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Trauma Disorders Glossary
Introduction
The purpose of this glossary is to provide definitions for the frequently used terms in the field of traumatic stress disorders. The anticipated audience is diverse, ranging from mental health professionals to consumers of mental health services and their families. Because of this diversity, we have included general mental health terms for those unfamiliar with psychological literature. The goal is to provide a common vocabulary and common meanings for both general psychiatric and trauma disorder terms.
Several editorial decisions that affect the structure and format of this glossary are described below:
- When a definition of a term is from a single source then that source is cited following the definition. Direct quotations are cited at the end of the quote.
- When there is more than one label for a definition, the definition is listed with the term that has the most common usage.
- When there is more than one label for the same definition, this is noted at the end of the citation.
- Since this glossary has been developed just as the change from the DSM-III-R to the DSM-IV takes place, the current DSM-IV definition will be used. When there are changes in criteria from
the DSM-III-R to the DSM-IV this is noted and reference to the DSM-III-R is included for clarity.
- Diagnostic categories have been chosen for inclusion in the glossary if there is a frequency of overlap with trauma symptomatology.
- In cases where there is a general psychiatric use of a term and also a specific use of that term in the trauma disorder field, this is noted.
- The term "personality states" (rather than alters, alternate personalities, or personalities) will be used throughout the glossary except in direct quotations from other sources.
- The word "client" (rather than "patient") will be used throughout the glossary, except in direct quotations from other sources.
Dissociative Disorders Glossary
abreaction The
discharge of energy [emotion] involved in recalling an event that
has been repressed because it was consciously intolerable. The
experience may be one of reliving the trauma as if it were
happening in the present, complete with physical as well as
emotional manifestations (also called revivification). A
therapeutic effect sometimes occurs through partial discharge of or
desensitization to the painful emotions and increased insight.
Abreaction can happen spontaneously or can be therapeutically
induced through verbal suggestion or hypnosis. Adapted from
American Psychiatric Glossary, p.1. See also flashbacks.
acting out Originally an
analytic term referring to the expression of unconscious feelings
about the analyst, the commonly used meaning is the expression of
unconscious feelings or conflicts in actions rather than words.
This can take many forms including dangerous behavior such as self-harm or suicidal gestures.
acute stress disorder A
disorder first named in DSM-IV. It is similar to Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in that it
is evoked by the same types of stressors that precipitate PTSD.
However, in this disorder, the symptoms occur during or immediately
following the trauma. The primary criteria are the same as those
for PTSD, except that the disturbance lasts for a minimum of two
days and a maximum of four weeks and occurs within four weeks of
the traumatic event. Adapted from DSM-IV, p. 432.
adjunctive therapies In
addition to individual psychotherapy with a primary therapist, a
client may receive other therapy such as art therapy, psychodrama,
dance therapy, or assertiveness training. These are considered
adjunctive therapies.
affect "A pattern of
observable behaviors that is the expression of a subjectively
experienced feeling state (emotion). Common examples of affect are
sadness, elation, and anger. In contrast to mood, which refers to
a more pervasive and sustained emotional `climate,' affect refers
to more fluctuating changes in emotional `weather.'" DSM-IV, p. 763.
age regression See regression.
alexithymia The inability to recognize or describe what one feels. This is common in post-traumatic stress disorder, somatization, and conversion disorders.
alter Another term for personality, alternate personality or
personality state; also called an identity or dissociated part. A
distinct identity or personality state, with its own relatively
enduring pattern of perceiving, relating to, and thinking about the
environment and self. Modified from DSM-IV, p. 770.
"Alters are dissociated parts of the mind that the patient
experiences as separate from each other." ISSD Practice
Guidelines Glossary, 1994.
amnesia "Pathologic loss
of memory; a phenomenon in which an area of
experience becomes inaccessible to `conscious' recall. The loss in
memory may be organic, emotional, dissociative, or of mixed origin,
and may be permanent or limited to a sharply circumscribed period
of time." American Psychiatric Glossary, p. 13. See also
dissociative amnesia.
anniversary reaction The
experience of reacting with feelings or behavior on the
"anniversary" of a previous event. For example, an individual
whose house burned down on September 22nd may for years after the
event have intense feelings or reactions on or around September
22nd. In some cases the person may not even consciously recall why
he or she is feeling differently on that date. A common anniversary
reaction is temporary depression.
assertiveness training
This is a cognitive/behavioral technique that
teaches clients to express their feelings and needs rather than
being passive and letting other people take advantage, overwhelm,
or dominate them (a characteristic of people who were abused in
childhood). After a client and therapist identify problem
situations, the client practices appropriate confrontation.
Assertiveness, a middle ground between being passive and
aggressive/hostile, may be learned on a one-to-one basis or in a
group.
attachment (bonding) The process of developing and maintaining a healthy relationship between people; healthy attachment between a parent and child, is characterized by a sense of security, emotional attunement and regulation of physiological functioning such that the developing child becomes able to self-regulate over time.
auto-hypnosis See self-hypnosis.
autonomic arousal A physical symptom of PTSD which occurs automatically when a person perceives a situation to be life-threatening. Also known as nervous system hyper-reactivity, this physical response bypasses the cognitive/thinking process and generally includes an elevated heart rate, dilation of pupils, perspiring, and other fear responses. Trauma survivors may re-experience autonomic arousal when remembering traumatic events. See also flight or fight response.
Axis II pathology Axis II is
one component of the diagnostic system described in the DSM-
IV. Axis II contains the personality disorders, such as
borderline personality disorder, narcissistic personality disorder
and avoidant personality disorder. Personality disorders are
defined as personality traits that are inflexible, maladaptive, and
cause functional impairment or subjective distress. When a person
has both DID and an Axis II diagnosis the treatment may be more
complicated and chaotic. A person may resolve the DID and still
need to deal with the Axis II diagnosis. Adapted from DSM-
IV, p. 630.
BASK The BASK model of
dissociation developed by Bennett G. Braun, M.D., conceptualizes
dissociation as dimensions of Behavior, Affect, Sensation, and
Knowledge. For example, a client with DID (MPD) may experience the
behavior of other personality states as
separate, or may experience the intense feelings of a personality
state as separate, or may have body sensations of pain with no
memory of trauma, or one personality state may have "knowledge" of
trauma but no feelings or physical sensations. The goal of
treatment is the integration of the BASK components over time.
Braun, "The BASK Model of Dissociation," pp. 4-23.
behavioral memory A lay
term for implicit (or habit) memory. This
type of memory is encoded in terms of a pattern of behavior rather
than explicit knowledge. This term often
refers to actions or fears which may indicate unconfirmed memories.
(Lenore Terr, M.D., personal correspondence, 31 August 1994).
blending A commonly used
dissociative disorders term coined by Catherine Fine, M.D. which
refers to the moment at which the personality
states or fragments temporarily come
together as a single entity, either spontaneously or with the help
of a therapist.
body memory This popularly-used term is actually a misnomer. The body does not have neurons capable of remembering; only the brain does. The term refers to body sensations that symbolically or literally captures some aspect of the trauma. Sensory impulses are recorded in the parietal lobes of the brain, and these remembrances of bodily sensations can be felt when similar occurrences or cues restimulate the stored memories.(Lenore Terr, M.D., personal correspondence, 31 August 1994). For example, a person who was raped may later experience pelvic pain similar to that experienced at the time of the event. This type of bodily sensation may occur in any sensory mode: tactile, taste, smell, kinesthetic, or sight.
Body memories may be diagnosed as somatoform disorder. See also somatic memory.
borderline personality disorder (BPD)
Borderline personality disorder is best understood as an attachment disorder. "The essential feature of Borderline Personality Disorder is a pervasive pattern of instability of interpersonal
relationships, self-image, and affects, and marked impulsivity that begins by early adulthood and is present in a variety of contexts," as indicated by five (or more) of the following:
- frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment
- a pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal relationships
characterized by alternating between extremes of idealization and
devaluation
- identity disturbance: markedly and persistently unstable self-
image or sense of self
- impulsivity in at least two areas that are potentially self-
damaging
- recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures, or threats, or self-
mutilating behavior
- affective instability due to a marked reactivity of mood
- chronic feelings of emptiness
- inappropriate, intense anger or difficulty controlling anger
- transient, stress-related paranoid ideation or severe
dissociative symptoms.
In Borderline Personality Disorder, like DID (MPD), there is a
likelihood of a trauma history: "Physical and sexual abuse,
neglect, hostile conflict, and early parental loss or separation
are more common in the childhood histories of those with Borderline
Personality Disorder." Adapted from DSM-IV, pp. 650-654.
boundaries For the
comfort and safety of the client, therapist, and other outsiders,
behavioral boundaries often need to be established. These limits
may affect a range of issues from details of personal and
therapeutic interactions, such as length of therapy sessions;
appropriate touching; number, and duration, of phone calls to
prevention of assault and suicide. Setting boundaries is
particularly important in the treatment of dissociative disorders
since lack of boundaries is usually a part of the history of a
person who has been abused.
brief reactive psychosis One of the trauma related disorders listed in the DSM-III-R. It consists of a sudden and brief psychosis (loss of reality contact) lasting from a few hours to no more than one month. It is preceded by a major stressor which would be extremely stressful to almost anyone in similar circumstances in that person's culture. This has been renamed Brief Psychotic Disorder in DSM-IV with a slight modification in the criteria. Adapted from DSM-III-R, p. 207.
brief psychotic disorder The
DSM- IV criteria are:
- The presence of one or more psychotic symptoms
- The episode lasts at least one day but less than one month with
eventual return to previous functioning
- The disturbance is not better accounted for by another mental
illness and is not due to the physiological effects of a substance
or general medical condition.
For this condition there are three specifiers: with marked
stressor(s), without marked stressor(s), and with postpartum onset.
Adapted from DSM-IV, p. 304.
co-consciousness For a
person with DID (MPD), this is the awareness of the thoughts,
feelings, beliefs, needs, etc. of other personality states.
co-existing disorders
Refers to cases in which an individual has more than one mental
disorder as described in the DSM-IV. Also known as co-
morbidity. See also dual diagnosis.
cognitive/behavioral
treatment A treatment approach that focuses both on
observable behavior and on the thinking or beliefs that accompany
the behavior. In psychotherapy, dysfunctional or maladaptive
behaviors, thoughts, and beliefs are replaced by more adaptive
ones. This approach is increasingly being used in the treatment of
DID (MPD) and BPD.
cognitive distortion An
error in thinking or reasoning based on drawing incorrect
conclusions about past experience. For example, a trauma survivor
who was sexually abused by a man with a beard might overgeneralize
from the trauma experience and conclude that all men with beards
are dangerous.
cognitive therapy A form
of therapy that focuses on what the client thinks or believes. In
this model, faulty thinking is seen as the basis for negative
emotions and maladaptive behavior. Therapeutic intervention helps
clients explore erroneous thoughts and beliefs and replace them
with a more realistic assessment of themselves and their situation.
complex PTSD (also
complex, chronic PTSD) A term used to refer to dissociative
disorders. See also Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder.
confabulation This term
originally referred to a neurological deficit in which a person who
is unable to recall previous situations or events fabricates
stories in response to questions about those situations or events.
It is now used more broadly to refer to "false
memories" that are supposedly created in response to questions
asked by a therapist or interviewer.
containment The process of consciously postponing dealing with intrusive PTSD symptoms, being able to notice a symptom, communicate about it, set it aside (contain it), and revisit it later.
context dependent memory See state dependent memory.
contracts Verbal or
written agreements made between therapist and client for the
express purposes of setting safe and reasonable boundaries for the client, to nurture the
client's sense of cause and effect, and to encourage the internal
personality system to take responsibility for its behavior.
conversion disorder Often
precipitated by psychosocial stress, people with trauma histories have a
higher than average rate of conversion disorder. The DSM-IV criteria are:
- One or more symptoms or deficits affecting voluntary motor or
sensory function that suggest a neurological or other general
medical condition
- The initiation or exacerbation of the symptom or deficits is
preceded by conflicts or other stressors
- The symptoms or deficits are not intentionally produced or
feigned
- The symptoms or deficits cannot be fully explained by a general
medical condition, by the direct effects of a substance, or as a
culturally sanctioned behavior or experience
- The symptoms or deficits cause clinically significant distress
or impairment in functioning or warrant medical evaluation
- The symptoms or deficits are not better accounted for by
another mental disorder.
Adapted from DSM-IV, p. 457.
co-presence This occurs when
two or more personalities are simultaneously present with or without
knowledge of each other's existence or current presence. They may
or may not exert influence on each other.
countertransference
A therapist's conscious or unconscious emotional reactions to a
client. It is a therapist's job to monitor his or her reactions to
a client and to minimize their impact on the therapeutic
relationship and treatment.
DDIS See Dissociative Disorder
Interview Schedule.
delayed memory This term
is used to describe the experience of an individual who recalls a
memory for which he or she was previously amnestic. The
recollection may occur spontaneously or in the context of therapy.
This is a controversial concept: some individuals believe that
delayed memory is an understandable response to traumatic stressors
and others believe that important events, especially traumatic
ones, are not forgotten. The term "delayed memory" is often used
interchangeably with repressed memory, or
false memory, but there are different
meanings for these terms.
depersonalization disorder
One of the dissociative disorders described in DSM-IV. The criteria
include:
- Persistent or recurrent experiences of feeling detached from,
and as if one is an outside observer of, one's mental processes or
body
- During the depersonalization experience, reality testing
remains intact
- The depersonalization causes clinically significant distress or
impairment in functioning
- The depersonalization experience is not attributable to another
mental disorder, the effects of a substance, or a general medical
condition.
Adapted from DSM-IV, p. 490.
derealization A feeling of
estrangement or detachment from one's environment. A sense that the
external world is strange or unreal. Often accompanied by depersonalization.
DES See Dissociative Experiences
Scale.
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders The fourth edition of
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-
IV) was published in 1994 by the American Psychiatric
Association. It contains standard definitions of psychological
disorders. DSM-III-R refers to the third edition, revised,
of the same manual, published in 1987. The diagnostic categories
referred to in the trauma literature published in the late 1980s
and early 1990s are those from the DSM-III-R.
DID See dissociative identity
disorder.
dissociation The
separation of ideas, feelings, information, identity, or memories
that would normally go together. Dissociation exists on a
continuum: At one end are mild dissociative experiences common to
most people (such as daydreaming or highway hypnosis) and at the
other extreme is severe chronic dissociation, such as DID (MPD) and
other dissociative disorders. Dissociation appears to be a normal
process used to handle trauma that over time becomes reinforced and
develops into maladaptive coping.
dissociative amnesia
One of the dissociative disorders described in DSM-IV. The
three criteria are:
- One or more episodes of inability to recall important personal
information, usually of a traumatic or stressful nature, that is
too extensive to be explained by ordinary forgetfulness
- The disturbance does not occur exclusively during the course of
another mental disorder, is not due to the effects of a substance,
a neurological and/or other general medical condition.
- The symptoms cause clinically significant distress or
impairment in functioning. There are several types of memory
disturbances including: localized amnesia, selective amnesia,
generalized amnesia, continuous amnesia, and systematized amnesia.
Adapted from DSM-IV, pp. 478-481.
For individuals with DID (MPD), amnesia may exist
differentially between various personality
states or personality fragments. In
one-way amnesia Personality A is unaware of Personality B; however,
Personality B knows everything about Personality A. In two-way
amnesia neither Personality A or B is aware of the existence of the
other.
Dissociative Disorder Interview Schedule
(DDIS) A structured interview developed for both
clinical and research purposes to standardize the diagnosis of DID
(MPD). It takes 30-45 minutes to complete. The DDIS has shown that
DID(MPD) is a valid diagnosis with a consistent set of features and
that both dissociative experiences and dissociative disorders are
common. Developed by Ross, Heber, Norton and Anderson, the DDIS has
been used in several research studies and has good clinical
validity. Ross, Multiple Personality Disorder, p.135.
dissociative disorder not otherwise
specified (DDNOS) In DSM-IV this is the
diagnostic category for individuals who have dissociative symptoms
but do not meet the minimum criteria for any of the specific
dissociative disorders. A client who has some (but not all) DID
symptoms, and who does not have amnesia for important personal
information, would be an example of a person with DDNOS. DSM-
IV, p. 590.
dissociative disorders A
group of psychiatric conditions with the disruption in the
integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, or
perception of the environment. DID (MPD) is one disorder in this
category. See also dissociative amnesia,
dissociative fugue, dissociative identity disorder, dissociative disorders not otherwise specified.
Adapted from DSM-IV, p. 477.
Dissociative Experiences Scale
(DES) Developed by Frank W. Putnam M.D. and Eve B.
Carlson, Ph.D., the DES is a 28-item self-report instrument that
can be completed in about 10 minutes. It asks the respondent to
indicate the frequency with which certain dissociative or
depersonalization experiences occur. An example of a typical DES
question is "Some people have the experience of feeling that their
body does not seem to belong to them. Circle a number to show what
percentage of the time this happens to you."
dissociative fugue One
of the dissociative disorders described in DSM-IV. The
diagnostic criteria are:
- Sudden, unexpected travel from home or work, with the inability
to recall some or all of one's past
- Confusion about personal identity or assumption of a new
identity
- The disturbance does not occur exclusively during the course of
DID and is not due to the effects of a substance or general medical
condition
- The symptoms cause clinically significant distress or
impairment in functioning.
- The onset of dissociative fugue is usually related to
traumatic, stressful, or overwhelming life events. In DSM-III-
R, this was called psychogenic fugue. Adapted from DSM-
IV, pp. 481-483.
dissociative identity disorder
(DID) One of the dissociative disorders in DSM-
IV. There are four diagnostic criteria:
- The presence of two or more distinct identities or personality states
- At least two of these identities or personality states
recurrently take control of the person's behavior
- Inability to recall important personal information that is too
extensive to be explained by ordinary forgetfulness
- The disturbance is not due to the direct physiological effects
of a substance or a general medical condition.
DID is the current name for multiple personality disorder
(MPD), first used in DSM-IV. In addition to the name
change, the criteria was increased by two items, items C and D.
The term DID is felt to reflect more accurately the condition
of an individual with two or more personality states. This change
recognizes that MPD represents the failure to form one core
personality rather than to simply create many personalities.
Adapted from DSM-IV, p. 487.
DSM-IV See Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
dual diagnosis This refers
to the co-existence of a mental disorder and substance abuse
disorder. The current term for this is co-existing disorders, also
called co-morbidity. See also co-existing
disorders.
eating disorders A category of mental disorders described in DSM-IV. Individuals with these disorders, such as anorexia nervosa and bulimia, show a marked disturbance in eating behavior. Some individuals with DID (MPD) and PTSD also have an eating disorder.
ego states An organized
system of behavior and experience in which the elements (ego
states) are bound together by some common principle. In this theory
of dissociation, developed by Helen H. and John G Watkins, ego
states occur naturally in people and are separated from each other
by boundaries that are more or less permeable. A problem arises
only when the boundaries between ego states become non-permeable or
maladaptive. The goal of treatment in ego state therapy is not the
fusion or integration of ego states, but the
harmonius cooperation between ego states. Watkins & Watkins, "Ego-
State Therapy in the Treatment of Dissociative Disorders," in Kluft
& Fine, Clinical Perspectives on Multiple Personality
Disorder, pp. 277-299.
EMDR See Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing.
empathy The ability to put one's self into the psychological frame of reference or point of view of another, to feel what another feels.
executive control In the
internal system of a person with a
dissociative disorder, authority over the body and its behavior by
a particular personality state, usually
the host.
experiential therapies
Therapeutic techniques that utilize metaphors and analogies to help
clients understand and change their behaviors, traditionally in a
group format. These techniques encourage the client to directly
experience feelings and thoughts by participating in activities
such as art, group sculpting, outdoor challenge courses, etc. See
also expressive therapies.
explicit memory
Consciously recalled facts or events (knowing that) which have
verbal components. This is the form of memory used, for example,
when a person recounts the events of his or her day at work or at
school. Also referred to as narrative or declarative memory. See
also implicit memory.
expressive therapies
Specific therapeutic techniques that facilitate expression of
feelings through language or movement. Examples include dance, art,
and poetry therapy. Most often used as adjunctive therapy to gain access to feelings
or memories, expressive therapies are increasingly used for primary
treatment in trauma cases. Since traumatic memories may be stored
on sensory motor or visual levels, the use of these therapies may
access memories not usually available through talking therapy.
Eye Movement Desensitization and
Reprocessing (EMDR) A procedure which produces rapid
eye movements in a client while a traumatic memory is recalled and
processed. This technique seems to lessen the amount of therapeutic
time needed to process and resolve traumatic memories. Developed by
Francine Shapiro, this technique requires training and following of
specific protocols for appropriate use.
false memory A term
developed in the early 1990s by the False Memory Syndrome
Foundation to describe memories that are not based on actual
events. This term is popular in the media, although the concept of
false memory is not based on clinical research or accepted
theoretical formulation.
The terms false memory, delayed memory,
and repressed memory are often used
interchangeably in the popular literature but they actually have
distinct meanings.
False Memory Syndrome (FMS)
"False memory syndrome" is a term coined in the early 1990s by the
False Memory Syndrome Foundation (FMSF). The FMSF defines the
syndrome as "a condition in which the person's personality and
interpersonal relationships are oriented around a memory that is
objectively false but strongly believed in to the detriment of the
welfare of the person and others involved in the memory."
Goldstein, Confabulations: Creating False Memories - Destroying
Families, p. iv
This organization was founded by parents of adult children who
reported delayed memories of child abuse usually uncovered in
psychotherapy. These parents deny the abuse and believe false
memories have been implanted by therapists in the minds of their
adult children.
The term "false memory syndrome" is popular in the media but is not based on clinical research or accepted theoretical formulations. It is not listed as a diagnosis or symptom in the
DSM-IV, nor is there a known treatment or cure. See also delayed memory and repression.
flashbacks A type of
spontaneous abreaction common to victims
of acute trauma. Also known as "intrusive recall," flashbacks have
been categorized into four types:
- dreams or nightmares
- dreams from which the dreamer awakens but remains under the
influence of the dream content and has difficulty making contact
with reality
- conscious flashbacks, in which the person may or may not lose
contact with reality and which may be accompanied by multimodal
hallucinations
- unconscious flashbacks, in which a person "relives" a traumatic
event with no awareness at the time or later of the connection
between the flashback and the past trauma.
Putnam, Diagnosis and Treatment of Multiple Personality
Disorder, pp. 236-237.
flight or fight response
An automatic response to an experience that is perceived to be a threat to survival. The part of the brain that regulates metabolic and autonomic function and prepares muscles to act -- to either flee or fight. This survival mechanism works well when the situation allows for an active response. In repeated traumatic situations, when there is no opportunity to fight or flee, this response may result in a chronic state of physiological arousal which is very stressful to the body. See also autonomic arousal.
flooding The process of becoming overwhelmed by intrusive emotions, sensory experiences, or intense re-living experiences; commonly associated with posttraumatic stress disorder.
FMS See False Memory Syndrome.
fragment Within the personality system of a person who has a dissociative disorder, a fragment is a dissociated part of that person which has limited function and is less distinct or developed than a personality state. Usually a
fragment has a consistent emotional and behavioral response to specific situations. For example, a fragment may handle the expression of feelings through drawing. The term "special purpose
fragment" refers to a part with an even more narrowly defined function.
fugue See dissociative
fugue.
fusion The moment when
personality states or fragments come together as a single entity.
The breaking down of dissociative barriers may occur spontaneously
or as part of a specific therapeutic process. Fusion is different
from integration.
grounding Reality based awareness in the here and now, a sense of connectedness to yourself and your environment.
host In dissociative
identity disorder, the personality state that most frequently has
control of the body and its behavior. The host is often initially
unaware of the other identities and typically loses time when they appear. The host is the
identity that most often initiates treatment, usually after
developing symptoms, the most common being depression. See also executive control.
hypermnesia This
experience of heightened memory is a symptom of PTSD. It is the
opposite of amnesia, which is the forgetting
of events. Hypermnesia consists of abnormally sharp or vivid
recall. For example, a trauma survivor may vividly remember a
traumatic event with total recall of all details--sight, sound,
feel, smell, and touch. Hypermnesia may be intrusive and may
interfere with everyday functioning.
hypervigilance One of the
symptoms of PTSD. In this state an individual is overly sensitive
to sounds and sights in the environment, scans the environment
expecting danger, and feels keyed up and on edge. In addition, a
traumatized person may have an exaggerated startle response and problems with memory and
concentration.
hypnosis An altered
state of consciousness which is subjectively experienced by an
individual as different from normal alertness. This may occur
spontaneously, as in spontaneous trance, or may be suggested by a
therapist or hypnotist. The individual who is hypnotized may
experience altered perception or memory.
Hypnosis is often used in the treatment of DID (MPD) to
facilitate communication between personality
states, to overcome amnesiac barriers and to promote healing
through managed abreaction. Before using
hypnosis in treatment it is recommended that the client be provided
with enough information to give his or her informed consent and that this be documented.
Hypnosis is also referred to as being in a trance
state. The process of dissociation itself
may be a form of self-hypnosis.
iatrogenesis When medical
treatment or psychotherapy causes an illness or aggravates an
existing illness. In psychotherapy, this may occur as a result of
the comments, questions, or attitudes of the therapist. There are
those who feel that DID (MPD) is an iatrogenic illness produced by
a client to meet the expectations of a therapist. There is also a
concern that traditional DID (MPD) treatment approaches may
encourage the development of additional personality states.
However, there is no scientific research to support the idea that
DID (MPD) is an iatrogenic illness.
ideomotor signaling A
hypnotic technique wherein the client and therapist agree on
prearranged body movements to answer questions non-verbally. The
most common technique uses finger signals to stand for "yes," "no,"
and "stop." This allows nonverbal communication of unconscious
material during hypnosis. Often the client will experience the
movement of the fingers as "outside conscious control." The
technique may be used to contact personality
states without direct emergence of those personality states.
imagery Using your imagination to manage stress responses and feelings.
implicit memory
Behavioral knowledge of an experience (knowing how) without
conscious recall or verbal components; habit memory. Driving,
riding a bicycle, or reading are examples of skills which people
implicitly remember how to do without consciously remembering steps
involved. This type of memory is almost always irretrievable in
words. (Lenore Terr, M.D., personal correspondence, 31 August
1994.) Also called procedural or sensorimotor memory. See also, explicit memory.
impulse An action urge.
informed consent In psychotherapy, informed consent occurs when a client is informed of:
- the diagnosis
- the nature of the treatment being considered
- the risks and benefits of such treatment
- the likely outcome with and without treatment
- alternative approaches to relieve the symptoms
The information must be presented in a form the client can
understand and consent must be given without coercion. Often this
information is presented in written form which the client signs,
thereby giving permission for treatment. While this has
historically been common for medical procedures and psychological
research, it is now also being done during psychotherapy,
especially with specific techniques such as hypnosis and sodium
amytal interviews.
inner self-helper (ISH) A personality state, often a helper or
protector, that has knowledge of the system
and works with the therapist to facilitate the treatment.
integration The
ongoing process of bringing together all dissociated aspects of
self, whether they are thoughts, feelings, behavior, or are
organized as personality states or fragments. This process begins before the fusion of specific personality states and
continues throughout the psychotherapy.
There is lack of agreement about the end goal of DID (MPD)
treatment. Some therapists and clients consider integration the
treatment goal while others do not. This complex decision is best
discussed together by therapist and client.
internal system see system.
International Society for the Study of
Dissociation (ISSD) Formerly the International Society
for the Study of Multiple Personality and Dissociation (ISSMP&D).
The organization voted to change its name in the spring of 1994
after the classification of MPD was changed to dissociative
identity disorder (DID) in the DSM-IV.
The International Society for the Study of Dissociation is a not-for-profit professional
association organized to promote research and training in the identification and treatment of Dissociative Identity Disorder and other dissociative states. ISSD provides professional and public education about DID and other dissociative states and serves as a catalyst for international communication and cooperation among clinicians and investigators working in this field. ISSMP&D Membership Directory, 1994, p. 2.
International Society for the Study of Multiple
Personality & Dissociation (ISSMP&D) The original name of
the ISSD when it was founded in 1984. It was changed in 1994 after
the term MPD was changed to dissociative identity disorder (DID).
See also International Society for the Study of
Dissociation.
International Society for Traumatic
Stress Studies, Inc. (ISTSS) A non-profit organization
to "promote the advancement of knowledge about the immediate and
long-term human consequences of extraordinary events and to promote
effective methods of preventing or ameliorating the unwanted
consequences of them." ISTSS Membership Directory, 1993,
p. iii.
intrapsychic The
complex processes that occur within the mind of an individual
rather than the dynamics between individuals or between an
individual and the environment.
ISH See inner self-helper.
ISSD See International Society
for the Study of Dissociation.
ISTSS See International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.
journal writing The process of using structured exercises to write about thoughts, feelings, and stress responses in an effort to increase self-awareness and decrease symptomotology.
learned helplessness A
term developed by Martin Seligman, pioneering researcher in animal
psychology, to describe what occurs when animals or human beings
learn that their behavior has no effect on the environment. The
impact of this experience leaves an individual apathetic,
depressed, and unwilling to try previous or new behavior.
This concept is relevant to people with dissociative disorders
who may show some degree of learned helplessness due to repeated
exposure to traumatic events which they could not change or avoid
by their behavior.
losing time Specific to
the dissociative disorder field, having no recollection of one's
activities during a given time period (hours, days, years).
Unaccounted-for periods of time are generally confusing and
frightening to an individual who has DID (MPD) and may allow for
the person's re-victimization.
mapping A technique used in psychotherapy with DID (MPD) clients to gain knowledge about the internal personality system. The client is
asked to draw a map or diagram of the personality states to explain the inner world of personalities. This provides useful information about the system, such as the connections or lack of connections between personality states. The map may need to be updated as therapy progresses and can be used for integration work to help ensure that all internal parts have been integrated. Also known as personality mapping; system mapping. Mapping can also be used to understand the relationships among feeling states as well.
medical model The view
that abnormal behavior results from a physical/biological cause and
should be treated medically. This emphasis on biological causes of
mental disorder is in contrast with cognitive/behavioral approaches that see beliefs
and socially reinforced behavior as a cause of mental disorder. As
non-medical disciplines have become more involved in the treatment
of mental disorders, the conflict between the medical model and
social/behavioral models has become heightened.
memory "The ability,
process, or act of remembering or recalling; especially the ability
to reproduce what has been learned or explained." American Psychiatric Glossary, p. 126.
The question, "What is a memory?" has become increasingly
controversial in the last decade. As PTSD and dissociative disorder
clients report delayed and dissociated memories of childhood
trauma, the accuracy or validity of these memories has been
questioned. At the present time there is no reliable scientific
method to assess the self-report of traumatic events. While the
presence of corroborating evidence (or witnesses) may support a
survivor's memories, it does not in itself determine the validity
of abuse reports. See also explicit memory,
implicit memory, body memory and false
memory.
mental status exam (MSE) The
MSE, which is conducted by a mental health professional, is a
formal evaluation of a client's current psychological, emotional,
and behavioral functioning. Areas of assessment include:
orientation to time, place, and person as well as thought content,
cognition, mood, affect, insight, and general intelligence. This
evaluation is usually summarized on the five axes of DSM-IV and in
a narrative report.
MindcontrolMind control loosely defined is the the systematic and deliberate control of someone’s thought processes by another person or group. It is a “system” of influences that disrupt and individuals’ identity (beliefs, behaviour, thinking and emotion) and replaces it with a new identity.Read more here
MKULTRAProject MKULTRA came into existence on April 13, 1953 along the lines proposed by Richard Helms, Deputy Director of Central Intelligence (DDCI) with the rationale of establishing a “special funding mechanism of extreme sensitivity.”
Monarch
may have culminated from MKSEARCH subprojects, such as operation SPELLBINDER, which was set up to create “sleeper” assassins (i e. “Manchurian candidates”) who could be activated upon receiving a key word or phrase while in a post-hypnotic trance. Read a paper written by Ron PattonProject Monarch
MPD See multiple personality
disorder.
multiple personality disorder
(MPD) In DSM-III-R, MPD was classified as a
dissociative disorder. The diagnostic criteria were:
- The existence of two or more distinct personalities or personality states within one person with
each personality having a distinct and consistent pattern of
relating to self and the environment.
- At least two of these personalities or personality states
recurrently take full control of the person's behavior.
In general, individuals with MPD have a background of child
abuse or other forms of severe childhood trauma. Dissociative
identity disorder (DID) is the current name for this disorder in
DSM-IV. In addition to the name change two items have been added to
the criteria. See also dissociative identity
disorder for the current criteria. Adapted from DSM-III-
R, p. 272.
numbing A symptom common
to individuals with PTSD. It represents an individual's attempt to
compensate for intrusive thoughts, memories, or feelings of the
trauma by shutting down and becoming numb to internal or external
stimuli. Also called psychic numbing.
original personality This
term is no longer commonly used but is found frequently in the
historical MPD literature. In earlier MPD theory, this refers to
the personality state with which an individual is born and from
which other personality states were "split
off." See also splitting.
passive influence
Individuals with dissociative disorders often experience their
actions or thoughts as being controlled by dissociated aspects of
the self. Some may feel that a passive outside or inside force has
control without an overt or visible expression of that influence.
Automatic writing is an example of passive influence.
personality see personality states.
personality mapping see mapping.
personality states In
the dissociative disorders field, this refers to an entity that has
the following:
- a consistent and ongoing set of response patterns to given
stimuli
- a significant confluent history
- a range of emotions available (anger, sadness, joy, and so on)
- a range of intensity of affect for each emotion (for example,
anger ranging from neutrality to frustration and irritation to
anger and rage).
Also known as ego states, personalities, alters, parts, etc. Braun, Treatment of
Multiple Personality Disorder, p. xii.
personality system see system
ProgrammingA method of systematic tortures that are for the fragmenting of our minds and creating new alters, personalities. Methods of programming can be and are movies, music, smells, touch, spin programming You name it they use it.
Project Paperclip Paperclip had two aims: to exploit German scientists for American research, and to deny these intellectual resources to the Soviet Union. At least 1,600 scientists and their dependents were recruited and brought to the United States by Paperclip and its successor projects through the early 1970s. The most famous of these was Wernher von Braun
posttraumatic stress disorder
(PTSD) An anxiety disorder based on how an individual
responds to a traumatic event. According to DSM-IV, the
following criteria must be met:
- The person has experienced a traumatic event that involved
actual or threatened death or serious injury, or a threat to the
physical integrity of self or others, and the person's response
involved intense fear, helplessness, or horror
- The traumatic event is re-experienced in specific ways such as
recurrent and intrusive distressing recollections or dreams of the
event
- Persistent avoidance of stimuli associated with the trauma or
numbing of general responsiveness
- Persistent symptoms of increased arousal, such as
hypervigilance or irritability
- Duration of the disturbance (symptoms in Criteria B, C, and D)
is more than one month
- The disturbance causes clinically significant distress or
impairment in functioning.
PTSD may be acute, chronic, or with delayed onset. Many
individuals with DID (MPD) also have PTSD. The literature
sometimes describes DID(MPD) as complex and/or chronic PTSD.
Adapted from DSM-IV, p. 427-429.
presenting personality
The personality state that first comes to therapy. It is often the
host personality.
pseudo-memory A non-
technical term to describe memory of events that did not occur.
This term is often used interchangeably with false memory, another non-technical term
coined by members of the False Memory Syndrome
Foundation.
pseudoseizures
"Pseudoseizures are sudden changes in a person's behavior and/or
mental state that resemble epileptic seizures but which are not
caused by a physical disorder of the brain. They may look like any
type of epileptic seizure: staring unresponsively, generalized
stiffening and rhythmic jerking, movements of only a few body
parts, or alterations of awareness. During these spells, brain
cells are firing normally and the brain wave tracing does not show
the changes which are characteristic of epileptic seizures.
"Several research studies have found that many pseudoseizures
are really dissociative trance episodes, dissociative switching of
ego states, or dissociative states in which unconscious emotional
distress is expressed. Many studies have noted high rates of sexual
and physical abuse among pseudoseizure patients and pointed to
abuse as one cause of pseudoseizures. Pseudoseizures have been
reported in dissociative identity disorder patients and may be the
symptom that leads to seeking treatment. There are non-dissociative
causes for pseudoseizures, so persons who suffer from them should
not be assumed to have a dissociative disorder." (Elizabeth S.
Bowman, M.D., personal correspondence, 22 August 1994.)
psychic numbing see numbing
psychodrama A group
psychotherapy technique. Under the direction of a therapist,
individuals re-enact life situations or feelings in order to gain
insight or learn new ways of coping. It is one of the adjunctive therapies used in treating trauma
disorders.
psychodynamic A
theoretical orientation that recognizes the role of the unconscious
in determining behavior. It also considers the interplay of the
unconscious with the current situation, cognitive ability, and life
experience.
psychogenic amnesia A
type of dissociative disorder described in DSM-III-R. The
name was changed to dissociative amnesia in DSM-IV. See
also dissociative amnesia.
psychogenic fugue A type of
dissociative disorder described in DSM-III-R. The name was
changed to dissociative fugue in DSM-IV. See also dissociative fugue.
PTSD See posttraumatic
stress disorder.
Rational Emotive Therapy
(RET) A cognitive psychotherapy
approach developed by Albert Ellis which focuses on the client's
thoughts and beliefs. The goals of therapy are to identify
unrealistic and illogical thoughts (such as "I must always be
happy"), question these thoughts or beliefs, and replace them with
more reasonable and constructive views. In this school of thought,
behavior is understood to be based on beliefs rather than external
conditions. This form of therapy is used to help trauma survivors
to identify mistaken beliefs brought on by the traumatic
experiences.
reality check A technique that helps you to become aware of the true state of affairs in a particular experience.
regression The return
to earlier or younger behavior and thinking. Trauma often
overwhelms everyday defenses and brings about behavioral
regression. Child personality states are
an example of trauma-based regression. In "age regression," a
person experiences him or herself at a specific earlier age. The
person does not always return to the age of a child, however; age
regression may take a client back a few years earlier in adult
life.
repetition compulsion
Originally defined by Freud as the repetitive re-enactment of
earlier emotional experiences, this type of behavior may be seen in
the lives of trauma survivors. For example, a survivor of
traumatic abuse may put herself in a situation where there is a
risk of additional abuse in an attempt to psychologically master
the previous traumatic experiences.
repression An
unconscious defense mechanism which occurs when unacceptable ideas,
images, or fantasies are kept out of awareness. This is done
without an individual consciously knowing that it has taken place.
Repression is one psychological mechanism that may account for amnesia of traumatic events.
re-traumatizing Re-enacting or reinforcing a traumatic experience or belief.
revictimization Describes
the experience of a survivor being victimized or traumatized after
the original trauma. Examples of revictimization include
psychological abuse that may occur in a survivor's interactions
with authorities such as the courts, law enforcement personnel, or
therapists. This process is important to address in therapy. In
some cases it seems that a survivor may unconsciously allow or
encourage this subsequent trauma to occur.
revivification The vivid
remembering of past experiences. When remembering traumatic events
the client may see, hear, taste, smell, and feel as though the
event is happening in the present. This is common during an abreaction or flashback of previous trauma.
ritual abuse This term has
been defined in a variety of ways by different authors and
researchers. One definition developed for a study of abuse in child
daycare defined ritual abuse as "abuse that occurs in a context
linked to some symbols or group activity that have a religious,
magical, or supernatural connotation and where the invocation of
these symbols or activities, repeated over time, is used to
frighten and intimidate the children." Finkelhor, D., & Meyers, L.
M., Nursery Crimes: Sexual Abuse in Day Care, p. 59.
Another definition developed by the Los Angeles Commission for
Women (1991) refers to ritual abuse as, "A brutal form of abuse of
children, adolescents, and adults, consisting of physical, sexual,
and psychological abuse, and involving the use of rituals. Ritual
does not necessarily mean satanic. However, most survivors state
that they were ritually abused as part of satanic worship for the
purpose of indoctrinating them into satanic beliefs and practices.
Ritual abuse rarely consists of a single episode. It usually
involves repeated abuse over an extended period of time." Report of
the Ritual Abuse Task Force, Los Angeles County Commission for
Women, 1991, p. 1.
At the present time there is tremendous controversy about the
objective reality of ritual abuse. While some clinicians,
researchers, and police believe that ritual abuse occurs, others do
not. They believe that reports of ritual abuse are part of a mass
hysteria fed by media accounts and talk show programs. There is no
consensus about the reality and/or extent of ritual abuse.
Read more indepth definitions Here and Ritual Abuse FAQ
sadistic abuse Describes
"extreme adverse experiences which include sadistic sexual and
physical abuse, acts of torture, over-control, and terrorization,
induction into violence, ritual involvements, and malevolent
emotional abuse. Sadism was defined by Freud's mentor, Krafft-Ebing
(1894-1965), in the nineteenth century, as follows: 'The experience
of sexual or pleasurable sensations... produced by acts of cruelty,
as bodily punishment inflicted on one's own body or witnessed in
others, be they animals or human beings. It may also consist of
innate desire to humiliate, hurt, wound, or even destroy others. .
. .'" See also ritual abuse. Goodwin, "Sadistic
Abuse: Definition, Recognition, and Treatment,"
Dissociation, 6:3, pp. 181-182.
sand tray therapy A
therapeutic technique, similar to play therapy, in which a tray of
sand with figures and toys is provided for a client to create a
scene or story to be discussed with a therapist. The "world" that
a client creates may directly or symbolically represent previous
life experiences, conflicts, feelings, or fears. This technique,
when used to process traumatic events, allows a client emotional
distance and the opportunity to process the feelings, thoughts, and
beliefs that may accompany a traumatic experience.
satanic abuse Abuse that
evokes the name, image, or concept of satan as part of the abuse.
Even though this term is used interchangeably with ritual and sadistic abuse they each have specific meanings.
Abuse could be ritual and sadistic but not satanic if the concept
of satan is not used as a part of the abuse. See also ritual abuse for a more detailed explanation of that
term.
screen memory A partially
true memory that an individual subconsciously creates because the
actual memory is intolerable. For example, a client may report
abuse by a distant uncle when actually the abuser was the father.
This disguised presentation allows the client time to adjust to
aspects of the abuse before accepting the total reality of the
situation.
SCID-D See Structured Clinical
Interview for DSM-IV Dissociative Disorders.
script memory A type of
memory that is created during ritual or cult abuse when a person is
given a scripted identity and memories. For example, a victim may
given a historical identity and the information and memories
related to that identity. Mungadze, "Scripts and screen memories in
victims of ritual abuse: etiological and treatment implications,"
November 1992 Conference, ISSMP&D.
secondary PTSD See vicarious traumatization.
self-harm The action of
harming oneself without the intent to commit suicide. The many
forms of self-harm include cutting, burning, eating disorders, etc.
For trauma survivors, self-harm can function as tension reduction,
punishment, trauma re-enactment, or rage expression. Also called
self-inflicted violence or self-injury. See also self-mutilation.
self-inflicted violence See
self-harm.
self-injury See self-harm.
self-hypnosis
"Spontaneous or purposeful hypnotic trance states produced within
his or her own psyche. These states may include any or all of the
full range of hypnotic phenomena such as sensory alterations,
anesthesia, time distortion, relaxation, age regression, and
alterations in physiological functioning." ISSD Practice
Guidelines, Glossary, 1994.
self-mutilation A form of
self-harm motivated specifically by the desire to scar or disfigure
one's body; "Defined by Walsh and Rosen (1988) as `deliberate, non-
life-threatening, self-effected bodily harm or disfigurement of a
socially unacceptable nature' (p.10), self-mutilation most
typically involves repetitious cutting or carving of the body or
limbs, burning of the skin . . . ." Briere, Child Abuse
Trauma: Theory and Treatment of the Lasting Effects, p. 66.
See also self-harm.
self-regulation The process of consciously managing different internal states by 1. experiencing them as they come up, 2. expressing what you are experiencing,
3. consciously postponing dealing with traumatic material or overwhelming aspects of feelings, and
4. retrieving part of what you have contained when you are better able to manage it.
sleep disorders A category in DSM-IV which includes various disorders of sleep: primary sleep disorders such as insomnia and secondary sleep disorders due to medical conditions. Sleep disturbances are common in people with PTSD.
sodium amytal A hypnotic
sedative drug occasionally used in psychotherapy with trauma
clients to access repressed or unconscious material including
feelings and memories. This procedure, an IV drip infused with
sodium amytal, is usually done on an inpatient basis due to the
slight risk of medical complications. Even though sodium amytal has
been referred to as a "truth serum" it does not guarantee truth any
more than any other interview technique.
It is suggested that informed consent be
obtained before using this technique in the treatment of
dissociative disorder or PTSD clients.
somatic memory "A
physical sensation or change in physical functioning without the
presence of organic illness, that represents a dissociated aspect
of a traumatic or abusive experience." ISSD Practice
Guidelines, Glossary, 1994. See also body memory.
somatoform disorder
According to DSM-IV, the common feature of somatoform
disorders is the presence of physical symptoms that suggest a
general medical condition but are not fully explained by a general
medical condition, by the direct effects of a substance, or by
another mental disorder. These conditions may represent the
unconscious conversion of psychological conflicts to medical
problems or medical concerns. Examples of somatoform disorders
include: somatization disorder, conversion
disorder, and hypochondriasis. Adapted from DSM-IV, p.
445.
split screen
phenomenon A hypnotic therapeutic technique which
enables a client to see the past trauma on a mental screen in which
one half is the historical event and the other half is the current
therapeutic situation. This allows the client to deal with a
traumatic memory without being emotionally overwhelmed. The
technique may be helpful for abreactive
and intense memory work.
splitting In general
psychiatric literature splitting is "a mental mechanism in which
the self or others are reviewed as all good or all bad, with
failure to integrate the positive and negative qualities of self
and others into cohesive images. Often the person alternately
idealizes and devalues the same person." American Psychiatric
Glossary, p.199. Splitting is a symptom of borderline personality disorder.
In the dissociative disorder field "splitting" is an outdated
term, although it is still used. Historically, the formation of an
alter personality state was conceptualized as
a split from the original personality or
birth personality, suggesting there is a finite number of
personalities that can occur during the splitting process. Current
thinking by leaders in the field (Putnam, Kluft, and others)
indicates that pretending to be other people, or trying out
different roles, is a normal dissociative phenomenon in young
children, which is intensified when trauma occurs, resulting in the
creation of alter personality states. Thus, the terms "splitting"
and "split personality" are no longer relevant when referring to
the formation of personality states.
spontaneous trance See self-
hypnosis.
startle reaction This
symptom of both PTSD and generalized anxiety disorder occurs when
an individual reacts strongly to new and unexpected stimuli in the
environment. An example of a startle reaction would be jumping out
of a chair when a door is slammed. Also called startle
response.
state dependent memory
A similar concept to state dependent learning. Based on research
and clinical experience, it appears that information and events may
be best remembered in the same emotional or physiological state in
which it was learned. For trauma survivors an event that produced
extreme fear may not be recalled during normal everyday conditions,
including psychotherapy. Recall of this past event may only be
available to consciousness at another time of extreme fear. This is
one reason why a current traumatic event, with all the feelings and
high arousal state, may trigger memory of forgotten earlier trauma.
Also referred to as context dependent memory.
Stockholm Syndrome
A child living with abusive parents is, in effect, their hostage. Her body and mind are ransomed for her life. Although in theory she could physically escape the home, in reality she is bound by psychological chains from which she has no resources to escape. Utterly trapped in this way, the child must do whatever she can to survive. Her existence depends on it. This child is in the same situation as battered wives and hostages of terrorists. As such she, like them, is vulnerable to developing something called "The Stockholm Syndrome," which basically means that she comes to identify with her perpetrator. There are four criteria which lead to the development of Stockholm Syndrome in a long-term captive. Read more here
Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV
Dissociative Disorder (SCID-D) This is the first
diagnostic instrument for the comprehensive evaluation of
dissociative symptoms and disorders. It was developed by Marlene
Steinberg, M.D., to enable a clinically trained interviewer to
assess the nature and severity of dissociative symptoms in a
variety of clinical disorders (including Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder, eating disorders, etc.) and to make diagnoses of
disociative disorders, based on DSM-IV criteria.
switching The process
of changing from one already existing personality state or fragment to another personality state or
fragment. Switching may be set off by outside stimuli such as an
environmental trigger, or by internal stimuli, such as feelings or
memories. Switching may be observable, such as changes in posture
or facial expression, as well as changes in voice tone or speech
patterns. Switching may also be observed by changes in mood,
regressed behavior, and variable cognitive functioning.
system A descriptive term
for all the aspects or parts of the mind in an individual with DID
(MPD). This includes personality states,
memories, feelings, ego states, entities, and any other way of
describing dissociated aspects of an individual. Understanding the
parts as a system rather than as separate personality states
provides an important frame of reference for treatment. Also called
internal system or personality system.
talking through The
therapeutic technique of talking to the personality system as a whole or talking to one or more personality states that are not in executive control. For example, a therapist may
say "I want everyone inside to listen," or "I want to talk to Mean
Bill inside who made that angry phone call last week." Talking this
way encourages the system to work together and to dissolve the
dissociative barriers.
trance Used interchangeably with hypnosis. A person in a trance or in an altered state of focused attention is in a hypnotic state.
trance logic The
ability of a hypnotized person to tolerate the existence of
inconsistent perceptions or ideas. "The inconsistent perceptions
are not kept isolated but appear in juxtaposition . . . The essence
of this phenomenon seems to be the suspension of critical
thinking." Udolf, Handbook of Hypnosis for Professionals,
pp.108-108.
transference "The
unconscious assignment to others of feelings and attitudes that
were originally associated with important figures in one's early
life." The psychodynamically oriented clinician uses this to help
the client understand the origins of emotional problems. The
transference phenomena is complicated in MPD because each alter may
have its own transference relationship with the therapist.
American Psychiatric Glossary, p. 211.
See also traumatic transference.
trauma A medical term for
any sudden injury or damage to an organism. Psychological trauma is
an event that is outside the range of usual human experience and
which is so seriously distressing as to overwhelm the mind's
defenses and cause lasting emotional harm.
Psychological traumata include natural disasters, accidents, or
human actions, such as child abuse, rape, torture, etc., which
cause the victim to be terrified, helpless, and under extreme
physical stress. Most individuals with DID (MPD) have been victims
of repeated trauma and generally also exhibit symptoms of post
traumatic stress disorder. See also Type I and
Type II Trauma.
traumatic transference
The unconscious assignment to a therapist of feelings and attitudes
associated with an abuser during earlier traumatic events. For
example, recalling being beaten in childhood, a client may ask the
therapist not to hit or hurt her, as if she were talking to the
abuser. Working through the traumatic transference may be an
important aspect for understanding early childhood trauma.
trigger An event, object,
person, etc. that sets a series of thoughts in motion or reminds a
person of some aspect of his or her traumatic past. The person may
be unaware of what is "triggering" the memory (i.e., loud noises,
a particular color, piece of music, odor, etc.). Learning not to
overreact to triggers is a therapeutic task in the treatment of
dissociative disorders.
Type I and Type II Trauma
Terms developed by Lenore Terr to describe different types of
trauma. A single traumatic event such as a fire or single rape
episode is considered to be Type I Trauma. Repeated, prolonged
trauma, such as extensive child abuse, is considered to be Type II
Trauma. According to Terr's formulation of this concept, these two
types of trauma result in different coping styles. Individuals with
Type I Trauma receive support from family and friends and usually
remember the trauma event. Individuals with Type II Trauma are more
likely to have severe PTSD symptoms, such as psychic numbing, and
dissociation. Type II Trauma is often kept a secret and support
from family and friends may be absent. Terr, Unchained
Memories, p. 11, 30.
unification "An
overall, general term that encompasses both fusion and integration." Kluft, "Clinical Approaches
to the Integration of Personalities," in Clinical Perspectives
on Multiple Personality Disorder, p.109.
V-codes These are categories of problems that may need therapeutic intervention but are not considered psychological disorders or mental illness.
Conflict between parents and teenagers would be an example of this.
Adapted from DSM-IV, p. 681.
vicarious traumatization Describes the experiences of mental health providers who become overly empathic after listening to accounts of abuse or violence by trauma survivors. Symptoms of vicarious traumatization are similar to those experienced by individuals with PTSD, and include psychic numbing, hypervigilance, difficulty sleeping, and intrusive thoughts of the trauma, which were reported by the client. Also called secondary PTSD or compassion fatigue. Kluft and Fine, Clinical Perspectives, p.164.
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