tons-of-moths-in-a-box - moths in a box
moths in a box

we're a C-DID system, traumagenic, we post about whatever comes to mind. our collective name is moth or bug, we use he/they/it/xe pronouns collectively

154 posts

Truths & Myths: Pluralpedia Part 1

Truths & Myths: Pluralpedia Part 1

Welcome to our "Truths and Myths" series! In this series, we aim to debunk misconceptions and provide accurate information about Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID). We will mainly focus on DID as it is the disorder we are most familiar with on both a personal and research basis.

Each post will highlight the accurate and inaccurate parts of each term, from the best of our research ability. Then, at the end, we will explain the full story of what DID actually is and provide our sources. We will be taking requests for terms anyone would like us to review. Otherwise, we will use random terms we find.

This first post is an exception to the random terms as we wanted to go over the formation of a DID system.

 To develop Dissociative Identity Disorder, a child must experience overwhelming, severe, and repetitive trauma during their childhood. Having a dissociative disorder such as DID, PDID (ICD-11), or OSDD (DSMV) is the only way to have forms of dissociative identities.

As previously mentioned, DID can only be formed from trauma.

However, it has been suggested that individuals with a natural ability to dissociate or use dissociation as their primary response to trauma are more likely to develop DID. This innate ability allows them to reach a high level of dissociation and form dissociative identities. It is important to note that there is currently no confirmed link between this ability and the development of DID, but it is a proposed logical theory that would need more research.

Furthermore, certain biological factors can make an individual more susceptible to trauma, such as being born biologically female or being neurodivergent. For example, biological females are statistically more likely to experience s*xual abuse, which may have been the trauma they experienced as a child that led to the formation of their system.

Additionally, it is crucial to clarify that Dissociative Identity Disorder cannot be present at birth, and therefore, one can not be born with a system.

The theory of how personality is structured suggests that the personality comprises "modes" that contain cognitive, affective, behavioural, and physiological representations. These modes also represent a plan for encoding experiences and responding to internal and environmental demands.

For example, a person may have a "mother mode" activated when caring for a child, and this mode would have planned what care a child needs. However, the person will also have other modes, such as one associated with demands about their work or demands for defence in verbal ways. In a regular adult, all modes are connected to each other and are under a "conscious control system," which allows for an integrated self-state. This is why it may feel you have fluctuations in your personality or feel differently around your family than your friends. They are different modes, but importantly, they are all integrated together, unlike in an individual with DID.

DID occurs when this coupling process of modes is disrupted by dissociation caused by trauma. This results in smaller, more isolated pockets of modes, leading to multiple conscious control systems that represent different and discontinuous modes. Each of these systems has its own aspect of self, reflected by the modes within it.

One's I specifically used to write my explanation:

Though I suppose technically, in the way the theory is currently proposed, people who have DID never had a "singlet" phase. Otherwise, they would not have been able to form a system or develop DID.

Revisiting the etiological aspects of dissociative identity disorder: a biopsychosocial perspective. (Section under Dissociative Identities)

McLean Hospital. (Section under What is Dissociative Identity Disorder?)

Other external sources that also validate my claims but were not used specifically in the writing:

Cleveland Clinic. (Section under What causes Dissociative Identity Disorder)

The coupling process can be disturbed when a child tries to displace their thoughts, feelings, and emotions onto a “not me” in order to escape what they are experiencing and carry on with life and allows the child to remain for example creative or have a sense of humour even in very difficult circumstances. This leads to disconnected feelings and disorganised attachments to primary caregivers, which means the integration of modes is impossible.

NHS (Section under Causes of Dissociative disorder. It is important to note that this covers all dissociative disorders, not specifically DID)

Truths & Myths: Pluralpedia Part 1
Truths & Myths: Pluralpedia Part 1
Truths & Myths: Pluralpedia Part 1

Better Health Channel. (Section under Causes of Dissociative Disorders. It is important to note that this covers all dissociative disorders, not specifically DID)

Truths & Myths: Pluralpedia Part 1
Truths & Myths: Pluralpedia Part 1
Truths & Myths: Pluralpedia Part 1

Thank you for reading our first part to this series. Feel free to send us an echo to our page or leave in the comments any questions or suggestions for future parts to this series.

Made from the collaborative efforts of the system who run this blog.

  • comicaholic
    comicaholic liked this · 8 months ago
  • juniper-bunch
    juniper-bunch liked this · 10 months ago
  • muted5ilence
    muted5ilence liked this · 10 months ago
  • s3rvant-k0matose
    s3rvant-k0matose reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • s3rvant-k0matose
    s3rvant-k0matose liked this · 11 months ago
  • splitasunderlandsystem
    splitasunderlandsystem reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • gh0sti3-pals
    gh0sti3-pals liked this · 11 months ago
  • birdohnoitsadragon
    birdohnoitsadragon reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • mlmmom-evy10
    mlmmom-evy10 reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • shinsiron-1069
    shinsiron-1069 reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • chaoticqueerreader
    chaoticqueerreader reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • mysterious-sunset008
    mysterious-sunset008 reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • lunar-chaos-system
    lunar-chaos-system reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • mysterious-sunset008
    mysterious-sunset008 liked this · 11 months ago
  • dissociationincarnate
    dissociationincarnate liked this · 11 months ago
  • oliveristired-snoremimimi
    oliveristired-snoremimimi liked this · 11 months ago
  • cipherdragon
    cipherdragon reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • cipherdragon
    cipherdragon liked this · 11 months ago
  • chaoticneurodivergent
    chaoticneurodivergent reblogged this · 11 months ago
  • onestoneinasea
    onestoneinasea liked this · 11 months ago
  • sleepyhallowsys
    sleepyhallowsys liked this · 1 year ago
  • criticalhank
    criticalhank liked this · 1 year ago
  • mystyishere-i-guess
    mystyishere-i-guess reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • atlasacademycollective
    atlasacademycollective liked this · 1 year ago
  • daffodil--lament
    daffodil--lament liked this · 1 year ago
  • catglitchess
    catglitchess liked this · 1 year ago
  • melsinferno
    melsinferno liked this · 1 year ago
  • mosaic-system
    mosaic-system reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • mosaic-system
    mosaic-system liked this · 1 year ago
  • spark1edog
    spark1edog liked this · 1 year ago
  • ren-054
    ren-054 liked this · 1 year ago
  • faggotkelpie
    faggotkelpie liked this · 1 year ago
  • d-i-d123
    d-i-d123 liked this · 1 year ago
  • system-cypress
    system-cypress reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • theinfinitelibrarysystem
    theinfinitelibrarysystem liked this · 1 year ago
  • chaos-and-ink
    chaos-and-ink liked this · 1 year ago
  • shattered-system
    shattered-system reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • weed-lore
    weed-lore liked this · 1 year ago
  • mygenderisknifu
    mygenderisknifu liked this · 1 year ago
  • beehive-system-404
    beehive-system-404 liked this · 1 year ago
  • delphientropy
    delphientropy liked this · 1 year ago
  • salty-squid223
    salty-squid223 liked this · 1 year ago
  • mimocrocodilelol
    mimocrocodilelol liked this · 1 year ago
  • the-moonjay-forest-system
    the-moonjay-forest-system liked this · 1 year ago
  • katetorias
    katetorias liked this · 1 year ago

More Posts from Tons-of-moths-in-a-box

10 months ago

happy pride month if you call a trans woman dude or bro and insist its gender neutral when she expresses discomfort i hope you explode

10 months ago

Acknowledging that transandrophobia exists is not us denying that transmisogyny exists

If you believe in transmisogyny but not transmisandry, why? Give me an actual GOOD reason

Transandrophobia is just a word to describe the shit that us trans men and transmascs go through, it says nothing about our thoughts on transmisogyny

I am a "transandrophobia truther" because I believe that transphobia specifically directed towards trans man and transmascs exist.

Yes, I do believe in transmisogyny because trans women and transfems DO face transphobia specifically for being women and fem

But I also believe that transandrophobia exists, because it fucking does

Yes, we're both trans but we face different kinds of discrimination

Transandrophobia is literally just a word describing the hate that trans men and transmascs face, just like transmisogyny is literally just a word describing the hate that trans women and transfems face

I'm tired of you people believing that trans men and transmascs don't face any oppression and are generally accepted

WE FUCKING AREN'T, ALL THESE LAWS BEING PASSED AFFECTS US TRANS MEN AND TRANSMASCS TOO

Trans men and transmascs are not seen as the "more acceptable" way to be trans

We're told:

- testosterone is a poison and will make us bad pepple

- we're transitioning to the "bad side"

- we're just little girls making "bad" decisions

We're also:

- treated as little white twinks

- treated as fucking babies

- seen as "transtrenders" if we're still femme in any way

- seen as dangerous if we're too manly or masculine

- treated as "not real men" if we menstruate, get pregnant or do anything of the sort

We're told time and time again that our identities aren't important and that the discrimination we face isn't real and that our existence just means we're transmisogynistic

How do you think we feel?

It's even worse when shit like this comes from our own community

hello!! we're looking for moots and were wondering if you'd like to be one of them! :]] /gen

Oh, sure! :D


Tags :
10 months ago

saw a post about how feminists, usually terfs and radfems but also other feminists, act like being a transman is anti feminist and "betraying" womanhood and just the rampant hatred of masculinity in feminist spaces and i didn't wanna speak over all the transmen there so i'm saying it here:

Realising you're a transman does not make you against femininity or feminism. It means that being a woman wasn't for you. And i think that's beautiful. And anyone that fails to realise how beautiful and joyous being your authentic self is is a piece of shit. And it's your right to yourself freely and without hate.

10 months ago

Daily reminder that when you demonize trans men who fit the cavetown, fluffy-hair, skinny boy, alt stereotype, its still trans erasure. Good intentions or not, when you try to make another group of trans people irrelevant and invisible, it's still hurting the community.

Stop going after your own community, trans people AS A WHOLE get enough shit from cis people we don't need trans people going after other trans people. We're on the same side here remember that.