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Reply #30 posted 11/18/17 9:06am

benni

ThatWhiteDude said:

I got this very often: Depersonalization disorder This disorder involves ongoing feelings of detachment from actions, feelings, thoughts and sensations as if they are watching a movie (depersonalization)

I always thought that everyone has this, but when I asked people around me if they get this feelig too, they looked at me as if I'm crazy or something. It's a strange feeling, it's like I'm not here, as if this body is not mine, It feels like you are watching someone else, like I see the person that should be me through VR or something. I can't really describe it but I don't know anyone that knows what I'm talking about. They just look at me and say: "That's strange."

anangellooksdown said:

benni said: Stay away from the psychiatric titles. They'll spiral you downwards into depression and hopelessness. Start seeking out a solution. If you seek hard and long enough and god knows you are willing, He will provide.


I know what you are talking about, TWD. The way I've explained it is there are times when I get in a really good conversation with someone and suddenly it's like they are speaking a foreign language. I know they are saying something, I hear them, but I'm outside of myself and I can't understand what they are saying. I have a friend that recognizes when I've dissociated and she'll start asking me, "Where are you?" She said that the way she has learned to recognize it is that I suddenly begin responding with "uh huh", "yes", "okay", that it's like the passion I'd had for the conversation just seconds before suddenly evaporated, and she knows I'm here but not Here. It's like everything is suddenly being experienced through a filter. It is a strange feeling.

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Reply #31 posted 11/18/17 9:09am

ThatWhiteDude

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Totally strange. Most of the time I just feel like I'm not existing, that I'm not really there and then minutes later I'm starting to feel myself again.

benni said:

ThatWhiteDude said:

I got this very often: Depersonalization disorder This disorder involves ongoing feelings of detachment from actions, feelings, thoughts and sensations as if they are watching a movie (depersonalization)

I always thought that everyone has this, but when I asked people around me if they get this feelig too, they looked at me as if I'm crazy or something. It's a strange feeling, it's like I'm not here, as if this body is not mine, It feels like you are watching someone else, like I see the person that should be me through VR or something. I can't really describe it but I don't know anyone that knows what I'm talking about. They just look at me and say: "That's strange."


I know what you are talking about, TWD. The way I've explained it is there are times when I get in a really good conversation with someone and suddenly it's like they are speaking a foreign language. I know they are saying something, I hear them, but I'm outside of myself and I can't understand what they are saying. I have a friend that recognizes when I've dissociated and she'll start asking me, "Where are you?" She said that the way she has learned to recognize it is that I suddenly begin responding with "uh huh", "yes", "okay", that it's like the passion I'd had for the conversation just seconds before suddenly evaporated, and she knows I'm here but not Here. It's like everything is suddenly being experienced through a filter. It is a strange feeling.

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Reply #32 posted 11/18/17 10:43am

Morgaine

benni said:



laurarichardson said:




benni said:




Laura, no one has said that he was a Superman. In fact, there is a lot of research that shows childhood trauma DOES impact chronic pain in adulthood. This would support your statement that he was NOT superman. My question of wondering whether Prince was self-medicating, not just the pain, but the trauma from his childhood, as well, and his discussion of there being another person "inside of him" (which from his description closely correlates to DID). Usually people who experience childhood trauma experience MORE chronic pain as an adult.



"My question of wondering whether Prince was self-medicating, not just the pain, but the trauma from his childhood, as well, and his discussion of there being another person "inside of him" (which from his description closely correlates to DID). Usually people who experience childhood trauma experience MORE chronic pain as an adult."



We have no means of knowing any of this so what we have is people on this board with childhood trama and drug issues projecting their problems on to Prince without knowing the facts.



We have numerous people who knew him who are telling us over and over again that his drug taking was for pain. People who actually knew him but many on this borad persist in making it something else. No wonder he did not bother to tell only a few about his problems what good would it do if is all about some issues other then joint pain.



Your question will never be answered and even back at the time people on this very board laughed at the idea that he had a split personality and some professionals think the entire split personality is a bunch of nonsense created by hacks i.e. Sybil.



I find it hard to belive he made it to 57 if he had a split personality and funny how know drugs for that stituation were found in his system. I am not saying he did not have abuse as a child and I am not saying he never was prescribed meds for mental or emotional issues but we just do not have access to his medical records.



People on this board get attacked for saying he might have some under laying physical illness but it is okay to say he was bonkers?




Laura, I stated in my first post that yes, Prince was taking the medication for pain. There is NO DOUBT in my mind related to that. However, the fact remains that chronic pain is chronic pain and research has shown that a traumatic childhood increases chronic pain in adulthood for many individuals. Traumatic childhoods REWIRE the brain and central nervous system so that the way in which that person interprets physical symptoms is forever changed. I have no doubt that he had chronic pain from the work he did, however, it is possible that the traumas he experienced in his youth ADDED to that pain and that using the medications wasn't JUST to address the chronic pain but to also medicate the trauma from his youth.

DID is actually a diagnosable condition that is recognized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual used by psychiatrists, psychologists, and clinical social workers. They changed it from a "split personality" to Dissociative Identity Disorder. The personality isn't "split" but it is fragmented in some situations. Dissociative Identity Disorder takes on many forms - such as dissociating from the body during times of crisis (they feel separate from their body, as though what is happening to the body isn't real, or it is being done to someone else), disconnection between thoughts/consciousness/identity/memory. It's a depersonalization of the self, a derealization of the self. HOWEVER, some individuals with DID do have another personality or more that come forward to deal with certain situations.

More on DID:



Symptoms and signs of dissociative disorders include:


  • Significant memory loss of specific times, people and events

  • Out-of-body experiences, such as feeling as though you are watching a movie of yourself

  • Mental health problems such as depression, anxiety and thoughts of suicide

  • A sense of detachment from your emotions, or emotional numbness

  • A lack of a sense of self-identity

The symptoms of dissociative disorders depend on the type of disorder that has been diagnosed. There are three types of dissociative disorders defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM):


  • Dissociative Amnesia. The main symptom is difficulty remembering important information about one’s self. Dissociative amnesia may surround a particular event, such as combat or abuse, or more rarely, information about identity and life history. The onset for an amnesic episode is usually sudden, and an episode can last minutes, hours, days, or, rarely, months or years. There is no average for age onset or percentage, and a person may experience multiple episodes throughout her life.

  • Depersonalization disorder. This disorder involves ongoing feelings of detachment from actions, feelings, thoughts and sensations as if they are watching a movie (depersonalization). Sometimes other people and things may feel like people and things in the world around them are unreal (derealization). A person may experience depersonalization, derealization or both. Symptoms can last just a matter of moments or return at times over the years. The average onset age is 16, although depersonalization episodes can start anywhere from early to mid childhood. Less than 20% of people with this disorder start experiencing episodes after the age of 20.

  • Dissociative identity disorder. Formerly known as multiple personality disorder, this disorder is characterized by alternating between multiple identities. A person may feel like one or more voices are trying to take control in their head. Often these identities may have unique names, characteristics, mannerisms and voices. People with DID will experience gaps in memory of every day events, personal information and trauma. Women are more likely to be diagnosed, as they more frequently present with acute dissociative symptoms. Men are more likely to deny symptoms and trauma histories, and commonly exhibit more violent behavior, rather than amnesia or fugue states. This can lead to elevated false negative diagnosis.



    And no one is saying he is "bonkers". HE said he had another person inside of him, that he discovered this when he was taking someone else through therapy. From what he was saying, it sounds like DID, which is what caused me to post this, going by what Prince himself said. In fact he said he felt that when he changed his name to the symbol, that personality had taken over, because he felt "divorced" from Prince.



Excellent post! Thanks!
The kind of love that takes over your body, mind, & soul
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Reply #33 posted 11/18/17 10:50am

Morgaine

ThatWhiteDude said:

I got this very often: Depersonalization disorder This disorder involves ongoing feelings of detachment from actions, feelings, thoughts and sensations as if they are watching a movie (depersonalization)



I always thought that everyone has this, but when I asked people around me if they get this feelig too, they looked at me as if I'm crazy or something. It's a strange feeling, it's like I'm not here, as if this body is not mine, It feels like you are watching someone else, like I see the person that should be me through VR or something. I can't really describe it but I don't know anyone that knows what I'm talking about. They just look at me and say: "That's strange."



anangellooksdown said:


benni said:



Laura, I stated in my first post that yes, Prince was taking the medication for pain. There is NO DOUBT in my mind related to that. However, the fact remains that chronic pain is chronic pain and research has shown that a traumatic childhood increases chronic pain in adulthood for many individuals. Traumatic childhoods REWIRE the brain and central nervous system so that the way in which that person interprets physical symptoms is forever changed. I have no doubt that he had chronic pain from the work he did, however, it is possible that the traumas he experienced in his youth ADDED to that pain and that using the medications wasn't JUST to address the chronic pain but to also medicate the trauma from his youth.

DID is actually a diagnosable condition that is recognized in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual used by psychiatrists, psychologists, and clinical social workers. They changed it from a "split personality" to Dissociative Identity Disorder. The personality isn't "split" but it is fragmented in some situations. Dissociative Identity Disorder takes on many forms - such as dissociating from the body during times of crisis (they feel separate from their body, as though what is happening to the body isn't real, or it is being done to someone else), disconnection between thoughts/consciousness/identity/memory. It's a depersonalization of the self, a derealization of the self. HOWEVER, some individuals with DID do have another personality or more that come forward to deal with certain situations.

More on DID:



Symptoms and signs of dissociative disorders include:


  • Significant memory loss of specific times, people and events

  • Out-of-body experiences, such as feeling as though you are watching a movie of yourself

  • Mental health problems such as depression, anxiety and thoughts of suicide

  • A sense of detachment from your emotions, or emotional numbness

  • A lack of a sense of self-identity

The symptoms of dissociative disorders depend on the type of disorder that has been diagnosed. There are three types of dissociative disorders defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM):


  • Dissociative Amnesia. The main symptom is difficulty remembering important information about one’s self. Dissociative amnesia may surround a particular event, such as combat or abuse, or more rarely, information about identity and life history. The onset for an amnesic episode is usually sudden, and an episode can last minutes, hours, days, or, rarely, months or years. There is no average for age onset or percentage, and a person may experience multiple episodes throughout her life.

  • Depersonalization disorder. This disorder involves ongoing feelings of detachment from actions, feelings, thoughts and sensations as if they are watching a movie (depersonalization). Sometimes other people and things may feel like people and things in the world around them are unreal (derealization). A person may experience depersonalization, derealization or both. Symptoms can last just a matter of moments or return at times over the years. The average onset age is 16, although depersonalization episodes can start anywhere from early to mid childhood. Less than 20% of people with this disorder start experiencing episodes after the age of 20.

  • Dissociative identity disorder. Formerly known as multiple personality disorder, this disorder is characterized by alternating between multiple identities. A person may feel like one or more voices are trying to take control in their head. Often these identities may have unique names, characteristics, mannerisms and voices. People with DID will experience gaps in memory of every day events, personal information and trauma. Women are more likely to be diagnosed, as they more frequently present with acute dissociative symptoms. Men are more likely to deny symptoms and trauma histories, and commonly exhibit more violent behavior, rather than amnesia or fugue states. This can lead to elevated false negative diagnosis.



    And no one is saying he is "bonkers". HE said he had another person inside of him, that he discovered this when he was taking someone else through therapy. From what he was saying, it sounds like DID, which is what caused me to post this, going by what Prince himself said. In fact he said he felt that when he changed his name to the symbol, that personality had taken over, because he felt "divorced" from Prince.


Stay away from the psychiatric titles. They'll spiral you downwards into depression and hopelessness. Start seeking out a solution. If you seek hard and long enough and god knows you are willing, He will provide.



I know exactly what you're referring to, it's one of the most common reaction to trauma and can also occur after the event. It is connected to self-preservation - the event is too much, so disassociation occurs as a survival method.
The kind of love that takes over your body, mind, & soul
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Reply #34 posted 11/18/17 10:58am

Morgaine

ThatWhiteDude said:



Morgaine said:


ThatWhiteDude said:

When I first saw this Interview last year I thought that Prince might have been tired because he was awake for days, when I found out that their son died just a week ago I was shocked. Because I thought: "How could they handle that? How could they handle to do that interview.



One thing's for sure, both Prince and Mayte showed during that interview how strong people can be during the probably most horrible times. Losing a child might be the cruelest thing that can happen in life. It's an unnatural loss.



To be clear, I'm paraphrasing what was said. Oprah asked Mayte for examples of he was romantic, she replies the songs he's written particularly, 'Let's Have s Baby' because that's why she got pregnant. Check out his facial reaction after she says this. How difficult this period in their lives must have been for both.

I didn't say anything else. I can imagine that this was the worst thing that happened to both of them.



The "to be clear" wasn't for you - trying to vslidate not insinuate, etc. I agree with you.

Peace & Be Wild
The kind of love that takes over your body, mind, & soul
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Reply #35 posted 11/18/17 11:07am

ThatWhiteDude

avatar

Morgaine said:

ThatWhiteDude said:

I didn't say anything else. I can imagine that this was the worst thing that happened to both of them.

The "to be clear" wasn't for you - trying to vslidate not insinuate, etc. I agree with you. Peace & Be Wild

Okay smile

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Reply #36 posted 11/18/17 11:15am

ThatWhiteDude

avatar

Morgaine said:

ThatWhiteDude said:

I got this very often: Depersonalization disorder This disorder involves ongoing feelings of detachment from actions, feelings, thoughts and sensations as if they are watching a movie (depersonalization)

I always thought that everyone has this, but when I asked people around me if they get this feelig too, they looked at me as if I'm crazy or something. It's a strange feeling, it's like I'm not here, as if this body is not mine, It feels like you are watching someone else, like I see the person that should be me through VR or something. I can't really describe it but I don't know anyone that knows what I'm talking about. They just look at me and say: "That's strange."

I know exactly what you're referring to, it's one of the most common reaction to trauma and can also occur after the event. It is connected to self-preservation - the event is too much, so disassociation occurs as a survival method.

Can it be "cured" or can I just learn to live with it?

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Reply #37 posted 11/18/17 11:49am

luvsexy4all

does anyone else find it rude to ask if he's gay with his wife sitting RIGHT next to him????????

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Reply #38 posted 11/18/17 11:53am

ThatWhiteDude

avatar

luvsexy4all said:

does anyone else find it rude to ask if he's gay with his wife sitting RIGHT next to him????????

That's one of the reasons why I don't like Oprah. She can't stop herself from asking rude questions.

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Reply #39 posted 11/18/17 11:53am

Morgaine

ThatWhiteDude said:



Morgaine said:


ThatWhiteDude said:

I got this very often: Depersonalization disorder This disorder involves ongoing feelings of detachment from actions, feelings, thoughts and sensations as if they are watching a movie (depersonalization)



I always thought that everyone has this, but when I asked people around me if they get this feelig too, they looked at me as if I'm crazy or something. It's a strange feeling, it's like I'm not here, as if this body is not mine, It feels like you are watching someone else, like I see the person that should be me through VR or something. I can't really describe it but I don't know anyone that knows what I'm talking about. They just look at me and say: "That's strange."




I know exactly what you're referring to, it's one of the most common reaction to trauma and can also occur after the event. It is connected to self-preservation - the event is too much, so disassociation occurs as a survival method.

Can it be "cured" or can I just learn to live with it?



In my experience, there's no cure and is about learning how to live with it, which usually entails learning to recognize what triggers its recurrence.
Triggers can be sounds, smells, emotions, situations, etc.
It's hard but I've found it's much easier to face and work through than to let it run my life.
Feel free to org note me if you're so inclined.
<3
The kind of love that takes over your body, mind, & soul
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Reply #40 posted 11/19/17 5:27pm

benni

I am not saying Prince had DID, just that this particular interview and what he discussed made me think of DID. (Probably shouldn't have added the part about DID, but I find that subject fascinating.) My main question is in the final paragraph, related to suffering chronic pain that is physical but if he experienced trauma as a child, could also have an impact upon his physical pain, making it seem worse, and creating a situation in which he would feel the need to take powerful opoids to control the pain, but that they would have the added effect of medicating the trauma. I also looked at the thought of memory loss, in a later post, and how it relates to DID and wondered about it in that post, but was remembering a conversation that went on several months ago in which someone was saying they were from Prince's camp and that he had beginning stages of Alzheimer's from years ago, and discussed memory loss. I wanted to add this disclaimer in case anyone is thinking that I was saying Prince had DID. There is no way to diagnose an individual through an interview, but in the interview it did appear that Prince was revealing something very deep and uncomfortable for him. That's what made me think of DID, and from the description seemed to closely correlate to DID. And any speculation thereof, in this thread, is strictly speculation based upon what Prince said in the interview - not from any other source, and it in no way means I am saying Prince had DID.

It is also possible that if Prince, by what he said, took someone else through therapy and that therapist discussed DID in Prince's presence, that Prince may have took that and ran with it, to explain some of his seemingly contradictions in personality.

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