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Basic Definitions of DID Terms
DID -- Dissociative Identity Disorder; formerly called Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD)
Dissociation -- (Webster) “separation from an idea or event from the main stream of consciousness especially as a defense mechanism. People
(especially children) who experience repeated trauma, especially that associated with the personal holocaust of Satanic Ritual Abuse, use this coping
mechanism to endure unbearable pain. I look at the mind’s ability to dissociate as a gift from God to prevent insanity in children.
Alter -- also known as alternate personalities or “sisters”; these are part of the core person who have, because of severe trauma, split off into
separate, unique, areas of the mind. Often there are amnesiac barriers between the alters and they, like the core person, are unaware of the presence
of each other. As the healing process continues, often these amnesiac barriers begin to crumble and the alters become aware of one another.
Core personality -- the personality into which the others are integrated
Integration -- also known as “merging”, this process takes place as alters and past events become known, amnesia is reduced and the alters take their
“rightful place” within the core personality, no longer separate and distinct from him/her.
Switching -- the changing from one personality to another. This usually occurs when the person in triggered by something or someone.
Trigger-- an event or person that (unconsciously or consciously) reminds the traumatized person of a past event or person. This causes the memory of
the original event to come rushing into the person’s conscious mind, bringing with it all the terror or other emotions associated with that event. In
many cases, it also brings to the surface the alter personality that was present at the original event.
Symptoms of DID
Please be aware, that dissociation is something every person does to one degree or another, (for example, daydreaming while driving and suddenly
finding yourself at your exit with no recollection of the specifics of your drive.) What is important in helping those with DID is to realize they are at the
extreme, having experienced trauma so severe they have actually "split off" inside themselves and developed individual "personalities".
What we have listed below are some possible symptoms people with DID may experience Those who have come from Satanic Ritual Abuse are more
likely to have DID.
They have unexplainable periods of time missing in their memory
This may take the form of major memory gaps in their childhood expressed in such statements as "The first thing I can remember happening to me as a
child was an event when I was six. Before that time, I don't remember any of my childhood." Or the person may remember being in their home at ten
o'clock in the morning and then "come to" so to speak at seven o'clock in the evening in a shopping mall. They have no recollection of how they got
there or what happened during the hours that they "missed." (In DID literature, these missing periods of time are called "fugue states".)
They have sudden changes in behavior, facial expression, voice tone or even different styles of handwriting
You may be talking to the person when suddenly they may have a brief look of confusion on their face followed by a totally different type of behavior,
topic of conversation or attitude. They may exhibit a new level of immaturity in both their vocabulary, their body posture as well as their voice tone.
They may be confused about who you are, where they are as well as what is going on. They may make contradictory statements such as "I don't like the
color blue" and then say "Blue is my favorite color." These contradictory comments are usually made by different parts or personalities. They may tell
you that their parents, grandparents or other relative were involved in psychic or occult practices. Such practices as reading tarot cards, playing
Dungeons and Dragons or other occulted fantasy games, levitation, mind reading, trying to contact the dead, having special healing powers or
participating in occult groups such as Voodoo, Freemasonry, Wicca or Santeria are all indications that there may be generational demonic activity. They
may report that they were removed from the home as a child by the state. Typically, government authorities are hesitant to remove a child from a
suspected abusive home unless there is clear evidence of that abuse and/or the level of abuse is severe.
They may have unexplained scars of their body
Such scars as cigarette or other burn marks, vaginal deformities or other cuts or marks that they cannot remember the circumstances in which they
received them, are clues that they probably experienced a severe level of abuse.
Hysterical reaction to a seemingly non-threatening event, comment or situation
An intense, unexplainable reaction to the color red, to robes, to black items, or to a whole host of other individual "triggers" (based on the specific
elements present at the time of their abuse), can be a clue. This is especially so if the person doesn't know why they are reacting so intensely.
Having a family member with a history of mental illness or severe chemical imbalance
Such comments as "My mother was in and out of mental hospitals", or "My father was diagnosed as a schizophrenic"



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