mindlessflight: (Default)
mindlessflight ([personal profile] mindlessflight) wrote in [community profile] anonrerising2023-01-27 02:32 pm

Hey.

Edit 2/1/2023: A new small guideline that has been added to the rules- please include direct links to profiles, especially if the user in question is being shady, since they go 'invisible' when FR locks/bans them.

(It's not mandatory, but it helps folks get those juicy details.)
 

Re: PrinceEridan/MoodyMrGemini

(Anonymous) 2023-02-04 12:36 am (UTC)(link)
Ayrt

What the other anon said. Basically I have a DD but it doesn't meet all the criteria of DID. If that makes sense.

Re: PrinceEridan/MoodyMrGemini

(Anonymous) 2023-02-04 02:07 pm (UTC)(link)
No, it doesn't. What's the difference in the criteria? Like you have alters but you don't have DID?

Re: PrinceEridan/MoodyMrGemini

(Anonymous) 2023-02-04 02:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Different anon, but OSDD is still a dissociative disorder- it's basically "The individual has alters, and dissociates, but doesn't have ALL the symptoms of DID."

Per the DID Research project:

"OSDD-1 is the subtype that is most similar to dissociative identity disorder (DID). It is used for individuals who have similar symptoms to those with DID but who do not meet the full diagnostic criteria for DID. Most commonly, this describes individuals who have dissociative parts that are not sufficiently differentiated to qualify as alters (sometimes known as OSDD-1a) or individuals who do not have amnesia between alters (sometimes known as OSDD-1b). Some individuals with OSDD-1 lack both amnesia and highly distinct parts, and other individuals with OSDD-1 have highly distinct parts but rarely or never switch between them. These latter cases are also sometimes described as OSDD-1b."

https://did-research.org/comorbid/dd/osdd_udd/did_osdd

Dissociative Disorders are variable, usually due to the variable nature of the origins. (Especially when factoring in the variable nature of trauma, which is one of the main sources of DD's.)