Alters in Dissociative Identity Disorder (MPD) and DDNOS
Alters in Dissociative Identity Disorder (MPD) and DDNOS
A person with Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), or a similar form of Other Specified Dissociative Disorder
(previously called Dissociative Disorder Not Otherwise Specified, or DDNOS-1) has a fragmented personality. A
person with DID experiences himself or herself as having separate identities, known as alters, or alternate
identities.[1]:292, [6] Alters take over control of the person's body or behavior at various times. [1] Each can function
independently. All the alters together make up the person's whole personality. Alters typically develop from
dissociation caused by prolonged early childhood trauma, although attachment problems and persistent neglect in
very early childhood are also known factors.[6]:189-191 People with alters may refer to their alters as "parts inside,
aspects, facets, ways of being, voices, multiples, selves, ages of me, people, persons, individuals, spirits, demons,
others," etc. [6]:121 Alter identities are sometimes incorrectly referred to as ego states, or even alter egos, but these
states exist in people without alters and do not involve amnesia, dissociative symptoms, or clinical distress.[1, 2]
[6]:129
Characteristics of Alters
Alters may have
different ages, for instance much younger or older;
a different gender to the physical body;
different names, or no name;
different roles or functions, either related to daily life or to trauma;
different attitudes, and preferences, e.g, in food, or dress
a different perception of their appearance, for e.g., different hair or skin color, body shape;
different memories, e.g., some may remember trauma or events in daily life that others have amnesia for;
psychobiological difference to others, e.g., different vision, medication responses, allergies, plasma glucose levels in
diabetic patients, heart rate, blood pressure readings, galvanic skin response, muscle tension, laterality, immune
function, EEG readings, etc. [1]:293, [6]:120-121, [7]:18, [7]:52, 24:[74]
Different alters have shown different results in neuroimaging tests, including functional magnetic resonance imaging
activation, and brain activation and regional blood flow and differences in PET scans. The variability between alters is
measurably greater than variability between non-dissociative people who are attempting to simulate alters. [6]:121
Because many alters have a very different perception of their body, they may disown it, or believe strongly that it is a
different chronological age, and refer to as "the body" rather than "my body".[6]:120,140 Alters who believe that they
have their own, separate physical body, can result in refusing to seek medical care, and self-harm or suicide
attempts, in the belief that they will be unaffected since it is not "their" body which is harmed. This can even involve
attempting to kill off "others". [6]:132, 140
Types of Alters
Types of Alter Personalities (Parts) in Dissociative Identity Disorder
Based on License CC BY-ND 4.0
All alters can be broadly classed as either Apparently Normal Parts of the Personality (ANPs), or Emotional Parts of
the Personality (EPs).[24]:31 In additional, each can have one or more type or role, for example a child alter may also
be a protector.[24] People who are "very fragmented" (have a very large number of parts) may also have complex
mixtures of ANP and EP.[24]:78
Caretaker/Soother
Caretaking alters are a type of a protector, they help manage and care for other alters, and sometimes external
people (for example children). [24]:83 They are often motherly, and may be modeled on a real person. [16]:61-62
Caretaking alters lack awareness of self-care and become exhausted easy; they only have a limited role and have
little capacity for play, exploration or socializing. [24]:83
Core / Original
Core personality. This term is now rarely used in scientific information. See Apparently Normal Part of the
Personality.
Dead alter
Usually this is an alter hidden from the rest of the system, often in a memory of a trauma in which they felt they were
being killed. The child who survives a near-death experience may develop a "dead alter" to contain this
experience.[16]:64 Alters can"t really die or be killed since the person"s brain is still alive, their feelings will still leak
through into other alters. "Dead" alters can be revived.[9]:35
Disabled alter
Alters may be disabled when the body is not, for example a blind or mute alter may be created in response to
abusers instructions, e.g. "Don't talk", "You didn't see anything". These alters can regain their sight or hearing, for
example, after working through the memories that caused their disabilities. [9]:34-35
Unsurprisingly, a person who has an alter claiming they are a famous person may be misdiagnosed as having
Schizophrenia or a Psychotic Disorder, because claiming to be a famous person is considered a delusion.
Psychotherapist Alison Miller gives the highly unusual example of a person who developed alters that were copies of
Axl Rose and rest of Guns'N'Roses band - and was misdiagnosed with Schizophrenia as a result. [10]:2 In
DID/DDNOS, however, an alter can adapt their believe if presented with clear evidence that they are not that person,
for example that Hitler is dead and the Nazis lost the war.[9]:101 Note: Delusions can also exist in people with
DID/DDNOS if they have a Psychotic Disorder or Schizophrenia as well.
Fictional characters
Alters may be created which are internalized representations (introjects) of fictional characters. Some people with
DID refer to alters based on fictional characters as fictives but this term is not used in literature on DID, which only
rarely describes examples of them and doesn't classed as being a separate "type" of alter or given a particular
name.[9],[32],[35] Like any other alter, they can physically take control of the person's body.[1] The characters that
alter personalities are based on may come from sources like nursery rhymes, fairy tales, children's stories or books,
music, and movies.[36]:493 One good description of alters based on fictional characters comes from a case of DID in
Turkey: a woman aged 45 with a severe abuse history was found to have Dissociative Identity Disorder, and two of
her alters were based on the classic story Snow White :
"Two identities had been formed from childhood imaginary playmates: "Pamuk Prenses" (Snow White) and "Kraliçe"
(The Queen). They both enjoyed parties at nights where the Queen looked after, protected and controlled the young
"Pamuk Prenses" and enviously competed with her at the same time. Snow White danced and sang. When Snow
White took control she saw her husband and children as "the relatives of that poor woman in the neighborhood" (Sad
Halimé [another alter])... These identities had been formed at about the age of twelve; they knew the other
personalities, but they saw themselves as distinct from all the others. [32]:151
Some abusive groups/cults have been known to traumatize children in order to force them to create alters based on
particular characters which suits the needs of the abusers. Ritual abuse survivors in particular report being forced to
create alters based on many different fictional characters, including:
characters from Lewis Carroll's story Alice in Wonderland, which has been made into several movies [39]
An “everyday life” alter based on the character “Samantha” from an episode of the TV show "Bewitched" [36]:523
Charles Wallace and Meg (from Madeleine L'Engle's 1962 book A Wrinkle in Time) - as part of MK-Ultra ritual
abuse[37]:70:72
Peter Munk (a character from a German fairytale) who is "unemotional, obedient, lacking in self-awareness" and
motivated to avoid pain, reported in a German survivor of ritual abuse during the "cold war" [35]:80
Sleeping Beauty , who believed she was dreaming when actually working as a government agent (as part of MK-
Ultra) [37]:217,272
Tinker-Belle (from Peter Pan ), in a survivor of Monarch programming/ritual abuse [38]:108-109
The Wizard of Oz, including the scarecrow (who was told he had "no brain", was obedient and suggestible), the
cowardly lion (who held the emotion of fear), tin man (who was told he had no heart - meaning no empathy, and as
such was able to be a trained killer following someone else's orders)[39]:62
All alters may adapt and change over time, and some may even choose to take on the form of fictional characters if
that serves a helpful purpose. Dr Colin Ross, a well known psychiatrist and Dissociative Disorders specialist, states
that a group of demonic alter personalities in a survivor of Satanic Ritual Abuse chose to become Ewoks (from Star
Wars) as part of healing.[33]:153
Fragment
Some alters are very limited in their role, for example they may only have a small number of emotions, hold
particular isolated memories or have a very limited job. These 'partial' alters are sometimes known as fragments.
[10]:280 Fragments can either have a range of emotions but only a limited life history, or a more substantial life
history but be unable to feel a range of emotions (for example, always sad, either angry or fearful). Special purpose
fragments are even more limited, for example existing to carry out a very limited role and never acting beyond that.
Memory fragments hold a very limited knowledge of an event, and only experiencing very limited emotions. [4]:xii:xiii
Several fragments together may hold a single event. [11]:6, 143
Gatekeeper alter
This type of alter has the job of keeping traumatized alters from appearing. [16]:58 They may also hold back
memories or control which alters can take control of the body, and when. [9]:54
Insiders
This term covers many different kinds of alter who are not primarily responsible for everyday life, they often hold
trauma memories. They often have been so separated from everyday life that they are unaware of the years that
have passed and do not know that the body have physically grown up. [9]:30 See Emotional Part of the Personality.
Opposite-sex alters
Some alters may have a different gender to that of that body, for example a male alter in a physically female body.
Opposite sex alters are usually more like a young girl's idea of how a boy would be an actual boy, or a young boy's
idea of how a girl would be. Normally they have personality traits which associated with the gender of the opposite
sex. A female alter in a male body may be very fearful or frightened, and a male alter in a female body may be very
angry, feel physically strong, or be very brave. An alter may be have an opposite gender because of sexual abuse, for
example a male alter does not have vagina, so will not fear being vaginally raped as the female body was. A female
alter may be created in a male because that alter was forced to take on a female role in having sex with men. [9]:34-
35
Nonhuman Alters
Alters are the result of severe dissociation; they are "constructed by the 'logic' of dream or trance",[30]:184, and can
be strongly influenced by a person's culture.[1]:294 As a result, they can take any form; some alters may not view
themselves as human, and may either feel (or fully believe) that they are not part of a human being. They may view
themselves as having a different physical form (or no physical form at all, for example a spiritual being), this is
recognized within the DSM-5's description of DID. [1]:294 Prolonged and severe interpersonal trauma can leave a
person feeling "no longer human", and has been reported in people with Complex PTSD for example as a result of
being a prisoner in a concentration camp, or severe child abuse. [16]:65, [23] Given the trauma history of the vast
majority of people with Dissociative Identity Disorder and DDNOS, it is unsurprising that parts of the mind may have
taken on a nonhuman identity. Some examples include alters that identify as animals, demonic or 'evil' alters, spirits,
ghosts or spiritual beings,, mythical figures,[1]:294,[30]:184 robots or machines, or even inanimate objects [9]:47.
Some people with DID or DDNOS refer to such alters collectively as "otherkin", although the word otherkin can have
different meanings, including meanings not relevant to Dissociative Disorders.
Object Alter
Alters which identify as inanimate objects are a type of nonhuman alter, for example a tree.[24]:80 Alters can also be
hidden inside animate objects, for example inside natural-looking structures in the inner world, e.g., mountains, trees,
lakes or rivers. [9]:49
Persecutor
A common type of alter, often acts in a harmful way but there is a protective logic behind a persecutor's actions.
[7]:17-19 Persecutors often have a distorted view of reality, and may disrupt therapy or intentionally injure the
person's body, for example to punish child alters for disclosing abuse that has been kept secret. All alters "should be
treated with equal kindness," despite their behaviors, and persecutors are often seen as "misguided protectors"
which can be negotiated with.[9]:41, [28] Some persecutors may threaten to "kill off" the ANP (host) and appear to
have no positive or protective intentions, however these can still be engaged with.[29]:95 Some persecutors may be
introjects of abusers. Download Therapeutic alliance with abuser alters in DID for more information on responding to
a persecutor.
Protector
Protector alters are common, there are three main types: 'fight' parts, persecutors and caretakers. The 'fight' parts
and persecutors are types of EP which have defensive intentions, despite their often self-destructive behaviors such
as self-injury or eating disorder behaviors.[24]:82-83 The term 'fight' does not necessarily refer to violence, but to the
'fight' reaction present in PTSD, which often involves verbal aggression.[1]:143 A diagnosis of DDNOS or Dissociative
Identity Disorder is not associated with crime or "wild aggression".[26] [27] Therapist Jo Ringrose, who has
considerable experience of working with alter identities, states that violent alters exist, but has never met one. [27]:8
Protector alters try to manage rage and anger, and avoid feelings of hurt, fear or shame.
They focus on perceived threats, and find dependence, emotional needs and close
relationships (attachment) threatening. Protectors may view themselves as a very tough
child or teenager, a powerful animal, or a physically strong, adult male. They can act
internally, or show external hostility, e.g., telling a therapist that other alters don't need
them and warning the therapist to leave them all alone.
Defensive "acting out" may be directed at a therapist or others close to the person; the
ANP may have no behavioral control or memory of it. However, the "whole person" (all
alters collectively) should still be held responsible for the behavior of all parts.[6]:132 A
protector may follow an alter that is "needy and searching desperately for attachment" in
order to protect it.[24]:87
Internal perceived threats may include the crying and dependency needs of a traumatized
child part, which an internal persecutor may silence with rage or self-harm. [24]:82-83
Protector parts may see the partner of an ANP (host) as a threat, for example the partner
initiating sex may cause a switch to a protector alter, who perceives it as an attempt to
rape, and fights off the partner. [24]:74 Communication and negotiation can improve
safety, and no attempts should be made to "get rid" of any alters.[6]:132-133, [6]:139
“With DID patients, if they feel hostility or aggression they take it out on themselves with self-harm... They’re
self-destructive and repeatedly suicidal, more so than any other psychological disorder. So that's what's typical
– not this wild aggression, or stalking women..." —Dr Bethany Brand [25]
Psychotic Alter
Some alters have psychosis or psychotic symptoms. However, many symptoms which appear psychotic are not. For
example, visual flashbacks may be mistaken for hallucinations, and strange body sensations (body memories) which
are physical flashbacks of past trauma can be mistaken for tactile hallucinations. [12]:64 Hearing "voices" is a
common experience in people with DID/DDNOS, the "voices" are alters trying to talk, and occasionally may come
from outside the person's head rather than inside, which is more common. "Thought snatching" (taking away your
thoughts) can be caused by the actions of alters. Beliefs caused by trauma can be mistaken for paranoia, for example
a person may be told that a "bug" has been implanted by abusers to record any dislosures they make. Working
through the memory of the trauma will resolve the paranoia that it caused. [9]:129
Some people who have been abused within ritually abusive groups may have alters who are trained (programmed)
to produce psychotic-like symptoms under certain circumstances.[9]:142 It is possible to have an alter with a
psychotic disorder, or to have schizophrenia as well as DID/DDNOS. [1]:291-307 This appears to be relatively rare.
Schizophrenia is a common misdiagnosis for people with Dissociative Identity Disorder, although many people with
DID/DDNOS believe they are going "crazy" they do not have a break with reality.[7]:58-59 Abusive groups are known
to have created alters who carry out "jobs" which make a person appear either "crazy" or learning disabled, for
example scrambling or garbling words and numbers so they cannot be understood, hearing high pitched sounds and
feeling "lost in a maze" in the back of your head, making your mind go foggy or misty or being spatially confused and
unsure what the truth is.[9]:78, 80-81 Anti-psychotic medication will not "remove" alters but can make the
communication needed to heal more difficult.[9]:129
Sexual Alter
Sexual alters may be created to handle sexual abuse and rape, and to keep that knowledge away from other parts.
One alter or group of alters may handle sexual abuse from men or boys, while others are created to handle sexual
abuse and rapes from women or girls. [22]:77
Shell
A shell alter is an Apparently Normal Part (host alter/front person) which handles daily life and is designed to hide the
existence of other alters from the outside world. [10]:33 Shell alters do not exist in DID, they only exist in one form of
DDNOS (now renamed to Other Specified Dissociative Disorder). The apparently normal part (ANP) is a shell through
whom the inside parts/alters act. The inside parts can come near the surface, temporarily blending with the ANP. The
inner parts are not regarded as separate, distinct states although amnesia may exist between them. [7]:9, [9]:5 If
DDNOS is caused by ritual abuse and mind control, the shell alter is not supposed to know about the others.[9]:5
Alters who believe they are spiritual or supernatural beings should be treated in the same way as any other type of
alter identity, with psychotherapy (talking therapy). Exorcisms are known to be harmful and ineffective in treating
complex dissociative disorders, and attempts should not be made to "get rid" of alters. Instead they should be
understood as a way of coping with traumatic life experiences. [6]:170-171
Sub-parts
An alter may have another dissociated part inside, which has a different role or function. [9]:141
Teen alters
Teenaged or adolescent alters may occur in people who had significant trauma during those years, or they may be
child alters who have grown older.[7]:18
Twin alters
Twin alters are two alters of the same age who are normally opposites of each other in views and behaviors. Twin
child alters are common, for example one may love the abuser, be eager to please and have only positive views
towards him/her, and another may hold angry and rejecting views towards the abuser. [16]:61
Number of Alters
This varies widely between people, the minimum needed for diagnosis is two different dissociated (disconnected)
parts/identities, e.g., one alter plus a host or main identity, or two alters without a host identity.
Average
In 1984, influential research found approximately half of people with DID had ten alters or less, and half had eleven
or more.[13] The DSM-IV (published in 1994) repeated this, adding that "[t]he number of identities reported ranges
from 2 to more than 100", and stating that adult women averaged 15 or more alters, and men had an average of
8.[40]:485-486 Howell (2011) states "[t]he number of parts [alter personalities] in a DID system usually ranges in the
teens. In some cases ... there are also polyfragmented multiples who have many, many parts—perhaps close to a
hundred or more parts".[16]:58 In recent years there has been little focus on reporting the number or characteristics
of alters in clinical research. The number of alters is not mentioned in the DSM-5 (published in 2013).[1] The number
of alters a person with DID is aware of often increases during treatment; one study, in 1988, found an average of
between 2 and 4 identities at diagnosis, with between 13 and 15 emerging during the course of treatment.[20],[21]
This does not mean that treatment in some way caused new alters to be created. Instead it is understood that
existing alters feel able to emerge from hiding, they may emerge naturally during psychotherapy if there is
something they wish to communicate or if something triggers them. [7]
Trauma which is "severe and long-lasting" produces the most splitting, creating large numbers of fragments and
alters. [7]:19 Such large numbers are likely to be caused by highly organized abuse, e.g., cult abuse, ritual abuse,
pedophile rings, or other form of extreme, sadistic abuse which extends over long periods of time and often involves
multiple perpetrators. [7]:4, [9]:133 A person with large numbers of fragments and less active alters can heal at least
some of them fairly quickly. This is because many of them will have similar roles and functions, this allows them to
fuse together (permanently integrate) relatively easily. Kluft and Fine (1993) describe how a patient who had been
severely traumatized had a protector alter for each of the 300 fragments holding her memories and pain. These
protectors were all carrying out the same role, and had the same information as each other, so they decided to fuse
together, into just one. The fragments holding the memories and pain needed to spend time processing the most
significant traumas first, and gradually fused into groups of up to 10 at once.[8]:126 Polyfragmented DID was
previously called Complex Multiple Personality Disorder (Complex MPD),[8]:306 but has never been a separate
diagnosis. People who have publicly described their experiences of being polyfragmented include artist Kim
Noble,[9]:xii and Truddi Chase, author of When Rabbit Howls.
Organized perpetrator groups may intentionally create alters and train them to do particular jobs. In ritual abuse,
abusers intentionally severely abuse the child until an alter develops. [10]:54 If the alter refuses to comply with the
"job" or role they are given then the abuse continues until another alter is formed, who then faces the same dilemma.
Eventually an alter must agree to ensure survival. [10]:54
Healthy Multiplicity
The presence of alters alone is not quite enough for a person to be diagnosed with a mental "disorder". For a
dissociative disorder to be diagnosed the person must have either clinically significant distress, or impaired
functioning in a major area of life. [1,2] This means that it is possible to be mentally healthy and a multiple, this is
referred to as "healthy multiplicity".
Some people incorrectly assume that the goal of treatment for Dissociative Identity Disorder (and similar forms of
DDNOS) is to either remove "alters" or to fuse into a single identity. This is not correct; removing alters is not possible
and fusing them into a single identity is not necessary although some alters do choose this. There are different
options in treatment, and the majority people do not fully integrate, only around a third do. [6] Psychotherapist Dr
Alison Miller states that multiplicity is called a "disorder" in psychiatry but it is actually a "valuable, creative asset"
which makes a person "well adapted to living with ongoing trauma". [10] Miller states that multiplicity "is not an
which makes a person "well adapted to living with ongoing trauma". [10] Miller states that multiplicity "is not an
inferior way of being" and has some advantages. Advantages may include having some alters which do not have the
distraction of emotions or managing everyday life, so, they are able to have a single focus and do amazing things are
like special being able to memorize large amounts of information (savant abilities). Some multiples whose alter
personalities are extremely cooperative prefer to stay as a community of coordinated alters rather than seeking
integration into a single identity.[10]
Dr Colin Ross, a well known expert on treating Dissociative Disorders, states that the intrusive actions of "part selves"
(alters) is not the actual problem, and recognizes healthy multiplicity as possible.
"the problem in MPD is not the intrusion of part selves as such, it is with the degree of amnesia, conflict, self-
destruction, and dysfunction in the psyche. The problem is not the multiplicity, it is the degree of pathological
dissociation. In MPD the part selves are personified to an abnormal degree. There is a big difference between
someone with active classical MPD, and an individual with healthy multiplicity."[14]
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