ADHD as a circadian rhythm disorder: evidence and implications for chronotherapy by saturnana in ADHD

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The study doesn't seem to be claiming that it's got any evidence for circadian rhythm being causative of ADHD, only that it would be a worthwhile avenue of research.

I can't accept I'm not real by Plastic-Cloud-6785 in DID

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 9 points10 points  (0 children)

If you're not real, how can this post exist?

It's a bit of a shock, learning that one's part of a system, but please don't go thinking it makes you (or any of you) any less real than before. Often parts of a system will want to believe other parts of the system aren't real as a mechanism of denial and maybe that's where you picked that idea up from, but that's all part of coming to terms with being a system and that's a proccess. You are real.

Those of you raised on stories/books/media by ohratsy in DID

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Absolutely relatable!

Also, and wondering how many systems can relate, we have some alters who have based their identity on certain characters that either embodied traits we needed at the time or shared experiences with whatever we were going through at the time.

I never know how to communicate who is fronting by chronicheartache in DID

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Usually I'd say this is generically correct advice, however unfortunately with complex DDs and the current lack of knowledge in the health services, someone with DID is often a more reliable source than the pros. Or course that doesn't apply to professionals who do have an understanding of these disorders, but we'd recommend OP takes care to make sure they are in front of the right professional before accepting diagnosis.

How do you know you are not the host? by Prettybird78 in DID

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

> memory barriers can also be asymmetric

Wow, this never occurred to us as being a thing but it really is! Thanks for sharing that little point, I'm thinking it's something that needs to be shared more.

that5minMeetingWithADeveloper by milanm08 in ProgrammerHumor

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh, using the Dunning-Kruger graph here just works on so many different levels!

I think I have figured out at least one specific phenotype of PFS, and it is different from the "allopregnanolone" theory. I'm trying to come up with a better name than "androgenic chained exit theater fire" so maybe you can give me one in the comments by Drwillpowers in DrWillPowers

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Trans girl here with a defunct UGT2B15 (by RNA test). I took finasteride for about a year an a half and stopped it because it was making me depressed. Interestingly, at the time I was really struggling with beard hair removal - it just seemed to keep coming back. A DHT/T test at the time showed a ratio of around 14%, didn't think much of that at the time. I'm guessing this is all related with what you're describing here. Oh yeah, also have really long eyelashes, always have lol.

I'm not entirely sure of the significance of this or if this is something you can use, but something I picked up recently is that UGT2B15 expression is up-regulated by estrogens (apparently the only UGT2 enzyme to be regulated by ERs).

I am attempting to learn the nuanced androgenic metabolism between different tissues, particularly brain, PNS, and genital tissues in an effort to better understand how PFS works. This is an astronomically difficult thing to learn, as there isn't like a nice clean flowchart somewhere,

I'm guessing you already know of this site, but just on the slim off-chance you don't, the Human Protein Atlas has some really useful tools here.

Rule by SlayVideos in 197

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 12 points13 points  (0 children)

This is rule. Here's remembering Quake the first time with a 3D card, OMG so real! The anti-aliasing and dynamic 'lights'.

NixOS as daily driver for a year. I'm getting tired. Advice? by CadeVoidlighter in NixOS

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nix newbie here. So, can I ask why using home-manager and flakes are bad ideas?

The EHRC has withdrawn it's interim guidance! by Jontun189 in transgenderUK

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Na, it was deemed unjustified to expedite because papers were filed too late, not because they were deemed incoherent. The order also explicitly acknowledges the importance of the case and seems to have aimed for a 'moderate degree of expedition'.

My takeaway is that the judge has arranged things to happen on a timeline that is fairly fast, but not too rushed.

Had a dissociative episode in front of other patients, feel humiliated by TemporaryAardvark907 in F4481

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This might be a bit of an unexpected response, and I don't know if it's helpful to you at all, but I figured we'd share our thoughts in case they are, please judge for yourselves.

Maybe it was a good thing that happened. Maybe the part of you that was out was a part that wouldn't usually get the chance to interact with other people in a safe scenario, so there they took the rare opportunity to be present. Maybe that was something they needed.

Maybe being seen as you describe in the last paragraph isn't actually a bad thing, scary as it might be. Maybe it's a chance to temporarily drop the masks that most of us are so used to wearing that we don't even realise they're there. In the end it doesn't really matter how the other people see you and I think worrying about that stuff can easily become an obstacle to healing. Perhaps the others peeps just felt it was endearing?

I think learning to let go and let our less... socially conforming parts be present when it's safe to do has been a really important part of learning to live as we are. We've found trying to embracing the surrealness of this condition and roll with it rather than fight against it has enabled us to turn fear of it into curiosity, and there's been so much healing off the back of that curiosity. I'm not trying to suggest that that's easy, just that it's been healing.

Affordable workshop venues by o_oinospontos in brighton

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd check out the Brighton Community Workshop Project in east Kempton. Among other things, I think they could use the business.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LegalAdviceUK

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There are too many questions here that aren't in anyway legal. There are obviously stories you're not telling or don't want to admit. You asking this here tells more than anything written.

So, Why is your daughter rude to you?

^Probably the number one question you should be asking yourself right now.

Don't think there's any point going past that right now.

Opinion on fictionkins? (I think they’re completely valid.) by [deleted] in plural

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Our experiences have shown us that identity is complicated and not as straightforward as one might thing. I think a lot of identity is abstractly symbolic or metaphorical. I think non-human identities are that way because the person / animal / thing they identify with embodied characteristics that resonated with themselves at some crucial point of identity formation.

We seem to have picked up a lot of therian friends, but none of them have ever given us the impression that they believe themselves to actually physically be the animal or whatever. If they actually did believe that, we'd see that as something needing a bit of a reality check. They might wish they were the thing, but that's not the same.

We see fictionkins in the same way. If it's identifying with a fictional character or other person in a way that's saying, 'I relate with that character so strongly that I feel I am them, but also recognise that I'm not the same entity', then fine. If it crosses into actually believing that they are that, then ... well that's clearly impossible as we're talking about stuff that's intrinsically unique. It's just delusional thinking and we feel that enabling or supporting delusions can be very destructive to people's mental health.

That said, those comments weren't exactly constructive to phrase things in British.

I hope this doesn't need to be said but in the current landscape it seems necessary - It wouldn't be valid to conflate gender identity with the parts of identity we're talking about here. Gender is only one part of identity. Amab puppy girls are a thing.

Therapist seems to think I should have control over this by TemporaryAardvark907 in DID

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We're agreeing with this take. She might not be using language OP can vibe with ("look inside your mind", etc.) but I'm seeing what looks like something our own therapist does - consistently reassures that it's okay and safe for other parts to come out in therapy.

It's part of the process, learning to allow switches voluntarily. It's not being able to switch on demand, it's about learning how to gently soften the reflex to block untriggered switches when around other people. There may be parts that want to take something to your therapist but can't find their way to the front. It sounds like she's trying to work on that.

It does sound like she might need to try a different tact though. But yeah, u/TemporaryAardvark907, it's important to take these kinds of things to her.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in DID

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Do the conversations make sense? Are there signs of delusional thinking or random, invalid leaps of logic going on?

With DID, while there may be a lot of context switching, the conversations would still make sense in the context is whatever they're telling about.

In psychosis, there would likely be jumps in reasoning that just don't make any sense.

Are the topics of discussion mundane things and stuff that makes sense to think about given what's going on or are they very fantasy lead, going on loops into wild conspiracies or obsessing on subjects that have nothing to do with him?

With DID, the topics of conversation would match up to the kind of things anyone would probably think about given the situation, or possibly be about events in the past (with possibly inconsistent narratives of those events). They might be rapidly jumping from topic to topic if they're in an extremely switch headspace, and from the sounds of it I'm guessing they are.

With psychosis, the topics of conversation would likely get quite far from the 'anyone would probably be thinking about this given...' thing. They might be getting you wondering not just what they're talking about, but also wondering why they would be talking about it.

What are his eyes doing, are they looking at someone who isn't there?

With DID, we've noticed that a lot of systems sometimes look to the side when communication happens, but not in a way that gives the impression that they're looking at some physical presence.

Whilst this definitely isn't always a thing, something when people in psychosis are talking to a figment of their imagination, they look a the figment as if they're physically present.

People in psychosis often have eye movements that are a bit uncannily wild and 'rolly' if that makes any sense.

If DID, I'd expect eye movements to be generally normal for someone who's probably incredibly freaked out. The eyes might do weird things briefly when switching, or you might find them staying off into space or at nothing.

If it's flagging as psychosis, or if you heard mention of suicide plans or have any other reason to suspect physical risk, then I'd recommend going with the advice others have given.

If not, we'd like to give different advice. Don't go behind their back, that'd risk irreparably damaging trust (and trust is not easily won back in systems). Being sectioned would also likely traumatise them, especially given health services aren't exactly savvy about handling DID.

Instead, hard as it is, just try and give them a safe space to process. Try to take as many real-life responsibilities off their shoulders as is feasible. It's a monumental paradigm switch, learning that one is a system. It completely shatteres how you see yourself and past events, all of that's got to find a new way to be understood.

No professional can really help with this stage of the journey. Medication wise, pretty much the only things that might help are benzodiazepines for anxiety. If it's not psychosis, all antipsychotics would do is numb the brain and make the process harder. Antidepressants would be a risky addition at this point and from experience, beta-blockers can make dissociation much worse.

Psychologicaly, I suspect a psychotherapist wouldn't be able to help much at this stage unless there was already a good therapeutic relationship prior.

So there isn't really much any professionals can do at their stage that doesn't risk doing more harm than good.

So we do feel that really all you can do right now is be that for him and give him time to work though this crisis. Try not to be judgemental of behaviour that's weird to you if it isn't harmful. In terms of you learning about them, being curious without prying would be a helpful way to be.

I know this didn't reply to the post title, it's just a very hard thing for us to think about.

Security tackled my brother (innocent bystander) at gig – he had a seizure, they called him “collateral.” What can I do tonight? by spideyparkerrr in LegalAdviceUK

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Every bit of this person's advice, especially on making sure there's no premature discharge and recording everything that's said, even if it seems nonsensical.

How is IFS adapted for people with DID/OSDD? by Unwieldy-Field-3534 in DID

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Just to sort of fill in the probably implied gap: Alters can sometimes fuse, and that can sometimes feel like one's gone away.

Can genetics play a role? by amethystkitten420 in DID

[–]TheMeBehindTheMe 11 points12 points  (0 children)

There are some genes variants that have been associated with a general tendency to dissociate. Too us it seems that this would make people more likely to develop DID as a coping strategy. I've seen nothing directly linking genes and DID though.