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What Is Dissociation?
Dissociation is a disruption — partial or complete — in the normally integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, emotion, perception, behavior, and sense of self. It is not a disease but a psychological process, ranging from ordinary to profoundly impairing.
• DSM-5 defines dissociation as a disruption in the usually integrated functions of consciousness, memory, identity, emotion, perception, behavior, and sense of self
• Psychologist Pierre Janet (1889) first described dissociation as the 'splitting off' of mental content from ordinary awareness — a framework still influential today
• Key domains affected: memory (amnesia), identity (fragmented self-states), perception (altered reality), emotion (numbing or detachment), and sense of agency
• Dissociation is dimensional — a spectrum from highway hypnosis to Dissociative Identity Disorder, not an on/off phenomenon
• Critical distinction: dissociation is not psychosis. Reality testing is preserved; the problem is integration, not perception of unreality
Analogy: Imagine a symphony orchestra where each section plays correctly but stops listening to the others. The notes are right — the music is broken.