understands the enormous pressures you have been under and there was a time when you had little option other than keeping your alters buried. Now, however, he wants you to keep pushing forward in healing until not one of your alters is buried but each is allowed to fully develop and become an active part of your daily life. Only by this can you reach your full potential and achieve the maximum for God’s glory, for your fulfilment and for the sake of all of those you will be able to bless with your enhanced abilities and wholeness.


To understand how an apparently useless or undesirable alter can become an astounding blessing to you and bring you great peace and achievement


Despising/Hating your Alters or the Fact that you have D.I.D.


People (hosts) who are just becoming aware they have D.I.D. are often tempted to feel superior to their alters and regard them as little more than nuisances. A friend of mine, who is himself a host, beautifully corrects this mistaken notion:


In my system, I’m the “host”. By that I mean I’m the one my alters laid their lives on the line to protect. I’m the one for whom my alters gave up so much in order to keep safe. I’m the one they held above the water, while they drowned, as it were. They gave up living in this life and held on to agonizingly painful experiences and situations so that I could survive and move on, while for years they were locked away in the dark haunted by those experiences without contact with the outside world.


I owe them everything, and each time I communicate with any of them I do my best to treat them with the same respect that I would treat someone who lost their legs diving under a truck to save the life of one of my children. Yes, they can be very angry. Yes, they can be annoying, controlling, distracting, painful to live with, but so might someone dealing with the consequences of having lost their legs saving my child. Regardless of that anger, I would happily immerse myself in it to give them one ounce of relief, especially after what they went through for me. It’s the least I could do.

The exciting thing is that I’ve found that as I treat them with respect and let them know that their needs are important to me by working with them on getting those needs met and allowing them time to just be themselves in a safe environment where they aren’t judged, they heal. They start to realize that those situations they held deep inside themselves have now past, and that they are now safe. As they are cared for, they start to use their skills to contribute meaningfully to our family – the whole person of whom I am a part.


For example, I have an alter called Do, who is very fast at getting things done. He now helps when we have limited time to get things done really quickly. This morning he came out to help me get my kids ready for swimming lessons. He managed to get them completely dressed, bags packed, everything in under eight minutes. Normally that would take me around an hour.


In another webpage, I wrote:


Do you suppose you would receive God’s approving smile if you heartlessly abandoned a deeply hurting child who was solely your responsibility and you let that little one suffer endlessly, not only refusing to comfort him/her but also preventing anyone else from emotionally supporting the child? Would you be able to stand before your eternal Judge and brazenly excuse your mistreatment by claiming the child is yours and therefore you can treat him/her however you wish? Of course not.


Being your own child would merely magnify, not diminish, your responsibility. If this is true for your offspring – someone whose genes are only fifty percent yours – your responsibility would, if anything, be even graver if the child you let languish in needless pain and ignorance is your inner child. To close your heart, defiantly saying, “It’s part of me, so I can do anything I like with it,” is highly offensive to the God to whom we must all one day give account.


The above is a quote from The Spiritual & Practical Reasons Why One Must Love One’s Alters. I suggest you read the entire webpage.


Lies


When an Alter Tells Lies


1. When ‘Lies’ Aren’t Lies


Dissociative Identity Disorder occurs because a person feels a great need to keep upsetting truths and memories from his/her consciousness. There are times when this is an important survival technique but when it remains in place long after the emergency has passed, instead of sparing oneself pain, it ends up perpetuating pain.


When an alter reveals something one does not want to face, an obvious way to maintain what one sub-consciously presumes is protective self-deception is to try to convince oneself that the alter is lying. It is likely to seem untrue because one has been ‘protected’ from so much information that would confirm the new fragment of truth. Furthermore, a clever way the mind often employs to help dull the impact of a traumatic experience is for one alter to store memories of only the facts about an event, and for a different alter to store memories of the deep emotions (such as fear, anger and emotional pain) generated by the event. One set of memories without the other feels unreal – it feels like a lie.


2. When they Truly are Lies


Sometimes alters feel the need to avoid a terrifying situation by deceiving abusers so that the abusers back off. [A biblical example of this need is when David pretended to be insane to avoid being killed by a heathen king (1 Samuel 21:10-15; Psalm 34, title).]


Such deception is most effective when a person not only acts the part, but literally believes it. Some alters have this power. It is well known, for instance, that certain alters end up convincing themselves that they are the opposite sex, or an animal, or a stuffed toy, or a headless body, or their abuser, and so on. For example, as his personal experiment to see what he was capable of, a friend of mine asked an alter who had this ability to pretend he had a certain phobia. Immediately, my friend felt as if he were in his forties (he was nothing close to that age) with thinning hair and much shorter than he really was, and he felt real fear of something that had never before scared him. I had expected that someone with this ability could pass any lie detector. I later learned that many years ago this man had felt the need to fool a psychiatrist by telling him atrocious lies for two full days. He not only succeeded, he literally passed a lie detector test.


Lies Abusers Tell – the Frequent Source of Alters’ Torment & Strange Behavior


You cannot find peace and wholeness while parts of you are tormented by guilt or shame or inferiority, or enslaved by destructive habits or evil, or are misguided, worried, hurting, frightened, angry, or filled with hate or bitterness.


Ultimately, the extent to which you are at peace depends on how much your alters are at peace, and what keeps alters distressed is that truths that would set their minds at rest have been cruelly kept from them. Much of an alter’s current distress centers less on the actual abuse than on being cruelly tricked into believing lies that, long after the abuse has ended, continue to make the alter feel condemned, hopeless, frightened and/or isolated.


Most of the misinformation has been deliberately and maliciously inflicted on the alters by the abuser, and repeatedly reinforced by him/her until the abuser’s lies seem undeniable truth. This process – virtually a form of brainwashing – is made easier by abusers accessing children rather than adults. Con artists prove how easily adults can be deceived but children are exceptionally vulnerable and almost instinctively accept as truth whatever an adult says, and even more so when terrorized.


Consider how many little children are certain that Santa Claus is real. Little ones who don’t believe in him are not smarter; they simply were not told about him by believable authority figures or they encountered someone who exposed the lie. If older people have authoritatively insisted that it is true and little children hear nothing to the contrary, they will inevitably believe what they are told, whether it be about Santa Claus, or that sexual abuse is normal or that the abuse was their fault or that the police will put them in jail if they tell the abuser’s secret, or any of a vast number of other bald-faced lies. This is an unavoidable part of being a child.


Children have to be quick to believe what they are told because their very survival hinges on believing warnings given by adults, and their intellectual development hinges on quickly absorbing vast amounts of information. It would take them excessively long to mature if they had to critically assess the accuracy of every bit of information they gain and, in any case, they start off not having the intellectual skills to do so.


This uncritical acceptance of what older children or adults tell them normally works brilliantly because they are surrounded by loving, trustworthy people. It turns to tragedy, however, if an evil person gains access to a child. Even more tragic, instead of being allowed to learn and mature, alters end up cut off from the parts of them that gain the knowledge and maturity and relationship with God to see through the lies.


The truth sets us free, but to know what truths an alter needs we must first discover which untruths are tormenting that particular alter. This involves talking with the alter but it will speed up the process of discovery for you to know what torturous, slanderous lies alters are typically tricked into believing.


The Danger of Alters Not Knowing that Past Abuse has Ended


Such things as vivid flashbacks and inner pain can make events that ceased years ago seem like just minutes ago. Moreover, alters have often been buried deep inside a person, causing them to have little or no awareness of external events and so leaving them unaware of the passage of time and changed circumstances.


Until alters realize that an abuser can no longer hurt them, they will not only suffer needless fear but might do damaging things, such as continue to enforce on you or your alters the oppressive rules that the abuser used to insist on. They will believe they are sparing you severe punishment by doing this. They might even return to the abuser and submit to his/her abuse; not knowing that they can now resist him/her. Moreover. they might be so afraid of the expected return of an abuser that they could engage in self-harm or even seek to kill themselves and, unintentionally, you as well.


It will initially be a shock for alters to discover that years have passed and so much has changed without their awareness. The shock is likely to initially be so mindboggling that the alter’s strong feelings of bewilderment and confusion are likely to wash over you as well; temporarily overwhelming you. Nevertheless, after the initial shock, the alter’s relief that life is now safer and better than when they had been abused will make the short-lived bewilderment very worthwhile. Alters usually adjust quite quickly to the startling news (typically one to three days) and then the benefits will begin to flow. Moreover, they can be told in a way that will minimize the shock and in a way that helps them quickly realize what a good thing it is.


Before giving the alter specific details of current circumstances, begin by assuring the alter that things are much better than he/she realizes. Tell him/her that he/she mercifully, but safely, lost consciousness for quite a while and that during that time good things have happened: his/her body has grown strong and that other parts of him/her remained active and learned many things and were able to leave the abuser. Explain that he/she has not missed out on the good things that happened but all the good memories of experiences and things learned will end up being restored to him/her and will all be as real as if he/she had personally experienced them because he/she shares the same brain and body as those who had the experiences.


Even the contents of the above paragraph will be mind-boggling to the alter and he/she will probably need a little break to ponder the implications. When you feel the alter is ready for more, show him/her around your current home and the district where you live (if this is different to where you lived when the alter lived when he/she was abused). Tell the alter all the good things that have happened to you since he/she was abused and explain why you are now safer than you used to be. When he/she seems ready, tell him/her the current year. If need be, use calendars, newspapers and so on to confirm it. Explain how long ago it was when he/she last hurt you and, if relevant, how much older and weaker the abuser now is and how far away the abuser is. If the abuser does not know where you live, you will obviously pass on that information to the alter. It is important, however, to only tell the alter the truth. Alters need to know they can totally trust what you tell them. Lying would end up creating serious trust issues and sabotaging your healing.


Think of everything that could contribute to the alter feeling safe and explain it to him/her. An example is that the alter now lives in the body that has grown up, making you physically stronger, smarter, no longer dependent upon an abuser and more likely to be believed by police. All of these things mean you have more power over the abuser than previously and would make the abuser afraid of you. Another factor is that the abuser is quite likely to only want to abuse children and would now consider you too old to abuse. (Do not, however, let the alter feel rejected or of no use because of this, but explain how valuable and useful he/she really is and how much God, you and others love and respect him/her.)


If necessary for further proof, take the alter to a real mirror (as distinguished from an internal or imaginary one) and show him/her the body he/she now has. Be cautious about this, however, because it could cause more shock, especially if he/she believes he/she is the opposite sex. If the alter does not realize his/her real gender, this matter will eventually need to be addressed but this information is usually not critical for him/her feeling safer and it is less traumatic if startling revelations occur gradually rather than piled on top of each other.


Abusers are desperate to terrify their victims into never reporting them to authorities, so they might use ridiculous threats – such as claiming to have supernatural powers – to cause the alter to think he/she could never escape the abuser’s awareness and punishment. Find out anything the alter fears and do all you can to provide convincing proof that those fears are groundless. Also, assure the alter of your love and respect for him/her and that you will protect him/her.


Alters Afraid to Change or Reluctant to


An alter who sees his/her entire reason for existence is to protect you from being punished by an abuser who can no longer hurt you is just one example of alters who need to change their role as you heal. This loss of purpose can be most upsetting for an alter, causing him/her to feel useless. Such an alter needs lots of encouragement and your help in receiving from God an awareness that he/she is of great value for who he/she is rather than merely for what he/she does. He/she also needs to receive from God a new role and a new sense of purpose.


Healing involves change, but it is a positive change. Help alters understand that there is such a thing as a positive change – that things really can get better.


This webpage might help:



Letting Jesus Support & Guide you Through a Crisis


Even though no one in the universe comes close to being as safe, competent and dependable as Jesus, I fully understand the tragedy of having enormous difficulty trusting him. Fearing Jesus is like a shivering child fearing the warm rays of the sun; as tragic as someone dying of starvation because he needlessly fears that the beautiful meals prepared for him are laced with poison.


As stated in Christian Index of Help for Dissociative Identity Disorder:


I’ve been privileged to have had large numbers of people with Dissociative Identity Disorder share their hearts and seek my help. Over and over I have seen that what I share in the links below really works and I give Jesus all the honor because I believe it is he who has dropped into my heart most of the understanding I have gained. I beg you, however, not to limit your healing by neglecting to continually look to Jesus to give you his personal guidance and insight. Jesus alone – and most certainly not my writings – is the source of all knowledge, wisdom and power. And he alone is available every moment of every day of every year. And whereas, despite doing our utmost, the best of us fail at times, only the real Jesus is the absolutely perfect friend and counsellor. No one can equal him when it comes to being utterly approachable and safe and flawlessly kind, gentle, understanding, patient and dependable.


Fears & Concerns About God


As stated earlier in this webpage:


Even though no one in the universe comes close to being as safe, competent and dependable as Jesus, I fully understand the tragedy of having enormous difficulty trusting him. Fearing Jesus is like a shivering child fearing the warm rays of the sun; as tragic as someone dying of starvation because he needlessly fears that the beautiful meals prepared for him are laced with poison.


Trust is exceptionally difficult for people with Dissociative Identity Disorder. The very fact that they have D.I.D. means that at least one key person in their lives has proved appallingly untrustworthy. The saying, “Once bitten, twice shy,” applies with devastating force. Having suffered so immensely raises to intense levels the fear of a repeat.


Fearing that humans could let you down is understandable because the best of us are weak and fallible. God is neither. And he is not sexual. Tragically, however, fear spreads like a cancer. The very thing that can protect you from dangerous people can end up keeping you from someone safe who can provide the support you desperately need. Never is this more so than when fear hinders us from trusting God.


Doubts about God’s trustworthiness might be inflamed by the tendency of fear to spread from real danger to genuinely safe situations, but I refuse to sidestep the reality of other significant factors:


1. The mistaken belief that the mere fact that bad things happening in the past mean that God approved of them happening or that he let you down. For help with this, see:



2. One of the malicious tricks in abusers’ arsenals is to claim that they have God’s blessing in what they do. This is made even worse when in order to protect themselves from being exposed as abusers they assume the cover of being a respectable person – and one of the best ways of doing that is to pretend to be Christians – and they are typically devious enough to fool most people. Abusers often make the ridiculous claim to their victims that their abuse is an expression of love. People who have been exposed to this lie as children can end up needlessly terrified of love. Likewise, those exposed to the lie that God approved of the abuser’s crimes can cause people to end up needlessly terrified of God.


3. Some abusers – especially in the case of Satanic Ritual Abuse – can actually get someone to dress up to look like Jesus and pretend to be him while abusing a child. A traumatized little child would not be able to see through the deceit and would end up terrified of Jesus.


When What Seems to be God, Jesus or an Angel is Fake


The real God is:       

 

Moral and good         

Non-sexual         

Gentle, Kind and Patient         

Consistent, faithful and trustworthy         

Forgiving and patient         

Totally consistent with the Bible


Here are three quite different examples of how people can mistake something else for God or Jesus:


1. A woman was most perplexed when what she believed to be God speaking to her was sometimes inconsistent with Scripture or displayed less than divine wisdom. In fact, it was so disturbing that it began to shake her faith in God. It turned out to be an alter who had been frustrated by the way the host kept ignoring her. Sometimes the alter actually had greater wisdom than the host and could have spared the host much heartache but the host kept ignoring and suppressing the alter. The alter perceptively worked out that she would be respected and her advice and requests followed if she gave the impression that it was not her voice but God’s.


The host told me, “In 99% of cases this alter had given me the right answers. She knew where to find my things when I had lost them and she woke me up in the mornings. She had helped me through the years to make so many wonderful decisions. Realizing that it was an alter restored my fellowship with God. I explained to my parts that they would never have to pretend to be God again in order for me to hear them and I asked them to please help me identify them when they speak.” The obvious solution to such a situation is to get to know the alter and come to an agreement whereby the host agrees to take very seriously all that the alter suggests and carefully weigh up all the alter’s reasons and the alter is allowed as much freedom to do as she pleases as the host is able to manage. In return, the alter agrees never again to pretend to be God.


2. Abusers have been known to dress up to look like Jesus and claim to be Jesus while he abuses a terrified little child.


3. Abusers, by the very nature of the evil things they do, open themselves up to the demonic and sometimes they deliberately implant demons into their victims in order to make them more compliant. Demons are nothing for Christians to be afraid of but they are very deceptive and will pretend to be friends etc. See Imaginary Friends ((although not stated there, the person involved had D.I.D.). They can just as easily pretend to be God or Jesus or angels from God.


Blame


No matter who you blame – God, yourself, your abuser or those who didn’t protect you from abuse, assigning blame ends up being like twisting a knife inside you. But someone must take the blame. Once you find that person you will finally be free. For powerful help with this, see Do-It-Yourself Healing.


Jesus, the Alter’s Alter


To quote from my webpage Healing and Wholeness for Alters:


Jesus: the Perfect Alter


An alter told one of Jake’s alters:


You exist as a separate part of Jake because Jake was pushed beyond human endurance. Then you come along like a lifeboat. You were loaded up with pain and set to sail. So was I. It wasn’t our fault.

This almost exactly describes the role of a scapegoat. The term “scapegoat” has entered everyday speech via the Old Testament. It has surprisingly much to tell us. Once a year, to atone for sin, two goats were chosen. One of them was sacrificed, paying the ultimate price for the nation’s sins. Of course, most of the nation’s sins were essentially average and yet, in the final analysis, each sin took no less than the death penalty for the blame to be fully resolved and extinguished. The remaining goat – called the scapegoat – stayed alive. Like the other goat, it was utterly innocent of any human sin, but after the sacrificial death of the other one, the sins of the entire nation were symbolically placed on its head and it was driven into the desert, symbolically taking the sins away from the people, never to be seen again (Leviticus 16:5-22).


Animal sacrifices, though hopelessly inadequate to resolve our guilt problems, were divinely instituted to point prophetically to the one sacrifice that can meet our souls’ deepest needs. The sacrifice to end all sacrifices would have to be human, since it is humans who are blameworthy. But to end all blame, the perfect sacrificial victim would, like the goats, have to be utterly blameless. Unless he had absolute moral perfection – like no other human the world has ever seen – a human sacrifice would be worthless. Since anyone who sins deserves to die, if any of us were to volunteer as a sacrifice we would only be suffering what we ourselves deserve, not suffering for the sins of others. The only perfect sacrifice is the One of whom John the Baptist said, “Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world.”


The entire Old Testament sacrificial system was ordained by God to prepare his people for the Savior of the world so that they would understand what our Lord achieved by dying on the cross. He is the embodiment and fulfilment of the whole Jewish sacrificial system. So when God instituted the use of a scapegoat, he was helping his people understand Jesus, who is the ultimate scapegoat.


That two goats were needed to atone for the nation’s sins – one dying and then the other released alive – points not only to the removal of our sins but to the death and the subsequent resurrection of Jesus. Not just Jesus’ death but also his resurrection were needed to resolve utterly the guilt and eternal consequences of humanity’s offenses. Just as Jesus rose to a new life, so he has the power to give us a new life, after fully extinguishing all of our blame and shame.


Humanity’s only true Innocent took upon himself all the blame, letting himself be stripped naked and abused to death so that you could have his peace and purity, and rise with him to a breathtakingly new life that begins here and now.


I am frequently deeply moved by the selfless, sacrificial way in which alters voluntarily take hurts and rejection upon themselves in order to protect the rest of the person. Like the perfect alter, Jesus wants to take upon himself all the guilt, all the horror, and all the shame you have ever suffered. He wants every trace of filth and pain and rejection to be dumped on him until it kills him, because in killing him, its power to hurt you is also killed.


If you were living in ancient Israel, it would not just be your sin that was symbolically placed on the scapegoat, but the sins of the entire nation. Even more astounding, the sins of the entire world were actually placed on Jesus when he agonized on the cross. This is significant. Usually, alters hurt, not because of their own sin, nor even the sin of their host, but because of the sins of an abuser or some other cruel person. There is no need even to work out exactly who is at fault and to what degree, however, because all the sin and all the blame and shame were put on the ultimate Scapegoat. Alters do the best they can but no alter can totally remove all blame, shame and pain. The host still feels some of it. And even if an alter could perfectly achieve full peace for the host, what about the alter? What can be done to relieve the alter’s own suffering?


We have noted that the pain an alter bears is almost never the alter’s fault. The source of the hurt is the sins of others, and he/she bears the pain, sacrificing his/her own well-being for the sake of the host. This is Jesus’ role. Being God, he – and he alone – can do it to perfection. And he does it for all of humanity. For an alter to hold on to the pain is to suffer unnecessarily (which would break God’s heart) and to render Jesus’ torturous death a waste, as far as both the alter and host is concerned.

Dumping pain upon an innocent alter is an act of desperation that can keep a person alive until he/she finds God’s perfect remedy: Jesus. Asking an alter to bear pain is at best an emergency measure only. Like putting chewing gum on a leaking fuel tank, as a tiny aircraft is in flight, it could save someone temporarily, but something more effective needs to be done as soon as possible. It is vital that alters be relieved of their pain as quickly as possible, both for their sake and so that their hosts can receive full healing.


Jesus is the alter par excellence; literally the alter’s alter. For both the host and all alters, Jesus bore all the horrific consequences of sin, completely removing all the blame, pain and shame, destroying it all by his own death, so that none of it could ever come back to hurt the host or any of the alters.

Please don’t let familiarity with the following Scripture rob you of its full impact. Read slowly and prayerfully what it says of Jesus, the perfect alter:


Isaiah 53:3-6 He was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows, and familiar with suffering. Like one from whom men hide their faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not. Surely he took up our infirmities and carried our sorrows, yet we considered him stricken by God, smitten by him, and afflicted. But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our iniquities; the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed.


Jesus took upon himself full punishment for every sin that has ever been committed. He was betrayed, disowned, spat on, stripped naked, made a public spectacle of, shamed, laughed at, degraded, slapped, punched, flayed alive, spiritually cursed (Galatians 3:13), rejected by his people and by God (Mark 15:34), tortured to death for you. He bore your rejection, your heartache, your humiliation. For you, he took the pain, the shame and the blame.


God’s plan has always been that we offload our pain on to him, not upon an alter.


1 Peter 5:7 Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you.

Psalms 55:22 Cast your cares on the LORD and he will sustain you . . .


When alters were formed, the host did not understand the implications of this truth, but now it can be explained to alters so that they can be relieved of all their torment by handing over to the Lord their pain, distress, and secrets, letting the Lord of glory, who lovingly volunteered to be humanity’s scapegoat, bear it all on the cross and annihilate it with his own death. Then alters can be free to enjoy life and can help hurting parts of their host, not by personally bearing hurts and secrets, but by encouraging fellow alters to lay all their pains and burdensome secrets upon the crucified Lord and rise in the triumphant new life of our resurrected Lord.


The Most Effective Way to Heal Fast


All alters desperately need Jesus. They are usually tormented by guilt and shame and feel so worthless that it is not uncommon for some to even be convinced that they are evil. Jesus’ whole reason for coming to earth was to resolve these stupendous needs in a way far beyond what anyone in the universe – and most certainly more than any counsellor – could ever achieve. He, alone, as the utterly Innocent One, took upon himself all our guilt; suffering our full punishment and then cleansing us utterly and granting us his moral perfection, purity, goodness and exalted status with God, the Holy Judge of heaven and earth. Obviously, these truths should be explained more simply and in more detail, but it is imperative that alters be made aware of them.


Alters also usually need someone to mother and father them, but because they are now in an adult body this is rarely possible, nor is it usually safe to seek it from anyone other than Jesus for this role as it could expose both alter and host to ridicule or abuse, or to devastation if the mother/father figure needed to leave at some later stage. Only Jesus is utterly safe in giving hugs, tucking alters into bed and so on, and fully understands the best way to help at every stage of healing, and offers the total security of never getting sick or burned out, changing, moving away, or dying. And no one understands any of us like Jesus does, nor has his wisdom. Moreover, Jesus fervently loves alters with total selflessness without any sexual overtones and longs to comfort and heal them.


There is a critical blockage to receiving Jesus’ help, however. Because Jesus is not an abuser, he will not force himself upon alters, no matter how much he yearns to help and knows they need him. A further hindrance is that alters often have such distorted ideas about Jesus (confusing him with abusers, for example, or believing lies people have said about him) that they can be terrified of him.

So the greatest of all things that anyone can do for alters is to reassure them of how gentle, kind, caring, patient, understanding and comforting Jesus is and how much he wants to take their pain upon himself – bearing their guilt, fear and inner pain as the alter’s Alter – and be their devoted friend and have lots of safe fun with them. (Yes, because play is important to every young alter he longs to play with them in a way that builds them up intellectually and in self-esteem and shows them great respect.)


Encourage alters to dialog with Jesus. Assure them that he will respect whatever boundaries they put up and that he will wait for as long as it takes for them to be sure that they are safe with him. Jesus is the perfect counsellor and the ultimate healer. Once they commence talking with Jesus, the door to wondrous things has opened.


Jesus loves you so much that he longs for you to let him be as much an integral part of you as any of your alters. Because Jesus is not an abuser, he will never force himself on you but he would love to be invited into the inner circle of your alters. For example, when you have alter meetings, he would love to be there; not to dominate but to listen, share and vote just like them.


See also:



Thinking of Oneself as Bad/Evil/Unforgivable


Seeing yourself as spiritually or morally ruined, evil or unforgivable is a deadly misconception that you dare not tolerate. If allowed to continue unchallenged it will be a source of unspeakable torment, and it will cripple you psychologically, spiritually and, potentially, even morally. It is better to sleep with a rattlesnake in your bed then suppress, tolerate or even entertain this deadly lie. It sucks the life out of a person and can drive one to desperate measures and even suicide. There is no need to let this ruin your life. You must fight this lie with everything you have until it is utterly eradicated from your thinking.


This deception is so damaging and needless that I have poured years of agonizing effort into amassing a huge mountain of help for people ensnared by this hideous self-image. To my frustration, however, I cannot read and absorb all that help for you. Forced to leave that responsibility to you, I can only get down on my knees and beg you to keep prayerfully reading all that I have provided on this subject until you find full relief. Even then, I expect you will repeatedly find yourself needing to revisit my writings and read still more of all I have on the subject. As I have written:


The enemy of our souls is the master deceiver because that is all he can do. The devil cannot change reality. He cannot change the fact that God loves you with all of his unlimited love and that Christ died for the sins of the entire world, which has to include every sin you have ever committed. So all he can do is mess with your feelings, hoping that you will start to believe them rather than believe in the cleansing and forgiving power of Christ and the love of God.


Even if you feel you are beyond God’s forgiveness, that feeling is a lie from hell as serious as claiming that Christ did not die for the sins of the world.


Until you realize that false feelings will continue no matter how devoted you are to Christ, you’ll be so vulnerable to false feelings that the tempter will keep piling them on more than ever. None of us ever gets to the point where we are no longer tempted. Unwanted thoughts and feelings would only slightly taper off if the tempter has tried so often without ruffling your feathers that he begins to believe that such an attack will never succeed with you and is a complete waste of his time. If he got mileage out of that approach in the past, he will take a lot of convincing.


Satan is a sore loser. Once he finds something that shakes us up he keeps trying it over and over relentlessly until he is absolutely convinced that his tactics will never again work with you. When, finally, he seems to leave, it is only to bide his time for a surprise attack. His persistence is so very unpleasant. The positive side, however, is that this will make you stronger and stronger as you keep resisting his lies.


It is tragically common for alters to be riddled with guilt because:


1. Abusers typically try to ease their own guilty conscience by blaming their victims, rather than accept responsibility for their own actions.


2. Abusers falsely accuse their victims (and often reinforce it with cruel punishment) to try to break their victims.


3. Abusers hope that overwhelming their victims with false guilt will undermine their desire to report the abuse to anyone. The more that victims imagine it is all their fault, the less likely they are to report the crime.


It usually works because children have a particularly sensitive conscience and usually accept as truth whatever older people tell them.


A further source of torment, is that it is not uncommon for abuse victims to feel moments of pleasure. This can end up even more confusing and devastating than pain and can lead to a needlessly tortured conscience.


Since abuse victims are no more sinful than the rest of humanity, it is tempting to be content just to explain how they have been cruelly tricked into blaming themselves. It would be tragic to stop there, however, because Jesus has the ultimate remedy not just to false guilt but to the real guilt that, deep down, we know we all have. Through him, even the most sexually perverse person on the planet can be made purer than the most innocent of virgins who has yet to experience Jesus’ cleansing. So I beg you to help each of your alters enjoy this by introducing them to the pages listed at The Ultimate Cure for Guilt. I suggest you start at the first and as you complete reading each page, click the Next Page link at the end of the text.


Addictions & D.I.D.


Addictions can take many forms, including an addition to over-eating, self-harm, sex, and so on.

Beating an addiction is agonizingly difficult for anyone, and even more so when one is battling inner pain, but Dissociative Identity Disorder makes it still more complicated and sometimes impossible.

No matter how much the host – the person most often in charge of the body – is determined to break an addiction, it can range from unusually difficult to literally impossible until certain alters are discovered and helped to see the wisdom of ending the habit.


There are a number of different ways in which the resolve of even the strongest-willed host can be sabotaged. Let me explain:


A person’s alters usually vary in their powers. Most people with D.I.D. have certain alters who have the power to forcibly take over the body and do things that are totally contrary to the host’s wishes. The host might be aware of what is happening (called co-consciousness) but is quite powerless to stop it, or the host might lose consciousness and have no idea what happens when the other alter is in control. In some cases, this could happen on and off for years, with the host having no idea he/she is living a double life.


Certain alters have a different power. They can remain completely hidden from the host and, without taking over the body, can force the host to do his/her bidding by giving the host an irresistible urge to do something that the host would normally vehemently not want. This would seem to be demonic, except that such alters can give their heart to Jesus and not only completely cease misusing their powers this way but become genuinely committed to acting godly.


On the other extreme, some alters unknowingly sabotage attempts to break addictions simply because they are not even aware of the host’s desire to break a habit. This is yet another reason why it is so important to keep alters informed of one’s plans and of one’s reasons for decisions.


There can be all sorts of unexpected reasons for an alter sabotaging a host’s resolve to break an addiction. Here’s one of countless examples: one alter felt compelled to smoke continually, not because of an addiction to nicotine but for self-protection. She believed that at any moment an abuser could suddenly appear and that her only hope of protecting herself was to have a lighted cigarette in her hand to use as a weapon. She believed that holding something like a cigarette lighter would not work because of the slight delay in producing a flame, and that having a lighted cigarette without smoking it would also fail because the cigarette would extinguish. And holding an obvious weapon such as a knife would be socially unacceptable.


Once you understand the reasons behind the alter’s actions, you can then work on resolving the matter. For instance, with an alter who is terrified about not having a lit cigarette in her hand, everything would change upon the alter being informed that the abuser has moved on and is no longer a threat to her. (Until they are befriended and told about current reality, most alters are denied such basic information.) Once this is sorted, it is then that the inevitable addiction to nicotine must be fought, just as people without D.I.D. must.


For much encouragement and help with this final stage, see:



Feeling Angry (General)


If you have times when you feel angry but have no idea why you feel that way, it could be because a part of you (an alter) is so angry that his/her feelings are washing over you.


Anger is at times simply a desperate attempt to express deep pain. Part of the abuse that is common for people with D.I.D. to have been subjected is to have not been allowed to express feelings of grief and pain by crying. Abusers often hurt their victims even more if they scream in pain or shed tears.

Traumatized people are often desperate to be seen as being tough in the hope that this might cause would-be abusers to back off. To be angry is often thought of as being tough, whereas screaming or shedding tears is often viewed as being weak. This fallacy is sometimes even perpetuated in western Christian circles. In Real Christians Grieve this fallacy is exploded.


So anger could be more an expression of pain and grief, or an attempt to harden oneself against more hurt, or an attempt to protect oneself by scaring off people.


Nevertheless, what one feels is often genuine anger at the injustice one has suffered. Such anger is a key part of the healing process and nothing to be ashamed of.


Whether the anger is directed toward yourself, or to another part of you, or toward God or another person, or it just seems a random feeling, it is an opportunity to deepen your healing.


For most of my life, I had no idea that getting in touch with one’s anger is an essential part of the healing and forgiving journey. I explain my discovery in a fairly short but important webpage: Why to Truly Forgive Hinges on Getting in Touch with Your Anger. I beg you to read it, and the links at the end of the page.


Most of us are so anxious to forgive as quickly as possible and not let the sun go down on our anger that we end up merely stuffing anger deeper inside rather than resolving it. We suppose we are taking the godly path when we are actually taking the cowardly path of not admitting to ourselves just how atrociously we have been sinned against. Being disconnected from the anger seething inside us tricks us into thinking the matter has been resolved and this has the unfortunate effect of short-circuiting the entire healing and forgiving process. The exciting thing about making this discovery is that it opens the way to more peace and healing than you have ever known.


Getting in touch with one’s anger is so critical that rather than being hard on yourself or criticizing alters for their anger, seek to sympathize with any parts of you that are angry and endeavor to understand why they feel this way. Remember that you are so deeply loved of God that he himself is furious that someone has broken his heart and his laws by hurting you.


God offers forgiveness not because sins are minor or hardly matter but because they are so atrocious that none of us could survive God’s wrath unless he forgives. He tolerates sin only because he is giving the sinner a chance to repent before Judgment Day and if God had not extended that tolerance to us over and over and over we would be in hell right now. Anyone who has mistreated you who is not genuinely filled with remorse before Judgment Day for every sin will end up bitterly regretting his/her actions for all eternity.


Self-harm is typically an expression of anger that is turned inward.


Also see:



Anger at What One has Suffered


Suppressing anger is neither Christian nor healing. What is needed is not stifling one’s anger but resolving one’s anger.


I have never encountered anyone with Dissociative Identity Disorder who has not suffered horrific injustice that makes even God angry. In fact, God is so angry at what was done to you that the only solution was for him pour out all this wrath upon himself (that’s what the cross is all about) and anyone not truly regretting his/her offenses will regret their actions for all eternity in hell. One way or another, the injustice you have suffered will be avenged.


Forgiveness in no way means excusing or minimizing the gravity of an offense. It does not mean blaming oneself for the offender’s actions or saying he/she could not help it or that it was not so bad. Nor does it mean tempting the person to re-offend. The offender might need to be removed from sources of temptation by not being allowed access to children and perhaps even by you having little contact with the offender. Surprisingly, a loving heart might even require one to seek the person’s imprisonment.


Forgiveness means letting go of ill will and wanting God’s best for the person. God’s best is that each of us truly regrets our sin and never re-offend.


Coping with the Loss of a Counsellor/Support Person


There is no side-stepping the fact that losing a counsellor or support person is a devastating blow and I feel deeply for anyone suffering this. Nevertheless, the greatest friend, counsellor and therapist in the universe is still faithfully available to you every moment of every day of every year. I spent years daily helping the woman who ended up being my wife and throughout that time I continually told her that she did not need me. “If God chose to use me, that was fine,” I told her. “But if I messed up or burned out or whatever, God could at any moment send her a replacement. Or he could choose to do all the counselling and support himself, which would be far superior to anything any human could do.”


You can even choose a superb Christian therapist/counsellor and still end up deeply hurt, if due to unforeseen circumstances (sickness or whatever) the therapist/counsellor ends up having to leave you in a year or so before you are fully healed. This is quite a possibility because full healing usually takes several years and counsellors are typically so compassionate and needed so much that they are often in danger of over-extending themselves and burning out.


This is one of several reasons why it is important to try to avoid emotional attachment and/or dependence upon a specific counsellor, but despite the best intentions it often happens and if the counsellor is forced to leave at a critical time in your healing, it can be quite a blow. . . .


If you have lost someone who has been a key person in your healing journey, there are several reasons why it feels excessively devastating:


1. Past abuse has crushed your self-esteem, causing you to feel far more hopeless, incapable and unlovable than you really are. In reality, you are a survivor; someone who has overcome enormous odds and you have Almighty God on your side.


2. Chances are that some event in your past caused you to feel abandoned and losing this special person can trigger those same feelings of abandonment even though this person’s actions might in reality not be nearly as bad as what you suffered in the past and things are not nearly as serious because now you have far more maturity and security.


3. As explained below, you are likely to have bonded in a psychologically unhealthy way with this person and as unpleasant as the breaking of the bond is, it could well end up being a good thing and release you to heal more.


Counsellors should keep a little aloof. Since the reasons for this are not immediately obvious, I need to provide a fuller explanation.


It is of critical importance to your healing that every part of you bond with, and become dependent upon, Jesus and each other. Unfortunately, even though it can seem to initially help, getting too close to a counsellor, or to anyone else, can detract from this critical bonding or even undermine it.


How awful it would be if someone wanted to heal her marriage and took her husband to a counsellor and then her husband fell in love with the counsellor! To heal a marriage the goal must be for a husband and wife to bond with each other, and certainly not with a counsellor. Likewise, for healing of Dissociative Identity Disorder, the goal is for all of a person’s parts to bond with each other, not with a counsellor.


You obviously need to bond with any children and/or marriage partner that you have, but not even these relationships must be allowed to detract from your relationship with Jesus and with every part of you.


Counsellors should not let little alters call them Dad or Mum or hug them. It is very tempting to break this rule because, in the short term, it seems loving and effective. The serious problem, however, is that it can create too strong a bond that, in addition to the issue already mentioned, would prove devastating if ever the counsellor suffered from burnout, illness, needed to move away, or whatever.

Counsellors who make the mistake of getting too close usually have a good heart and, even if they have been doing it for years, are too inexperienced to realize the dangers. Not only is it unprofessional to hug counselees, it is often a sign of lacking the training and understanding that professionals have.


Do not presume that the counsellor’s gender will protect you from inappropriate bonding. Young, love-starved alters can bond exceedingly deeply and very quickly to either gender. Moreover, people with D.I.D. have usually been sexually wounded and often have alters who are unsure of their own gender and/or are attracted to the same gender as their body. You might not be currently aware of any alter within you with such vulnerabilities but you probably have alters you have not yet met.


People with Dissociative Identity Disorder can quickly develop unhealthily powerful attachments to those who show them kindness, and what initially feels good and speeds their recovery can end up sabotaging their healing.


Until they heal, people with D.I.D. might have many casual friends but deep inside they are tortured by extreme loneliness and intense yearning for acceptance, further compounded by the belief that anyone discovering the full truth about their past would reject them. They feel haunted by dark, tormenting secrets that they keep suppressing from everyone (and even from themselves). To release that fearful pressure and isolation by sharing their secrets and find warm acceptance is such a relief that it powerfully bonds a person with whoever the secrets are shared. This, combined with the false but strong deception that virtually no one would accept them if they truly knew them, typically causes people with Dissociative Identity Disorder to feel strongly attached to, and dependent upon, a counsellor or whoever they open up to.


To understand the power of the forces at work, remember that parts of the person are literally like little children desperate for a parent’s love and approval, others are like older children yearning for a best friend and still others are like teens pining for romantic love. It is not at all unusual for some to be sexually attracted to someone of the same gender as their own body. And all these different alters can believe they have found in the one counsellor (or friend they have opened up to) all the love and acceptance they have been starved of all their lives. Almost overwhelmingly powerful forces combine, not only on a conscious level, but on a subconscious level.


Little children typically think their parents infallible, and starry-eyed lovers are blinded to faults in the person they idolize. People who are hurting are exceptionally sensitive. Alters can take the tiniest thing as a huge personal insult. Bring all these components together and the result is such intense emotions that if you and your alters bond exclusively to one person, then even temporarily losing access to this person can feel not just like being orphaned but being widowed, and like being betrayed by your best friend, all at the one time.


What makes these attachments so dangerous is that no one but God can guarantee never to die or get sick or need a break. It also puts enormous pressure on the person who is the object of this dependence. Becoming so crucial to another’s healing and well-being can easily so overload a helper that he or she cracks under the demands placed on him or her. Moreover, it makes the person with Dissociative Identity Disorder dangerously vulnerable to exploitation if the one they depend so highly upon has the slightest moral weakness.


It is for very good reason that it is considered not just unwise but highly unethical for a counsellor to have a romantic relationship with someone he or she is helping. Doing so is enough to get professionals deregistered because it is well established that people who are emotionally wounded are highly vulnerable and can so easily end up feeling emotionally attached to anyone offering them support. This is further exasperated by the fact that people with Dissociative Identity Disorder usually need prolonged help.


Anyone recovering from Dissociative Identity Disorder needs to be in a position where the most significant person in their recovery could at any moment die or be forced by circumstances to withdraw without it undermining much of the progress made.


An alter wrote to me, saying:


My host’s husband left her alone with all her outside children to raise all by herself. He told her, “You need too much.”


We don’t want you to go away from us like he did because we need too much because that made our host cry and cry and cry and throw up until she almost died. We don't want to make that happen to her again.


I replied:


Precious Friend,


I understand your needs. They are very deep, intense and critically important. I feel for you and long to be used of God to help you have all these needs met. But although humans can facilitate, your needs are so great that it is critical for your well-being and for other people that you don’t look to other people to meet your needs. You actually need someone who is available 24/7 and who can guarantee not to burn out or die. Otherwise, you are vulnerable to more heartbreak – and you have already suffered far too much of that.


I will do my best, but the only safe and totally effective way to meet your needs is through Jesus and through each part of you loving, understanding and supporting every other part of you.


As you understand, it is not fair on yourself, or on any counsellor, to look to a counsellor as if he were a substitute husband who pledges to be with you till death and gives you priority over everyone else who needs him. I know you don’t think this is what you are asking but it is so easy to slip into this degree of dependence without realizing it.


Nor is it safe for you, or fair on any husband, for you to unconsciously make a husband into a substitute mother and father for your every alter, even though your alters desperately need it. This does not mean that your needs cannot be met but they must be met through Jesus and through you loving and supporting each part of you. My role must not be primary, but must be to help you discover how to have your needs met by Jesus and by yourself.


Since only God is immortal, infallible and unchangeable, alters need to learn as quickly as possible to keep availing themselves of human help while at the same time shifting their dependence as much as they can from humans to God. For this reason, I have established a DID group, an important goal of which is that members bond to the group rather than to myself or any individual in the group. Other people are an important part of the healing process but alters are best helped by looking primarily to God and their host for nurturing, approval, parenting and so on.


I’m always keen to find the good in every tragedy because we have a God who has promised to bring good out of all things (Romans 8:28). That most certainly does not mean that God causes all things but that he loves us too much and is too powerful not to weave anti-God tragedies that break God’s heart into the things that end up blessing us.


When it is Unspiritual to Refuse Human Help


In the first part of God, Counsellors & Inner Healing Kathy bravely shares her discovery that she had been hindering her healing by trusting counsellors more than she had been trusting God. However, the same webpage tells of another trauma-surviving friend who discovered that she had been guilty of the opposite danger – potentially dishonoring God and missing out on healing by refusing human help.


Protector Alters


Protector alters courageously do their utmost to protect certain other alters from harm. Often a significant part of this protection is their insistence that alters do not reveal themselves to people and, in some cases, not to the host or some other alters.


Unfortunately, protector alters’ perception of harm is typically distorted by the trauma they have suffered and/or is out of date. This means that even though they have the best intentions, they can unknowingly delay healing until they are gently helped to see the value of giving more freedom of expression to the alters they care for.


Protector alters might be scared, but they act strong and usually interact with the outside world more than those they seek to protect. As a result, they often win the respect and admiration of other alters, thus causing them to believe a protector’s evaluation of danger.


I regard all alters as equally valuable, just as I regard a baby as just as precious as an adult, even though the baby has not yet developed to its full potential. Nevertheless, it is often initially necessary to give priority to helping the protector because until you win his/her confidence you will be denied access to other alters.


Seeming to Go Backward or Feeling Worse, Rather than Better


I explain below how things seeming to be getting worse is usually an illusion. It is tempting, nevertheless, to give up at such times. So to encourage you to persist with healing, it seems best to start with this quote from my writings:


If you suspect you could have Dissociative Identity Disorder, then finding, comforting and supporting your every alter and organizing them into a tightly knit team working in unity toward a common goal should be a higher priority to you than your marriage, your children, your job, your ministry and even your relationship with God. Why? Precisely because each of those other responsibilities is so important and each of them is profoundly impacted by how harmoniously and effectively your alters pull together. What could happen if parts of you are able to take over your body without your knowledge? Ponder the possibilities if those parts are allowed to remain cut off from your knowledge of morality or even from the knowledge that you are married. Consider even the legal implications of a sexualized alter in an adult body who believes she is a young teen getting involved with a boy her own age.


Every aspect of your life and future will suffer if you are disorganized inside, and everything you touch will thrive if you are exquisitely functioning within.


Progressing on the healing journey involves enjoying significant breakthroughs interspersed by times when you feel you are going backward. The main reason for this is that it is normal for alters who have little awareness of current circumstances to gradually become aware of healing that other alters have been enjoying and to be inspired to reveal themselves so that they, too, can heal. Because they have been largely out of the loop, however, they will know little of what you have learned of D.I.D. and they will need you to start almost from scratch in teaching them things that to you are now basic. Moreover, they will have their own pain, memories and issues that will need healing.


Until they heal, when these alters come to the fore, their pain and ignorance might feel so strong that it temporarily overwhelms your own peace and understanding. For example, you might temporarily lose memory of all that you have learned about D.I.D. At such times it will be tempting to wish those parts of you had remained buried, but they will heal and their healing will bring you more peace and wholeness than ever.


You can easily reach the point where it seems there are too many alters to cope with, but as one alter heals he/she will become your ally and will help carry the load for you and assist you in comforting, and guiding the healing of other alters.


When the going gets tough (and it inevitably will) it is tempting to revert to burying things and living in denial.


For more help, see:



Bad Memories, Flashbacks & Nightmares


In Positive Confession? Or Living in Denial? (a webpage I urge you to read in its entirety) I write:

Whether it be credit card debt, early signs of cancer or past trauma, problems are never solved by ignoring them. Putting a crisis out of your mind might give you temporary peace but the problem will only worsen and you will inevitably end up wishing you had faced it earlier.


If you have a full bladder and you ignore the urge to empty it, the uncomfortable feeling will go away in a while. In time, the discomfort will return, reminding you of the need to take action. You can ignore it again and it will fade away. Keep ignoring it, however, and the pain will keep returning with increasing frequency and intensity until you either take decisive action or you embarrass yourself.

Inner wounds caused by past trauma act the same way. The memory and/or associated pain will make its presence felt but you can ignore it and it will go away. Eventually, the memories and/or inner pain will come back and, if ignored, they will keep returning with increasing frequency and intensity, because ignoring a problem merely gives it time to grow worse.


Nightmares, flashbacks and/or inner pain are your mind dutifully alerting you to matters you must face before they become even more serious. It is warning you that, despite your attempts to move on, you are still being crippled by past trauma. Most likely, your lack of recovery is because you have left past events languishing in the dark – where things always seem scarier – instead of devoting sufficient effort to prayerfully re-examining them in the reassuring light of God’s truth. For instance, lurking in the murky depths of your consciousness could be the fear that ugly incidents in the past indicate that God abandoned you and that he is not good and trustworthy, or that because of those unfortunate events God sees you as untrustworthy or unforgivable, or that you see yourself that way.


If so, these are not merely events in the past; they are fears and lies that hold you back right now and will continue to do so until you identify the lies that haunt you and you explode them with God’s truth.


In The Surprising Power of Journaling I write:


Dreams and flashbacks can be exceedingly unpleasant, so don’t waste them. They contain valuable information, so record them. The obvious place for this is in your journal. Writing them out and thinking about them when relaxed and fully conscious can help remove some of their terror and might possibly prove beneficial, should the dream recur. The practice also provides a good opportunity to ask alters about the dream or flashback – what does it mean to them, how do they feel about it, and so on.


Dreams can sometimes be like flashbacks – accurate memories of past events that you may or may not be aware happened. Alternatively, some dreams are the mind trying to come to terms with things that have been bothering you. Sometimes you were not even conscious that these matters were bothering you. Both of these types of dreams can be valuable in giving you insight into what some of your alters might be coping with. However, some dreams can actually be alters seeking to communicate with you, either by symbolically revealing how they feel or by sharing accurate memories. Additionally, some dreams are alters trying to come to terms with things by imagining themselves in various scenarios.


A woman with Dissociative Identity Disorder approached me with this prayer request:


I want to heal without recalling all of the memories.


I understand exactly where this dear woman is coming from. Bad memories can terrify us. The problem, however, is that it is our refusal to face those memories that causes Dissociative Identity Disorder. Remaining unaware of what part of us is doing (or has done) is at the very heart of D.I.D.

With D.I.D., a part of you keeps upsetting information from the rest of you by maintaining exclusive access to part of your brain. The unfortunate downside is that this prevents you from accessing your full intellectual capacity. That’s an exceedingly high price to pay. Moreover, it means that a precious, irreplaceable part of you will continue needlessly reeling in pain because the more mature part of you does not know what the distressing memory is and so cannot resolve it by such things as convincing the part that is hurting that the danger is now over, that the awful thing was the abuser’s fault, and so on. The dire consequences of not remembering are not something this dear woman would want.


Whilst emotionally very understandable, her prayer request to be continually cut off from certain memories is like praying, “Lord, I don’t ever want to be separated from my children but I want nothing more to do with them.” Some things are logical impossibilities – absurdities that not even God can do.


All guilt, fear and torment associated with memories need to end but this is not the same as losing those memories. What this woman has not yet grasped is that her continued inability to remember unpleasant events would be a tragedy, not a blessing. There are several aspects to this, so it will take a few paragraphs to explain.


To run from memories would be to cave into false feelings of shame, fear or inability to cope. It would be to languish in needless defeat. That’s not God’s plan for you. Christ took all your shame, blame and pain, bearing it all in his own naked, tortured body so that you can lift your head high. Through Christ, you are a winner; not one who runs away, but a hero clothed with divine majesty in God’s royal family.


Our walk with Christ is about love, adventure and glory. It’s not about escapism, wasting one’s life and trashing opportunities for greatness. It has no partnership with cowardice and the eternal regret it brings. We might think of ourselves as born failures but through Christ we are transformed; born anew for achievement, heroism and honor. The Almighty has astounding faith in what you can do empowered by him. You are called to jettison shame, defeatism and self-indulgence to enter into holy union with the all-powerful Conqueror and, thus endowed, to reign with him in regal splendor:


2 Timothy 2:12 If we suffer, we shall also reign with him . . . (KJV).


Romans 8:17  . . . we are heirs – heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, if indeed we share in his sufferings in order that we may also share in his glory.


Revelation 3:2 To him who overcomes, I will give the right to sit with me on my throne, just as I overcame and sat down with my Father on his throne.


Don’t dare dishonor the Lord of glory by thinking this is beyond you. For Christ, who has invested the last drop of his blood into ensuring your success, impossibilities are playthings. You are one with the Almighty Lord. You are in him and he is in you; melded together in the most thrilling of unions.

Furthermore, even if full healing without recovery of memories were neither irrational, nor a needless defeat, it would render much of your past agony a useless waste. You are passionately loved of God; the darling of his heart. He is far too devoted to you to want you to undergo such a tragic loss.


Instead, his plan is to transform your past suffering into something that exalts you to eternal heights of glory like nothing else could ever achieve. His goal is not to destroy your memories but to heal your memories so that they no longer distress you and so that your past suffering becomes something uniquely valuable. Remembering your past will not only enable you to better comprehend the love of God but will equip you with the ability to minister with unique experience and conviction to other hurting people. This is the path to eternal glory.


Astoundingly, not even the Eternal Son of God, the Infinite Lord of Glory, could be granted the authority to fulfil the exalted role of Ultimate High Priest without his familiarity with, and memory of, his own suffering.


Someone who finds study highly taxing devotes year after arduous year to medical studies. Finally. he qualifies as a doctor. Now all the hard work is behind him and at last, he can truly help people, save lives and reap all the benefits of his study. Can you imagine him rendering all his efforts a useless waste by praying to forget everything he has learned?


We don’t need more self-proclaimed experts who trample on other people’s feelings; arrogant theorizers exposing themselves to the wrath of God by ignorantly thinking they are helping when they are devastating people who are already writhing in inner agony. The world is filled with – in fact, has had its fill of – such people. What are as rare as diamonds, however, are people who truly understand; people whose advice does not come from a book or vain imagination but from genuine experience; leaders who, like Jesus, can say, “I’ve been there – follow me.” You’ve endured what it takes to qualify as one of those rare and valued people who truly know. Now, with almost all the sweat and tears behind you, will you throw it all away by praying to forget it all?


The great apostle Paul seems to have suffered no loss of memory when reeling off the precise number and ways in which he was tortured:


2 Corinthians 11:24-25 Five times I received from the Jews the forty lashes minus one. Three times I was beaten with rods, once I was stoned, three times I was shipwrecked, I spent a night and a day in the open sea . . .


In fact, he seems to have seen his suffering as something to boast about:


2 Corinthians 11:23, 12:1 Are they servants of Christ? (I am out of my mind to talk like this.) I am more. I have worked much harder, been in prison more frequently, been flogged more severely, and been exposed to death again and again. . . . I must go on boasting. . . .


You might long to keep suppressed from your consciousness horrific memories and/or awareness of your current emotional reaction (such as fear, pain or shame) associated with those memories.


Disturbingly, however, for as long as a part of you has memories and/or emotional reactions that you have no access to, you are unable to access that part of your brain in which those memories and emotions are stored. Of particular concern is that for people with Dissociative Identity Disorder, alters (sometimes called personalities or insiders) have not just memories and emotions but other intellectual abilities. So if you have an alter you have little interaction with, those parts of your brain that you have lost access to almost certainly hold not only memories and emotions but valuable skills and intellectual abilities.


Healing of Memories


Memories are healed not by trying to cause them to disappear but by discovering why you still find them upsetting. Of course, the event was extremely upsetting at the time but what is preventing you from simply feeling relief and joy that it is now all over? A huge factor is likely to be that part of you is believing some lie about the event, such as thinking the event could recur at any moment or that it means you are forever defiled or unlovable or useless or that God does not care what happens to you. Find out what the lie or lies are and then prayerfully begin addressing them until God’s truth sets you free. It is particularly beneficial to ask God to show you his perspective on this event.


Why is Healing so Important?


Healing from Dissociative Identity Disorder is a very long process demanding much courage and effort. But there are many profound reasons why we need to persist with it and there are astounding benefits from doing so.


No one, no matter how capable, can be sure of making smart and safe decisions without knowing all the relevant facts. Whether you realize it or not, there are facts that will remain hidden from you unless you connect with every alter that is currently hidden inside you. No one knows how vital these facts are to your welfare until all your alters reveal themselves and fully share all they know. I have met very many people who have ended up exceedingly sorry they had not tried harder and much earlier to get to know their every alter. They could have been spared much heartache.


It is with great reluctance that I alert you to the magnitude of the very real dangers of not connecting with all your alters. You have more than enough stress without me adding to it, but it would be irresponsible of me not to warn you of what could be at stake.


Picture several infants and young children who have access to guns they do not know are loaded. You are unable to physically touch the children or the guns. So you cannot prevent them from pointing the guns at family members and strangers and playing with the trigger. All you can do is coax and train them to leave the guns alone. It is no exaggeration to say it is equally as dangerous not to do everything you can to discover and interact with every one of your alters. It is not at all that your alters are evil; they simply lack your understanding. Now that you know this, however, to remain wilfully ignorant and not seek out every last one of your alters is irresponsible and would render you accountable for any disasters that result.


Alters are ordinary people (frequently little children) cut off from vital information and subjected to mind-numbingly horrific situations. Think of normal little children who have been fed lies and are beside themselves with pain, terror, confusion and hopelessness. These darlings have not only been cut off from almost all that you know about life and God but have been tricked, groomed, manipulated and even brainwashed by someone terrifyingly evil.


Despite having surprisingly good intentions, such confused and traumatized alters could unwittingly cause you enormous distress.


Until connections with alters are made, D.I.D. can, for some people, render battling certain temptations almost impossibly difficult. Once alters receive the benefits of your insights, however, having Dissociative Identity Disorder suddenly becomes an asset in fighting temptation – an advantage that average people can only dream about.


I even know of several devout women, each of whom had no idea she was having an affair or even more physically dangerous sexual liaisons for years, until eventually discovering the shattering truth.

Similar situations can involve child abuse, squandering money, chemical abuse, self-harm, overeating and bulimia. Some devout Christians have alters they know nothing about who literally worship Satan or befriend demons. Some alters can be committed to ensuring a person fails at everything he or she attempts.


When alters are befriended, however, Dissociative Identity Disorder not only ceases to be a disadvantage, it becomes a significant spiritual advantage.


It is hard to conceive of a more tortured existence than that of an alter living in an adult body and yet trapped in the years of childhood. When treated kindly and wisely, alters can find total relief, but unless they receive the attention and comfort they deserve, their pain will never end this side of the grave. Moreover, unless people with alters learn how to avoid making things worse, they will almost inevitably create still more sources of suffering for their already severely traumatized alters.

People with Dissociative Identity Disorder can quickly develop unhealthily powerful attachments to those who show them kindness, and what initially feels good and speeds their recovery can end up sabotaging their healing.


Until they heal, people with D.I.D. might have many casual friends but deep inside they are tortured by extreme loneliness and intense yearning for acceptance, further compounded by the belief that anyone discovering the full truth about their past would reject them. They feel haunted by dark, tormenting secrets that they keep suppressing from everyone (and even from themselves). To release that fearful pressure and isolation by sharing their secrets and find warm acceptance is such a relief that it powerfully bonds a person with whoever the secrets are shared. This, combined with the false but strong deception that virtually no one would accept them if they truly knew them, typically causes people with Dissociative Identity Disorder to feel strongly attached to, and dependent upon, a counsellor or whoever they open up to.


To understand the power of the forces at work, remember that parts of the person are literally like little children desperate for a parent’s love and approval, others are like older children yearning for a best friend and still others are like teens pining for romantic love. It is not at all unusual for some to be sexually attracted to someone of the same gender as their own body. And all these different alters can believe they have found in the one counsellor (or friend they have opened up to) all the love and acceptance they have been starved of all their lives. Almost overwhelmingly powerful forces combine, not only on a conscious level, but on a subconscious level.


Little children typically think their parents infallible, and starry-eyed lovers are blinded to faults in the person they idolize. People who are hurting are exceptionally sensitive. Alters can take the tiniest thing as a huge personal insult. Bring all these components together and the result is such intense emotions that if you and your alters bond exclusively to one person, then even temporarily losing access to this person can feel not just like being orphaned but being widowed, and like being betrayed by your best friend, all at the one time.


What makes these attachments so dangerous is that no one but God can guarantee never to die or get sick or need a break. It also puts enormous pressure on the person who is the object of this dependence. Becoming so crucial to another’s healing and well-being can easily so overload a helper that he or she cracks under the demands placed on him or her. Moreover, it makes the person with Dissociative Identity Disorder dangerously vulnerable to exploitation if the one they depend so highly upon has the slightest moral weakness.


It is for very good reason that it is considered not just unwise but highly unethical for a counsellor to have a romantic relationship with someone he or she is helping. Doing so is enough to get professionals deregistered because it is well established that people who are emotionally wounded are highly vulnerable and can so easily end up feeling emotionally attached to anyone offering them support. This is further exasperated by the fact that people with Dissociative Identity Disorder usually need prolonged help.


Anyone recovering from Dissociative Identity Disorder needs to be in a position where the most significant person in their recovery could at any moment die or be forced by circumstances to withdraw without it undermining much of the progress made.


An alter wrote to me, saying:


My host’s husband left her alone with all her outside children to raise all by herself. He told her, “You need too much.”


We don’t want you to go away from us like he did because we need too much because that made our host cry and cry and cry and throw up until she almost died. We don't want to make that happen to her again.


I replied:


Precious Friend,


I understand your needs. They are very deep, intense and critically important. I feel for you and long to be used of God to help you have all these needs met. But although humans can facilitate, your needs are so great that it is critical for your well-being and for other people that you don’t look to other people to meet your needs. You actually need someone who is available 24/7 and who can guarantee not to burn out or die. Otherwise, you are vulnerable to more heartbreak – and you have already suffered far too much of that.


I will do my best, but the only safe and totally effective way to meet your needs is through Jesus and through each part of you loving, understanding and supporting every other part of you.


As you understand, it is not fair on yourself, or on any counsellor, to look to a counsellor as if he were a substitute husband who pledges to be with you till death and gives you priority over everyone else who needs him. I know you don’t think this is what you are asking but it is so easy to slip into this degree of dependence without realizing it.


Nor is it safe for you, or fair on any husband, for you to unconsciously make a husband into a substitute mother and father for your every alter, even though your alters desperately need it. This does not mean that your needs cannot be met but they must be met through Jesus and through you loving and supporting each part of you. My role must not be primary, but must be to help you discover how to have your needs met by Jesus and by yourself.


Since only God is immortal, infallible and unchangeable, alters need to learn as quickly as possible to keep availing themselves of human help while at the same time shifting their dependence as much as they can from humans to God. For this reason, I have established a DID group, an important goal of which is that members bond to the group rather than to myself or any individual in the group. Other people are an important part of the healing process but alters are best helped by looking primarily to God and their host for nurturing, approval, parenting and so on.


I’m always keen to find the good in every tragedy because we have a God who has promised to bring good out of all things (Romans 8:28). That most certainly does not mean that God causes all things but that he loves us too much and is too powerful not to weave anti-God tragedies that break God’s heart into the things that end up blessing us.


Seeming to Go Backward or Feeling Worse, Rather than Better

 

I explain below how things seeming to be getting worse is usually an illusion. It is tempting, nevertheless, to give up at such times. So to encourage you to persist with healing, it seems best to start with this quote from my writings:

 

If you suspect you could have Dissociative Identity Disorder, then finding, comforting and supporting your every alter and organizing them into a tightly knit team working in unity toward a common goal should be a higher priority to you than your marriage, your children, your job, your ministry and even your relationship with God. Why? Precisely because each of those other responsibilities is so important and each of them is profoundly impacted by how harmoniously and effectively your alters pull together. What could happen if parts of you are able to take over your body without your knowledge? Ponder the possibilities if those parts are allowed to remain cut off from your knowledge of morality or even from the knowledge that you are married. Consider even the legal implications of a sexualized alter in an adult body who believes she is a young teen getting involved with a boy her own age.

 

Every aspect of your life and future will suffer if you are disorganized inside, and everything you touch will thrive if you are exquisitely functioning within.

 

Progressing on the healing journey involves enjoying significant breakthroughs interspersed by times when you feel you are going backward. The main reason for this is that it is normal for alters who have little awareness of current circumstances to gradually become aware of healing that other alters have been enjoying and to be inspired to reveal themselves so that they, too, can heal. Because they have been largely out of the loop, however, they will know little of what you have learned of D.I.D. and they will need you to start almost from scratch in teaching them things that to you are now basic. Moreover, they will have their own pain, memories and issues that will need healing.

 

Until they heal, when these alters come to the fore, their pain and ignorance might feel so strong that it temporarily overwhelms your own peace and understanding. For example, you might temporarily lose memory of all that you have learned about D.I.D. At such times it will be tempting to wish those parts of you had remained buried, but they will heal and their healing will bring you more peace and wholeness than ever.

 

You can easily reach the point where it seems there are too many alters to cope with, but as one alter heals he/she will become your ally and will help carry the load for you and assist you in comforting, and guiding the healing of other alters.

 

When the going gets tough (and it inevitably will) it is tempting to revert to burying things and living in denial.


For more help, see:



How to Heal



Triggers – When Something Upsets you More than One would Expect


If a particular sound, sight, smell, place or person makes you feel uneasy or even alarmed every time you are exposed to it, the thing causing that response is often called a trigger. It is because there is a superficial similarity between the trigger and something that was present when you had an unpleasant past experience.


A trigger might cause a vague feeling or something much more vivid – perhaps even a flashback or body memory – or it might cause an alter to suddenly appear or disappear. Regardless of whether it causes a memory to consciously surface, however, it alerts you to the fact that something from your past needs healing.


A trigger occurs when there is something in a situation that bears a superficial similarity to past trauma and suddenly it is as if one were back in the traumatic situation. A popularly known example is a soldier returning to the safety of home, ducking for cover at the sound of a car backfiring.


What people find triggering differs according to the exact nature of their past trauma and things their mind associates with that upsetting event. For one person it might, for instance, be someone using the same aftershave as a former abuser. The connection only has to be vague. For someone afraid of snakes, for example, an eel could trigger a panic attack.


When one is triggered, taking note of one’s surroundings is often helpful if it helps remind oneself that one is in the second decade of the twenty-first century and not back when the abuse originally happened, or if it confirms that the geographical location is different to that when the trauma took place. Looking in a mirror might significantly help by reminding you that you are an adult and not the helpless child you were when the original trauma happened.


When a trigger occurs, try to take some deep, slow breaths and calm yourself.


Though unpleasant, triggers can cause forgotten memories to surface, and so end up assisting healing. Being triggered by something that did not previously upset one might even indicate that a new alter has surfaced and getting to know and reassure that alter will greatly promote healing.


Like the conscious surfacing of unpleasant memories, triggers are unpleasant but can open the way to further advancement on the healing journey, especially if you start investigating the cause of the trigger. Think and pray and journal and ask alters about it until you learn what event in your past caused the trigger. Then commence work on healing that memory.


The following is a general explanation about the formation of triggers.


I suffered migraines as a teen and was prescribed pills to take at the onset of migraines. The pills looked remarkably like M&M; candy. I had to chew it and doing so would instantly make me feel like vomiting. They had no positive effect on the migraines, so I soon stopped taking them. From then on, however, if I ever saw M&Ms; – and especially if I thought of eating one – I would feel nauseous.


Through slowly deliberately exposing myself to them I eventually trained myself not to have that reaction, but until then, M&Ms; were a trigger for me. My mind told me that M&Ms; were chemically very different from the medication but the superficial similarity between the two provoked an uncontrollable reaction within me as if I were back in time with an on-coming migraine, reacting to that medication.


Everyone – even animals – can have peculiar triggers that reflect past experiences. You might have heard of Pavlov’s dogs. Knowing that dogs salivate when eating, the Nobel Prize-winning scientist conducted an experiment in which a bell sounded every time the dogs were about to be fed. Before long, the connection between the bell and eating grew so strong in the dogs’ brains that when the bell sounded, the dogs would salivate even if there were no food.


Healing from Inner Pain


Abusers inevitably tell their victims all sorts of hurtful, deeply damaging things when victims are too young to recognize them as lies. Older alters can greatly help by finding out what lies are upsetting each younger alter and gently helping each one see through whatever lies are causing problems. For help with this, see Exposing Lies that Abusers Tell.


Another very upsetting cause of distress stems from it being common for alters to have been deeply buried for years and so have little awareness of the passage of time or changing circumstances since they were abused. Again, a counsellor, or more experienced alter, can help by checking for this and informing alters of all the good things that have happened since they were last regularly in touch with the outside world. Examples are that they are safer because the body is now older, stronger and more able to defend the alters, that the abuser no longer has access to them, and so on. Simply sharing pleasant memories the alters missed out on can help dispel the pessimism and defeatism that comes from thinking that only bad things ever happen to them.


Trials, Discouragement


When Things Get Tough and keep following the main link at the end of each page.





Negativity – Little Hope for a Bright Future


It is most important that alters share bad memories with each other but it is also critical to healing that they share good memories, achievements and good things that have happened in their lives. Moreover, they need to keep reminding themselves, and each other, of these good things. Unless alters tell each other about the good things they have experienced, some alters will never know. Here’s a dramatic example of the distressing implications of being kept ignorant about good things: An alter believed that a critical part of his body had been permanently severed. He believed it had been chopped off because his father had grabbed an axe and angrily said he would chop it off. Just before the axe fell, the terrified alter fled inside and another alter took over. It turned out that the

threat was never carried out but the alter was sure that it would happen and never knew the good news until very many years later when another alter finally told him.

Even sharing mildly good things is important because without it alters are left with a twisted view of their past and predict their future on the basis of this misinformation. It will seem to them that perhaps 98% of their lives has been continual horrors when it was really perhaps only 1%.


This is such an important subject that I have made it into a separate webpage:



For still more help in overcoming a damagingly negative view of one’s future, see:





When Abilities or Alters Vanish: When Alters Die, Disappear or Go Missing


Alters can go deep into hiding or they can go to be with God for a while but alters cannot die without the entire person also dying. Nevertheless, just as some alters convince themselves that they are not human, some can convince themselves that they are dead, even though they are aware that they are still thinking. They might think it is safer or less painful to be dead (and so be afraid to admit to themselves that they are alive) or mistakenly think their abuser killed them. Helping those who prefer to think they are dead is similar to helping those who think they are the opposite sex or less than human. Basically, it is helping them realize that it is now safe to be who they really are.


Alters could see another alter kill himself/herself and that alter might never have been seen since. Since alters cannot die while the body is still alive, this is not as alarming as it seems. What actually happened was that the alter suddenly felt so unable to cope that he/she went deep into hiding, thus forcing another alter to take his/her place. At the time, however, it can be quite traumatic for two reasons:


1. The situation that caused the alter to disappear or ‘die’ must itself have been very distressing.


2. Alters who vanish leave the other alters not only without their companionship and protection but without all the knowledge and skills they had accumulated.


If you suddenly lose abilities it is probably because an alter who has that knowledge or skill has withdrawn. A likely cause is that the alter feels overwhelmed due to physical, mental or emotional exhaustion, or something happened to frighten the alter. (Often this is just because an event has a superficial similarity to a past trauma, such as meeting someone who uses the same cologne as a previous abuser.)


When it is an alter who is usually out, however, the loss is likely to be very disconcerting because much valuable information is stored exclusively with the alter. (For this reason, it is important to encourage alters to share their skills and information and train up each other.) The positive side, however, is that it forces other alters to assume greater responsibility. This can help them develop and gain confidence and sometimes it can give you the opportunity to meet (and hence help) alters you have never met before.


Encourage alters (especially new ones) to understand that they are very important and needed. Keep reminding yourselves of the motto, “Stronger together.”


One cannot know how long an alter will remain out of contact. Often it is not long. A way to shorten the time is every now and then say out loud (in case the alter happens to be listening) that you need the alter and give reasons why it is safe for the alter to be out. Simply being kind and supportive to the alters who are out might entice the alter out as he or she sees that alters who talk to you are well treated.


Recently surfaced alters are easily overwhelmed because so much in the way of current events and circumstances is new and unexpected. Often they just withdraw in order to think things through and soon come out again.


Sometimes people mistake alters going into hiding with integration but integration does not mean losing contact with one’s alters.


A Safe Internal Haven for Alters to Retreat to


Young alters need a safe place where they can play and act like children, and develop as a result, without outside people thinking them weird. Alters – even hosts – can sometimes temporarily become too overwhelmed by external events to be able to remain in contact with the outside world. It is far from ideal for any alter to withdraw but sometimes alters can feel unable to stay out and so retreat for a while in order to recover. If they just disappear, some alters are likely to feel alarmed as to what happened to the alter and those who are forced to take over in the alter’s absence are likely to flounder in the outside world without critically-needed information known only to the alter who has disappeared. This loss of information might, for example, cause them to lose their job or leave them without necessary money because they are unable to access their bank account. Furthermore, the alter who has gone will have no way of knowing when it is safe to come out again.


These serious problems with withdrawing can be resolved by using one’s powerful imagination to create a safe, beautiful haven inside that is spacious and peaceful and filled with fun things to do. You can create your own variations but I’ll provide an example of how it might work.


What makes this haven safe is that on the outside it is a fortress that can be entered only by alters who know the exact password and whose fingerprint (or whatever) is recognized by the uncrackable security system. Inside it is light and spacious. It could have trees, meadows, waterfalls, flowers, birds and cute animals to play with or ride as well as playground equipment for little alters. It is a place where alters can chat with each other and with Jesus and have fun together.


Within this wonderful place are still more fortresses. These are retreats. Each alter has one. On the outside they look just like a row of solid iron doors, each of which has the name of a different alter, indicating to whom it belongs, and below that is a sign that either says Vacant or Occupied. The impenetrable door will open only to the voice and fingerprint of the alter whose name is on the outside. On the inside it is beautiful and amazingly spacious, decked out with whatever the alter decides will make him/her the most relaxed and comfortable. Whenever the owner enters, the Vacant sign on the door changes to Occupied. That way, if ever an alter retreats, alters who are allowed in the Safe Haven can go to the doors, see the one with the alter’s name on it, and if it says Occupied they will know where the alter is, although they will not be able to go inside. Everyone knows that an alter inside his/her retreat needs to be left alone until he/she is ready to come out.

On the solid door, however, is an intercom that allows alters to speak to the one inside. The one inside cannot switch off the intercom, but alters respect the desire of the one inside to be left alone and they keep communication to a minimum. They use the intercom primarily just to reassure the alter and also to inform him/her as to when things in the external world have become safer. When absolutely necessary, alters will also use the intercom to seek critically-needed information that is required for those left in charge to perform important tasks in the outside world.


Therapist/Counsellor/Human Support


Don’t settle for anyone less than the best. Jesus is by far the greatest friend, counsellor and healer anyone could ever have. You need no one else. Often, however, like Naaman’s healing being dependent upon humbling himself by washing seven times in the dirty Jordan (2 Kings 5:10-14), God asks us to humble ourselves by seeking human help. The Lord likes involving his loved ones in his work, not because he needs them, but simply because he delights in giving them the honor.


On the other hand, we must never dethrone God and put a human in his place. It is dangerously easy to become as dependent upon a human as a junkie is on heroin. This not only dishonors God, it degrades us; turning us into leeches sucking the life out of people and eroding our relationship with the most beautiful Person in the universe. We need to counter this tendency by continually reminding ourselves that our only need is God, not people. At any moment, God can raise up a replacement for any person or take over and do it all himself.


Even without any formal training, friends and loved ones are capable of being an immense support, if they are gentle, non-judgmental and accepting of D.I.D. I urge them to read How to Comfort the Hurting and the pages it leads to.


Christian counsellors with little knowledge of D.I.D. can also be of great value, provided they are willing to learn and they do not seek to undermine your belief that you have D.I.D. or mistake alters for demons.


Secular counsellors can be of some value.


Your choice of counsellor, however, and even who you choose to let know that you have D.I.D. is critically important; demanding much wisdom and prayer.


 Trust Issues

 

To quote from Fear: Help & Cure

 

One of the greatest ways to honor God is to trust him and it is something we need to continually work on. Thankfully, however, our wonderful Lord understands better than we do that trusting him is so much harder for those whose trust has been violated by key people in their life – especially if it happened repeatedly during their tender, most impressionable years.

 

Simply having more fear or doubt than other Christians you know is not an acceptable reason for despising oneself. The devil is the Christian’s accuser (Revelation 12:10). Trying to make you feel bad about yourself is part of his job description. So let’s not put him out of a job by doing it for him.

 

Dependency – Too Attached to Someone


It is not emotionally healthy for anyone to have to keep secrets from everyone. We all need good friends, even though we should first thoroughly check out who is safe to share confidences with .

 

However, having been cruelly isolated and starved of any kindness makes many alters desperate to be understood, cared for, and protected. This makes them highly vulnerable to forming abnormally strong attachments to anyone who seems to offer compassion. It might, for instance, be a kind, motherly person, a counsellor, or a pastor. Little alters are often so desperate for someone acting like a proper father or mother – rather than the cold or even abusive parents they had while growing up – that they are keen to treat as a mother or father almost anyone who shows them basic kindness.

 

The danger of these emotional pressures is that it opens alters up to exploitation by anyone who has less than the highest standards. Some alters have been taught by their abusers that love equals sex or that sex is the only way they can ever get even a crude, inadequate substitute for love. Pressured by their desperate emotional needs and the training their abusers forced on them, some alters are even seductive. The heart-rending desperation of these love-starved alters is proof of the truth of Proverbs 27:7 that to the hungry even what is bitter seems sweet. Unfortunately, even if the host is strongly heterosexual or opposed to any thought of sex, that does not, of itself, mean that none of his/her alters is capable of forming sexual attachments with someone, even if that person is the same gender. Even if the host is going to marry someone, it is not good for little alters to regard that person as a father or mother, as it could give the relationship incestuous overtones.

 

Besides the possibility of a confused alter being seductive, predators are skilled at detecting vulnerable people who have been subjected to these pressures in the past and they actively seek out such people with a view to exploiting them sexually.

 

It is extremely hard to be certain that someone is totally safe. Suppose, however, that you were to form a strong attachment with an exceptionally good, safe person: it will still almost certainly weaken the bond alters should be forming with each other and with Jesus. In order to heal from one’s fracturedness, one’s alters need to bond with oneself and one’s other alters. Some alters will end up skilled at mothering little alters and it will be a satisfying relationship both for those giving the care and those receiving it. More importantly, it will forge a strong connection between those parts of the person engaging in this and the result will do much to repair the person’s fracturedness. In addition, in order to heal from their deep emotional and spiritual wounds, alters need to bond with Jesus. He alone is the perfect Father. Few people are as safe for the little alters of an adult to play with as Jesus and no one understands them as well as he does.

 

Another serious issue with strong attachments is that the more intense the relationship, the more likely it is that the carer will burn out. Someone’s highest intentions are not enough to keep a person from burning out, nor from his/her situation changing so that the relationship needs to change. A major consideration is that someone with D.I.D. is likely to be needy for years longer than the carer expects and that any change in the relationship can be devastating to someone with D.I.D.

 

Someone with Dissociative Identity Disorder wrote to me saying a leader in her church told her that he could treat her as a father. She was a mature, independent person. Fathering such a person takes little time and effort, and I’m sure that was what he envisioned. Parenting a child, however, is an enormously time-consuming, lifelong commitment. This is not what he was offering but it would be taken that way by young alters and so would almost certainly end in heartbreak if they went down that path.

 

Professional therapists are trained to maintain an emotional distance from their clients (and often will not, for example, hug them) and they have codes to ensure this is maintained. It can seem a little cold but there are good, time-proven reasons for this. I long for you not to be one of the many who end up learning the hard way the importance of applying this to other non-marital relationships as well.

 

It is normal for abuse survivors to find it difficult to trust anyone. Unfortunately, this further intensifies the tendency to form strong bonds, once trust is gained. Rather than having less intense relationships with several people, when it comes to people they are willing to open up to, it tends to be all or nothing, with the result that the needy person feels highly dependent upon one person. This is a concern, given the fact that anyone with D.I.D. is likely to be needy for many years and not even the best carers can guarantee never to die, get sick, burn out or eventually need to move on. Jesus, on the other hand, has no such limitations.


When Alters Can’t Speak

 

Alters who are unable to talk, are likely to understand at least some of what you say and the mere act of talking to them could help them learn to speak. Chances are that you can also communicate with each other through thoughts, mental images and/or feelings. Additionally, you can communicate through gifts, facial expressions, hugs and so on. (You can hug or hold an alter’s hand by strongly visualizing doing it, but be cautious at first in case the alter fears physical contact.) Sometimes you might even be able to communicate by writing notes to each other.

 

We can comfort babies who are too young to talk by holding them, singing to them, safely playing with them, feeding them and so on. You can use the same methods with alters who were formed as babies and have never had the chance to grow. Just as babies grow and learn to speak, however, so will baby alters, once you begin interacting with them, and this can happen quicker than with real babies..

 

Sometimes it is not because of their age that alters do not speak but because their abusers made them very timid. Alters might, for example, have a history of being told to shut up or being misunderstood when they tried to communicate and being punished accordingly. Another possibility is that not speaking is consistent with their self-image, such as thinking of themselves as being non-human.

 

Another possible reason for alters not speaking is that they have been threatened by their abusers never to speak about their abuse and they have not only believed the threats but have taken them to the extreme of not talking at all. Obviously, in this case, they need repeated assurance that it is safe to talk with you and that old threats cannot materialize.

 

Yet another possibility is that another alter might be threatening this alter into silence. Usually, this is because the alter issuing the gag order still believes threats issued by the abuser if alters talk. Alternatively, the alter doing the silencing might think life will get too complicated if another alter reveals himself/herself. In these cases, the answer lies not in trying to get the silenced alter to disobey the other alter (and so making that alter mad at you) but in helping the alter doing the silencing to understand that it is safe for other alters to talk with you. This might also encourage the alter to let other alters you are unaware of to reveal themselves.


When Some Alters Seem to have a Physical Disability

 

It is possible for some alters to seem to have a physical disability, when the same person’s other alters do not. It can be as mild as an alter who needs reading glasses or walks with a limp or is tone deaf to when another does not, or as severe as one alter being totally blind or deaf.

 

 

There are different possible reasons for this.


1.      A disability that you grew out of

 

For example, a friend of mine has an alter formed as an adult who is not surefooted and often falls when walking on uneven surfaces. Her younger alters are much more confident and capable walking on rugged terrain. Ironically, however, one of the alters more capable at walking, walks with a limp. Today this person still has a lump on her knee but it causes her no inconvenience. It is due to a painful condition that sometimes occurs in children but ceases to be a problem as they grow up (Osgood–Schlatter disease). Obviously, the alter who limps was formed at the time in the person’s life when the disease was active and she has vivid memories of the pain and of how she used to have to walk to minimize that pain.

 

I am reminded of a dog I once read about. As a pup one of its legs was caught in the steel jaws of a rabbit trap. The dog fully recovered but whenever the dog was frightened it would revert to limping for a little while. This is not exactly the same as the situation described above but it is another possible variation.

 

2.      An alter who feels safer with a disability

 

In Alters Thinking They’re the Opposite Sex it is explained that it is common for alters to convince themselves that they are the opposite sex and that a common cause is that they believe that if they were the opposite sex they would be treated better and perhaps no longer subjected to sexual abuse. What motivates a distorted self-image is that alters are desperate to give themselves some respite from the constant terror of believing they will again be abused. Some alters even convince themselves they are dogs because their observations tell them that dogs are better treated than they are. It is quite possible that some observation might lead an alter to believe he/she would be safer and/or better treated if he/she had a disability. For example, one person with D.I.D. has an alter who is apparently deaf. Certain family members suffered deafness. Perhaps one or more of those in the family who were deaf had been treated more kindly than the alter.

 

A variation on this is if a deaf person were the abuser and the alter is an Introject Alter i.e. an alter who believes he/she is the abuser. (This is similar in that it is safer to be the abuser than to be the victim.)

 

Another possibility is an alter who discovered that if he/she displayed certain symptoms, such as a seizure, he/she would be hospitalized or for some other reason be granted time-out from abuse.

 

Yet another possibility is an alter who yearns to not hear abuse or see abuse and so convinces himself/herself that he/she cannot hear or see.

 

In such cases, the first step is to help the alter realize that he/she is now safe, and so there are now no advantages in having a disability.


3. Conversion Disorder

 

According to Wikipedia, “A conversion disorder causes patients to suffer from neurological symptoms, such as numbness, blindness, paralysis, or fits without a definable organic cause. It is thought that symptoms arise in response to stressful situations affecting a patient's mental health. . . . The term ‘conversion’ has its origins in Freud’s doctrine that anxiety is ‘converted’ into physical symptoms”.

Since (until they begin to heal) some alters keep certain stresses exclusively to themselves and/or cope with trauma in an individual way, it would not be surprising if some alters suffer from Conversion Disorder, whereas others are quite free from it.

 

4. The Complicated Causes of Sickness

 

Alters vary as to how in touch they are with what their current physical body is feeling.

 

There is more to illness than the mere exposure to germs. One dramatic demonstration of this is found in the tragic lives of Siamese twins, Masha and Dasha, who were born in 1950 and taken from their mother from birth (she was told they had died) and subjected to years of experiments by Soviet medical authorities. They shared the one bladder, lower intestine and reproductive system. Of their three legs, two were functional. Masha controlled one. Dasha controlled the other. Yet though they shared organs and the same disease-carrying blood, they contracted illnesses separately. When one was stricken with measles, for instance, the other was perfectly well. One’s mind plays a significant role in physical illness.

 

If I Tell Anyone About What Happened to Me, I’ll Never Be Believed


Now that you live in a more mature body, you are more likely to be regarded as a credible witness. What you suffered might be so rare that average people don’t understand it, and should not be trusted with such information without first thoroughly checking out their attitude to such things without hinting that it applies to you. Nevertheless, there are people who have suffered similar things to what happened to you and they and their counsellors would believe you. God knows exactly what happened and in the life to come, if not before, all will be revealed.

 

Jennifer Haynes’ alters were not only accepted in court as alters, they testified in court and secured the conviction of their abuser, who received a very heavy sentence. For amazing details, see Multiple Personalities Testify in Court. (Link coming soon)

 

Nevertheless, there are risks in telling people that you have D.I.D.


“Useless” Alters

 

Alters can seem too young or too traumatized or dysfunctional or too opposed to you to be anything but a burden. Nevertheless, alters can heal and grow and change dramatically and sometimes remarkably quickly.

 

The more annoying or useless an alter seems, the more astounded you will be when you see what an invaluable friend and magnificent person the alter becomes as he/she heals and reaches his/her stupendous, but once-hidden, potential.

 

Alters are like your children who might start off as helpless, crying babies who take up your time and ruin your sleep but when they grow up you will be forever proud of them. They will grow into highly capable, talented and loyal friends who will faithfully serve you and enrich your life beyond your fondest hopes. When the transformation is complete you will discover that every alter is priceless and irreplaceable. You would not part with any of them if offered millions of dollars.

 

God wants you to love others as you love yourself (Mark 12:31-34; Galatians 5:14; James 2:8); doing for them what we wish they would do for us (Matthew 7:12). How would you like to be spurned and considered of no value or treated as if you were not even human or a liar? Haven’t you already received far too much such treatment in your life? Isn’t it time to break that cycle?

 

How do you wish you had been treated as you were growing up? Treat your alters like that.

 

“Give, and it will be given to you” (Luke 6:38). As you do it for them, you will find you are doing it for yourself because they are an inseparable part of you.

 

You were robbed of so much love and kindness and fun and enjoyment of God in your formative years. By giving your alters your loving attention and helping them enjoy the childish fun and other things you missed out on, you are restoring yourself and filling a huge void within you.

 

You are called to be like Jesus and follow his example. He is the good shepherd who leaves the ninety-nine behind and even though it’s the end of a tiring day, he trudges up and down hills, looking everywhere for a single sheep who did not have the sense to stay with the rest of the flock. And when he finds the sheep, he does not reprimand it; he rejoices. Moreover, he takes that heavy, nuisance of a sheep, and lifts it up, putting it on his shoulders and lugs it all the way back to the other sheep; delighted that he has found the one that had been lost (Luke 15:4-6). That’s how God longs for you to treat your alters.

 

Consider the parable of the talents. Our eternal loss or endless reward hinges on how much we have ignored or developed whatever has been entrusted into our care (Matthew 25:15-30). You might think you have higher obligations to your work, your family, and so on, than to your alters. The more you help your alters, however, the more effectively you will be able to nurture your family and the more you will thrive in your employment.


Loss of Time

 

An alter could take over your body and when you next become aware of things, hours or even days could have passed. Sometimes this is because something happened that alarmed you and rather than face it you uncontrollably withdrew from conscious interaction with the world; forcing other parts of you to take over. Often this is not because of any real danger but because something happened that caused you to panic because it bore some superficial similarity to a traumatic experience you once suffered.

 

Another possible reason for losing time is simply because an alter took over – perhaps because he/she believed she could better handle that particular situation or perhaps simply because he/she wanted “body-time”.

 

Sickness – Extra Complications When You Have D.I.D.

 

D.I.D. adds many complications to being physically ill, including:

 

You could have alters who are terrified of doctors and/or hospitals.

 

You could switch to alters who are so disconnected that they are unable to feel your physical pain or are unaware of doctor’s instructions and so they could unknowingly worsen injuries or illnesses you are recovering from. This is one of many reasons why it is important to keep all of your alters as informed as possible about current events and to help them realize that all of you share the same body, which makes it critical for them to be cautious and treat the body well even when they feel no pain, etc.

 

Being sick can be a terrifying thing to traumatized alters because it means you are temporarily less strong and able to defend yourself. Some could even be determined to hide their temporary vulnerability by pushing themselves harder than ever. These alters need to be continually reassured that they are safe.

 

At any time you could switch to an alter who is unaware that you have already taken your medication and so can overdose. This makes it important to keep a written record of how much medication has been taken and when. Pill boxes organized by time or days would be very helpful, although it might be good to keep a note next to it as to what day it is.

 

Some alters can believe that they deserve to be punished and so sabotage healing as a form of Self-Harm. For help with this, see Deserve to be Punished? No! You Can be Happy & Resist Sickness. (Link coming soon)

 

Parts of you could have little or no desire to live. This has considerable health implications, such as no desire to treat an illness. You might even need to hide the medication to prevent an alter from deliberately overdosing. These parts of you need your help to see that life will improve as you continue to heal from past traumas and that these alters have much to offer this needy world. (For example, there is always a desperate shortage of people who understand D.I.D. and can support those who have it.)

 

Little alters need matters like menstruation explained to them lest they needlessly panic, assuming they are in more danger than they are.

 

A number of people with D.I.D. have reported having different reactions to the same medication, depending upon which alter is out.

 

Wikipedia states, “almost all physical illness have mental factors that determine their onset, presentation, maintenance, susceptibility to treatment, and resolution.”

 

Says Robert C. Bransfield, M.D., “All diseases have a psychic [mind] and somatic [body] component, however, either component may be more dominant in different disease states.” (In each quote, the emphasis is mine.)

 

This intimate interaction between one’s mind and physical illness makes it highly likely that suffering years of inner turmoil and stress will adversely affect one’s physical health – perhaps seriously so – and that the sooner you can help each of your alters relax and find peace, the healthier you are likely to be.

 

New Alters – Creating New Alters

 

If you experience new trauma, new alters might be formed but the trauma would usually have to be severe. Often what happens is simply that an alter comes forward that you have not previously been aware of. Some alters see their role as keeping in the background until a crisis and sometimes alters are forced into taking leading roles when other alters who usually predominate vacate their usual position because they need a break for some reason.

 

Demons

 

A few alters, because of their tragically low self-esteem created by their abusers, might mistakenly think they are demons, and some uninformed people might sometimes mistake highly confused alters for demons simply because some alters have been tricked into doing bad things. Nevertheless, alters are never demons, and even when confused alters do bad things, it does not prove demons are involved. Moreover, even in rare instances where demons trick alters, this can be easily rectified.

 

For true Christians, demons are nothing more than a harmless nuisance. Just as everyone – even the best Christian – is tempted, everyone has dealings with demons. In fact, although we often talk of the devil tempting us, it is almost always his underlings – demons – since the devil does not have God’s unique power of omnipresence (able to be everywhere at once).

 

Not even the weakest Christian need fear the strongest demon. It’s as if all Christians have guns loaded with live ammunition and demons are weaklings with nothing more than blanks in their weapons. If a Christian imagined his/her gun is unloaded and that the demons’ guns are loaded, the Christian might cower, not use his/her weapon, and let demons order him/her around, but doing so would be as ridiculously needless as being scared of a butterfly.

 

It is very traumatic for an alter and can significantly impede healing if he or she is mistaken for a demon. One must be very careful not to make this mistake and it is very easily done as some alters can initially seem very evil.

 

If you really are confronting demons, you need to know that if we let them, demons can be a nuisance but to the weakest Christian who understands, they are less of a concern than pesky flies. Just hold on to Jesus, stubbornly stand your ground and, as Jesus’ ambassador, keep ordering them to leave. Keep refusing to take no for an answer and these cowardly trespassers will slink off. For help, see:


 

 


 

Porn/Masturbation

 

It is common for those who have suffered sex abuse to engage in masturbation and/or viewing porn in an attempt to help them cope. Sometimes it can actually be a form of self-harm and even when it is not, the result is a bit like self-harm in that it is a desperate attempt to cope with the inner pain that has serious downsides. For example, some alters might do this without understanding that it re-traumatizes one or more other alters.

 

Baby Alters

 

Baby alters might not be able to speak but, like real babies, they are likely to understand more of what you say than they might be able to repeat and they can still be comforted. They might communicate with you through thoughts or feelings or memories. You might feel very inadequate when it comes to comforting a baby but do your best. In time you might discover an alter who is quite good at it and perhaps even enjoys it.

 

Baby alters will eventually learn to speak and will grow up. It can happen far faster than for a real baby. All that is needed is for the alter to learn how to access other alters’ skills. As your healing progresses your alters will become quite proficient in doing this.

 

Anything that could comfort a real baby, such as singing or playing lullabies, holding the baby, giving it toys and/or a special blanket, feeding it, and so on, is likely to help a baby alter. Some people even need to temporarily wear diapers, drink formula milk out of a bottle and/or use a pacifier in order to help baby alters feel safe and comforted and to give them some body-time in order to grow up. When a baby alter is out, you might find yourself unable to walk or control your bladder. I can understand you not wanting to go down that path but you will truly end up benefitting from it.

 

Gender Issues: Alters who Think They are the Opposite Sex

 

It is common for some alters to think they are the opposite sex because it helps them feel safer. Their experience gave them the impression that they would have been less vulnerable to abuse if they had been the opposite sex. Another possible reason for some alters convincing themselves they are the opposite sex is because they were sexually abused by someone of the same gender, and regarding themselves as the opposite sex to their abuser removed some of their inner conflict over the horrors they were forced to endure.

 

Sometimes, alters thinking they are the opposite sex is of little consequence to the rest of the person. If so, this matter might be safely left on the backburner if there are more pressing issues that need to be addressed. It would be helpful to prepare them, however, by helping them understand that it is now safe and good to be the same gender as your physical body.

 

Feelings/Emotions that Seem to Come from Nowhere & How to Cope with Them

 

Unexpected feelings that do not match your current circumstances or mood seem puzzling to those who do not understand Dissociative Identity Disorder but is actually a common feature of D.I.D.

 

Feelings that puzzle you could possibly be because something just happened that reminds you of a past event that strongly impacted you, but most likely it is because it reminds another part of you (an alter). Or it could simply be because an alter who has strong feelings and is usually deep inside is now closer to the surface of your consciousness and that alter’s emotions are washing over you.

 

The feelings can be highly distressing and so overwhelming that you cannot think straight. If you can manage it, however, this is a superb opportunity for you to make contact with this part of you and for you to get to know him/her and offer comfort and reassurance.

 

If you feel fear, tell yourself (preferably out loud), how much safer you now are than when you were younger and all the reasons why there is no need to fear. Since the alter is so close that his/her feelings are impacting you, there is a good chance that the alter will hear what you say.

 

Do similar things if other negative emotions are involved.

 

If it feels appropriate with a distressed alter, ask if it would be okay if you gave him/her a safe hug. If the answer seems to be yes then, even if you have no idea what the alter looks like, strongly imagine yourself giving the alter a reassuring hug. Also, ask the alter why he/she feels this way.

 

For as long as the alter is present, keep continuing to establish a rapport with the alter. For example, if the opportunity presents itself ask if the alter has a name and ask if he/she knows how old he/she is.

 

You might not seem to achieve much the first time but every such instance increases the likelihood of you being able to help and befriend this part of you and further your healing.



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Not to be sold. © Copyright, Grantley Morris, 1985-1996, 2011, 2018 For much more by the same author, see www.netburst.net. No part of these writings may be sold, and no part may be copied without citing this entire paragraph.
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