Find Out If You Have Dissociative Amnesia

I'm back with another form of Dissociation: Dissociative Amnesia. You may commonly ask yourself why you can't remember things? Or do you have memory loss? These could be signs of dissociative amnesia, a common type of dissociation that differs from other types like maladaptive daydreaming, depersonalization and derealization. In this video I'm talking you through what is dissociative amnesia, types of dissociative amnesia and treatment of dissociative amnesia.
What is Dissociative Amnesia & and what are the treatment options?
Frequently I am asked questions like this:
Why can't I remember my childhood?
What does it mean that I don't remember?
Does trauma cause memory loss?
DIAGNOSIS of Dissociative Amnesia
• Dissociative Amnesia 00:18
• What does
Dissociative Amnesia
look like? 01:51
TYPES OF Dissociative Amnesia:
• Dissociative Fugue? 02:18
• Localized Dissociative Amnesia 02:57
• Generalized Amnesia 03:40
• Systematized Amnesia 04:28
• Continuous Amnesia 04:46
TREATMENT of Dissociative Amnesia
• Talk Therapy 06:39
• EMDR (eye movement desensitization and reprocessing) 07:12
• CBT (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) 07:55
• DBT (Dialectical Behavioral Therapy) 08:23
• Medication 08:36
Other related videos:
Is It Dissociation? • 5 Signs of Dissociation
Dissociation: why it happens and what we can do about it • Dissociation: why it h...
5 General Types Of Dissociation • 5 Types Of Dissociation
Dissociative Disorder playlist (full set of videos)
• Dissociative Disorders
There are three major dissociative disorders defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), published by the American Psychiatric Association:
Dissociative amnesia. The main symptom is memory loss that's more severe than normal forgetfulness and that can't be explained by a medical condition. You can't recall information about yourself or events and people in your life, especially from a traumatic time. Dissociative amnesia can be specific to events in a certain time, such as intense combat, or more rarely, can involve complete loss of memory about yourself.
Dissociative identity disorder. Formerly known as multiple personality disorder, this disorder is characterized by "switching" to alternate identities. You may feel the presence of two or more people talking or living inside your head, and you may feel as though you're possessed by other identities.
Depersonalization-derealization disorder. This involves an ongoing or episodic sense of detachment or being outside yourself - observing your actions, feelings, thoughts and self from a distance as though watching a movie (depersonalization). Other people and things around you may feel detached and foggy or dreamlike, time may be slowed down or sped up, and the world may seem unreal (derealization).
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Пікірлер: 271

  • @Katimorton
    @Katimorton2 жыл бұрын

    Have you ever experienced this? What did it feel like to you? And did you know that this was what was happening? xoxo

  • @nikkimckay860

    @nikkimckay860

    2 жыл бұрын

    Kati Morton hello seen your notification and clicked it you are looking very nice the pink top suites you and your hair looks very nice straight. to add also thank you for another important good informative video I'm learning more about different mental health issues everytime you talk about new things I don't know about ❤️

  • @HaveAHollyDayArts

    @HaveAHollyDayArts

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have a horrible time recalling some events (like they didn’t even happen) and also have a hard time putting events in the correct time line over the length of my life. Does this mean something is wrong or I just have a bad memory?

  • @whereloveblossoms

    @whereloveblossoms

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don't know.. I know when there is Conflict, contention or what I think is a discussion of different views that either with those people or with others trying to resolve who insist in taking it through (when I am triggered /dysregulated ) I can't Speak or think properly, I forget some details (I always know what didn't happen ).tho sometimes I forget some facts when put on the spot. Yet when something is brought up later on I can still struggle to Recall everything... Then when false info /details or exaggerated negative details I know didn't happen it is really hard for me to focus and try to explain myself.. feelings from other unrelated experiences flood in and it gets complicated.. I am trying to put in Boundaries I try and say that I am busy when something happens and have to talk it out . But I realise I need to be even firmer that I cannot discuss anything until I am ready. And J am starting to be bluntly honest by taking a breath and saying "Yes I Agree"..but also give a wider context.. if someone isn't happy or raises an issue with something I have done Instead of panicking and trying to defend get defensive.. It's quite an interesting move to deal with people who keep finding fault with anything.. (it makes me so Paranoid but there is sort of a genuine reason and intent from others as well as my own insecurity )

  • @astreaward6651

    @astreaward6651

    2 жыл бұрын

    This sounds like it might be what I experienced in the two to three months leading up to my mother's death. After she received her cancer diagnosis and told our extended family, one of my cousins came to visit. We hadn't seen her in about twenty years so it's not like it was a common thing. I remember that she and her husband came over but I cannot remember anything that was said. She stayed for a few hours but I can't recall any of it. It's been bothering me that I seem to have just lost time or something. I had no idea it might actually be a recognized thing. The therapist I was seeing just kind of said, "huh, that's weird," so this is actually a bit reassuring. I swear, I learn more from watching your videos than I do speaking to therapists in person! Thank you :)

  • @beckysorg9406

    @beckysorg9406

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes. Most of 11th grade has completely disappeared from my memory. My anxiety was HORRIBLE at the time and the performance pressure from my family made it even worse, so it kind of feels like I just...shut off for a bit. I have whole classes ony transcript that I don't remember sitting in, doing homework for etc. I recently reconnected with a friend from high school and thankfully I know well enough what's going on when I don't remember some of the events she talks about that it doesn't weird me out anymore. If it had been a short number of years ago, I would not have coped with it so well.

  • @twiztidmomma22
    @twiztidmomma222 жыл бұрын

    I have huge chunks of my life gone. Happy moments, bad moments... Theyre just...gone...

  • @KnockOut242

    @KnockOut242

    2 ай бұрын

    Me too

  • @groofay
    @groofay2 жыл бұрын

    I don't remember most of my childhood except for a couple of big traumatic events, and even those I don't really "remember" so much as I just know they happened, and someone who was me was involved.

  • @iGoByPenelope

    @iGoByPenelope

    2 жыл бұрын

    @groofay, same for me.

  • @artchick2002

    @artchick2002

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@iGoByPenelope Me too.

  • @LauraLouise5

    @LauraLouise5

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wish I could forget my extremely traumatic childhood, unfortunately I remember too much and hate it!

  • @TheKuroSheep

    @TheKuroSheep

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same. I thought that was a normal thing but seems like it isn't. I remember things that happen to me at 2-3yo, and a lot of people say they can't remember that early, but even remembering this particular things the rest is just blank until my 12yo hahaha

  • @jungocarlier4740

    @jungocarlier4740

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same, my brain has erased most of my childhood years followed by dissociative amnesia and fugue states when I was 9. I can't remember what happened other than it was sexual assault. I want to know what happened to me tho!

  • @demi3115
    @demi3115 Жыл бұрын

    Gosh, the 'you don't know what you don't remember' is so true. didn't know things happened within my family until my sibling told me so.

  • @chanellegranlund7890
    @chanellegranlund78902 жыл бұрын

    I had the freakiest experience during my last session. As I was about to tell him about my weekend (which had been very distressing for me) and everything just disappeared! I couldn’t piece the events together in the right order and then I didn’t even know what the event were. It felt like I was shut out. And I stoped feeling my emotions, even though I logically could tell they where there. I was stressed and anxious, but I didn’t feel that way. They came back after the session, but it was so weird to be “denied access” to my own memories of something that happened the day before

  • @beans9019

    @beans9019

    2 жыл бұрын

    This happens to me too!!! You should tell your therapist that you have problems with this.

  • @katem2411
    @katem24112 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for doing this. I don't remember much of anything that happened between the ages of about 6 and 16 and it took me a long time to figure out why and the full extent of it. There are a few clear memories but for some reason grade 5/6 are a little less obscured than the rest of the time. It's weird though, I know that some significant things happened (I.e. my brother died, my family moved, my class went on a fieldtrip) but I don't have any emotional connection to those events - like I've read a book about it a long time ago.

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    ❤️❤️

  • @Bobin10101

    @Bobin10101

    Жыл бұрын

    This is the best explanation of what I experience

  • @zoelecta

    @zoelecta

    Жыл бұрын

    Same. No emotional connection.

  • @leahw4905
    @leahw49052 жыл бұрын

    I haven't had many, if any 'big T's', mostly small ones but a large portion of my childhood is just poof, gone, and I struggle to create new memories the majority of the time. My friends would always bring up something we did together but I have no recollection "I was there? I did that? ". It's like pieces of me are missing but I don't feel sad about it because I am 1. emotionally numb and 2. don't know what I forgot

  • @BryanHoover3

    @BryanHoover3

    Жыл бұрын

    I am the same way and until today, did not know there was a condition it fell into. Happy to have the start to an answer.

  • @hotgirlbummer520

    @hotgirlbummer520

    11 ай бұрын

    Same. I have asked people to help me remember events but there is nothing there. If I think about it too much it drives me crazy.

  • @Ladeenian

    @Ladeenian

    8 ай бұрын

    Same here

  • @emilypeace6446
    @emilypeace64462 жыл бұрын

    This happens to me sometimes I didn’t know it has a name. Sometimes I even forget what I said in previous therapy sessions I’m glad my therapist keeps notes otherwise I won’t remember what we just talked about last week

  • @amos8977
    @amos89772 жыл бұрын

    Im unable to remember anything from the time where I was severely bullied at school, I just can’t remember the traumatic events, they became a trigger. It’s simply 3 years completely erased from my memory, I don’t understand why it happened, but I became very insecure about myself ever since that time.

  • @greatgoodnessgoddessgratit5611
    @greatgoodnessgoddessgratit56112 жыл бұрын

    As a child/teen/young adult not remembering bad situations to confide in people for further insight used to have me feeling stupid or like something was acutely wrong with me, when I was otherwise (considered) rather intelligent. It left me feeling isolated and closed in.

  • @JasonPippin
    @JasonPippin2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for giving this a name for me. I don’t remember really any of my childhood except for a few events. I don’t know if something very traumatic happened to me or not, but I have a lot of suspicions. I’ve wanted to reconstruct a timeline of my childhood and ask family about the time gap. Is this safe to investigate on my own without a professional? I’m worried that discovering something that’s been hidden might be equally traumatic.

  • @amandagean

    @amandagean

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’m the same way. Idk why but I can not remember much of my childhood… I remember certain things that like in little splotches here and there and useless information but I can’t tell you about like my 4th or 5th or 6th or 7th Christmas and /or birthday

  • @RootwitchQueen
    @RootwitchQueen2 жыл бұрын

    I experience dissociative amnesia as a symptom of Dissociative Identity Disorder. I cannot remember practically ANY of my childhood right down to the happy memories. It's like someone put a super magnet to my brain's hard drive and fried it. I was able to salvage SOME memories with therapy but there's still huge chunks missing. As for what dissociative amnesia feels like when you have DID? Well, I would have times where I would black out completely and not remember entire work shifts. I would leave my home in the morning and come to standing in the aisle at work. I've blacked out and woken up in different clothes or standing in different places than I was when I last remembered. It's scary and not at all as 'fun' as DID is sometimes portrayed to be. It's a terrifying disorder that can also be very helpful at times I've been doing CBT and DBT and it's been super helpful for us in managing our DID as well as our dissociative amnesia. Can't wait to hear more about these topics! I'm definitely interested in a video about OSDDID if you do plan to make one. Thanks for all that you do! - Akita, The Elysian System

  • @airohwalker2478
    @airohwalker2478 Жыл бұрын

    Dissociative amnesia shows up a few places in my life. I have childhood trauma that I completely forgot about until about 3 years ago, and now I’m only able to remember parts of it. Also sometimes when I get triggered/really stressed out I struggle to form memories. This caused issues in my last relationship because during some of our fights I would feel disoriented and afterwards struggle to remember what we fought about. It was difficult for my ex to understand, and I felt so ashamed even though I didn’t have any control of it. Also there have been a few times when I was so distressed that for 5-30 minutes I had episodes of generalized amnesia. Once I was calmer things came back to me, but during it I couldn’t recall where I was, what I was doing, who I was, or who anyone else was. It was super scary and confusing. There have also been times where I am going somewhere and I feel like I’m one place and then I’ve teleported 200 meters ahead. Its a very odd experience. It’s not 100% clear how much of my memory issues are trauma related as I have a squished brain too, but definitely some of it is. It’s really tough, but I’m figuring it out day by day.

  • @degeest5571
    @degeest55712 жыл бұрын

    Once I started Esketamine treatments my memories started coming back. Ive had PTSD for 14 years, I was frustrated because I was struggling to remember myself and memories before and up to the trauma. I consciously worked on releasing the memories under Esketamine and had a great deal of success. Esketamine works wonders for me in dealing with PTSD

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    I am so glad you've found a treatment that's working for you!! xoxo

  • @sarahedrington5720
    @sarahedrington5720 Жыл бұрын

    Every time I walk into my house or anywhere I’ve known forever it feels like I’ve never been there. It used to look unfamiliar but now it only feels like I’ve never been there. I don’t remember anything I used to like cook, clean, how I used to do basic things. It’s like eveything I do is the first time.

  • @NovelNovelist
    @NovelNovelist2 жыл бұрын

    The past about forgetting skills too was the most surprising. I always thought that a big clue something was going on was like if you could inexplicably play the piano despite no memory of learning. Surprised you’d instead ALSO forget how to play the piano.

  • @Enigmatic.Natalie
    @Enigmatic.Natalie2 жыл бұрын

    I’m working towards becoming an LMFT and watching your videos have helped me gain insight on different disorders. Thank you for all the hard work you do and for sharing your knowledge ♥️

  • @Brownsuga210
    @Brownsuga2102 жыл бұрын

    I’m glad more people are talking about this.

  • @abbigailaskarov5192
    @abbigailaskarov5192 Жыл бұрын

    I can't remember my childhood or some events that happened in my life. I can't also remember who I am, who they are, or what their part of me was. I don't know what to do, but when I hear a familiar name, my heart is throbbing fast. There's something heavy in my heart I can't explain, but I feel like it's hurting me and making me sad. I don't knowwhat to do.

  • @abbigailaskarov5192

    @abbigailaskarov5192

    Жыл бұрын

    My auntie tells me that she saw me laying down on the floor. So she brought me to the hospital. I can't remember anything. I can't remember what the doctor said. It's making me feel dizzy. My auntie also told me that I'm having anxiety and, you know what, I keep asking myself where are my parents? It's too hard for me, for real, because I'm having trouble with anything and every night I always feel something heavy in my heart and I end up crying, but I don't know the reason why.

  • @dickieOiRed_07
    @dickieOiRed_072 жыл бұрын

    Kati- I just wanted to say I really appreciate your videos. They are always interesting and informative and I have gotten a better understanding of my own mental health, which has really helped in my sessions with my therapist. Thanks, Kati!

  • @75sadiegirl
    @75sadiegirl2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Kati for all your hard work! EMDR has been a lifesaver for me!

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for being here. Xoxoxo 😘😘😘

  • @jujuuu1
    @jujuuu12 жыл бұрын

    I’m really looking forward to a video on dissociative identity disorder! thank you for all that you do ♥️

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    That one is coming soon!!! xoxo

  • @jp1457
    @jp1457 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you. I went through some major Trauma 8-9 years ago where I was almost killed. And now I just starting to remember what happened, everything from continuous amnesia I’m having. It’s really hard 😢

  • @narutonicwater8774
    @narutonicwater87742 жыл бұрын

    I’ve been trying to figure out what’s wrong with me, because I’m aware whatever I’m constantly feeling isn’t normal, but I never knew exactly what it was or if there’s a name for it. Sometimes I feel like the only one in the world who has this feeling because my environment consists of ppl who seem so…. Connected to themselves and who they are. I think this is the closest I’ve ever gotten to naming and knowing what’s wrong with me. I’ve been dealing with foggy memory, foggy mind, limited emotions, bad memory, and especially not even knowing myself. A lot of the times I can’t describe this feeling and often just say “I don’t know” as a description of it, considering it’s so complicated. I’m tired of living like this every day, and it’s been happening for 2 years now. I can’t get a therapist, I doubt school counselors help, and the online therapy’s I’ve seen usually require money. I’m lost I’m confused and I’m tired of living like this 24/7. Whatever dissociative feeling I have, it interferes with my everyday life and I can’t live like this anymore…. Any suggestions on what I can do?

  • @mohamedabarkan9842

    @mohamedabarkan9842

    11 ай бұрын

    Be pacient allah is with us

  • @AnnaAnna-nr8uh

    @AnnaAnna-nr8uh

    11 ай бұрын

    I feel exactly the same ..does it mess up your eyesight too?

  • @narutonicwater8774

    @narutonicwater8774

    11 ай бұрын

    @@AnnaAnna-nr8uh Although I do have bad eyesight, I don’t think it directly affects my eyesight. My mind is very blurry and I find it difficult to name these feelings though

  • @joanaguimaraes97
    @joanaguimaraes972 жыл бұрын

    Incredible explanation, Kati. Thank you o much! In the last sessions with my therapist I did EMDR and it was totally game changer. Initially, I was only aware of the event itself, but denied that it was a traumatic event. My therapist told me about this trauma dissociation and after these sessions I was completely in shock. I realized that the event that I didn't think was traumatic is, in fact, quite traumatic, and surprisingly to a very high degree. It is really important that we work on these issues. Therapy should be mandatory, because there are a lot of people who certainly have traumas they can't even imagine.

  • @laraannabell9879
    @laraannabell98792 жыл бұрын

    I don’t remember some things about my childhood. But because I don’t remember it I don’t know why. I’ve had one traumatic memory come back to me after ten years of blocking it out. It’s so scary that things might have been happening without us knowing. Another (complex) trauma I only remember the story I made up about it to cope with being asked about it. I often seek the bad feelings and situations in hope to remember things. For example not getting out of abusive situations. I also suffer from depersonalization and derealisation. (sorry for my english I‘m german) thank you for this video!

  • @dennisdutton2863
    @dennisdutton2863 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your video's. I lost my memory my second year in the military. Forgot my entire life... and have a hard time remembering new things. A few years later I had another "reset" and again a few years after that. I'm regularly seen at my local VA and have seen a number of specialists but to be honest.. these video's have been more informative than any of that time spent elsewhere. It's especially difficult for the people close to me. I hope that when I share this with them it will help. I don't know how they handle it. Thanks again...

  • @wittgensteinsbitch3813
    @wittgensteinsbitch3813 Жыл бұрын

    I was talking with my sister about traumatic events in our childhood. I had no recollection of some of these events, but as she spoke, the memories came flooding back...along with the panic and pain associated with the trauma that I had blocked out. I was essentially and suddenly reliving it.

  • @nunyabusiness5414
    @nunyabusiness54142 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, Kati. I know how much you give to your channel and I want you to know you are appreciated, and know that you are a guiding light for many. Keep strong. *virtual hug

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much ❤️

  • @RainRemnant
    @RainRemnant2 жыл бұрын

    Have known I had this for years due to something traumatic in childhood but now is the first time hearing it has a name. I'm glad it's out of my memory though, probably wouldn't know how to handle with it, so I feel blessed. Thank you for your video 💖

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    I am so glad it was helpful :) xoxo And I totally get not wanting to remember too. xoxo

  • @katem2411

    @katem2411

    2 жыл бұрын

    Amen. I don't remember most of my childhood. A few years ago a person who I (apparently) went to school with turned up in my social group and I had to explain why I didn't remember him. He was nice about it, but his wife asked me why I didn't go to therapy to get the memories back. I'll never forget the shocked look on her face when I said that what I remembered was brutal, so I'd never want to remember the stuff that was so traumatic I'd blocked it out. Sometimes it's easier just to let it go. That said, some of my blocked off stuff did spontaneously resurface when I found myself in a similar situation to some of what was buried and I needed some time and help to process it all. I hope this doesnt happen to you, but you may want to be aware of the possibility that some memories may filter back.

  • @gemgwilliam
    @gemgwilliam2 жыл бұрын

    The reason I can't remember most of my childhood is because of my health trauma, I always wondered why everyone could remember so much about their childhood

  • @n.oneimportant5
    @n.oneimportant52 жыл бұрын

    Thanks as always, Kati. Having a tough week so I'll keep it short. That said, I really needed the video today. Much appreciated, your Patreon patron, Swang

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    Glad you’re here ❤️

  • @larag1764
    @larag17642 жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much for your videos. They're informative, respectful and sincere. I've learnt so much from your channel xx

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the kind words Lara. 🙏🙏

  • @bibliomorgan
    @bibliomorgan Жыл бұрын

    I used to joke "If I don't remember, it didn't happen." - but now with the diagnose I seriously know why I can't remember. To live a life full of holes and gaps of memories, and having your own story being narrated by other people is really difficult to live. Everytime I try to bring up some of my childhood into my therapy, I have to ask relatives about an especific day or situation. Some of those were traumas made by these said relatives, to have the version of the potential abuser is always the wrong way to figure out your problems. I learned through DBT to have tools and great system of coping and to remade these memories when it's possible and I thank you Kati for share this video (and many others!) for better understanding.

  • @Panicscroll69
    @Panicscroll692 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the video! There’s a lot of hurt people out there in need of help.

  • @AtticBoy68
    @AtticBoy682 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing this Kati. I can't remember my childhood and teens in any great or emotion. I find it hard to form memories too. I feel as though I don't have a history. Currently seeing a therapist who's going to to EMDR to try and process these stuck events.

  • @snowpeeps2550
    @snowpeeps25502 жыл бұрын

    I have recently started seeing a new doctor and she suspects that I suffer from this. This video explains so many things I feel and I can relate to it so much!

  • @leeannschaffer1433
    @leeannschaffer14332 жыл бұрын

    EMDR sounds amazing!! I want to know more about that. Thank you once again! You're so great!❤️

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have other videos about it, and even one where my friend does a little bit of it with me :) xoxo

  • @leeannschaffer1433

    @leeannschaffer1433

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Katimorton I am headed there then. I'm a regular viewer, but either I somehow missed it, or it was before I knew you. Thank you so much!💕

  • @cs5384
    @cs53842 жыл бұрын

    Really looking forward to the DID video. My son's psychiatrist still isn't sure between PTSD and DID but either way it goes it's a struggle for him every day. He goes through periods where he's in that fugue and can't really remember much after.

  • @RobinFae6772

    @RobinFae6772

    2 жыл бұрын

    DID and PTSD are often comorbid, so it could be both. But either way, I hope he is getting the help he needs to heal

  • @user-io6gn6no2c
    @user-io6gn6no2c Жыл бұрын

    I just watched this informative discussion (4/24/23) Thank you. Last June I was found in a state of what was later defined as dissasociative amnesia. I was taken to a hospital and tests ruled out a biological cause. I temporarily lost biographical information spanning close to 18 years. I did not form any new memories for several days. They are simply blank. Even now I still have zero memory of my time in the hospital and two trips along the Oregon coast (the coast is one of my deepest loves). For the better part of a week I did not know I had moved to Oregon, that I was married, nor did I recognize my personal belongings or my residence. I remember looking at my stove and telling myself I cook food here but not remembering either the stove or cooking (which is an activity I greatly enjoy). It was through constant reassurances lovingly given by my grown daughter, and protective physical care given by my grown son that I gradually recovered those 18 years. I am so grateful for the extraordinary patience and the amount of time they willingly devoted to my recovery. It was interesting to me that I did know important parts of my life choices prior to the 18 missing years. My core identity was intact. I have never recovered any memory of the time my mind was in amnesia except I do recall dream-like conversations I had with people from my past (that my daughter explained could not have happened) and I recall wanting desperately to feel safe. What my mind apparently decided to erase were 18 years of emotional and verbal abuse. Firmly facing that reality in a safe setting was how I recovered. I'm sending emotional warmth to each of you who have had to find your way back into the present. You will be able to go on from this experience. Your mind gave you a safe release for a while. You have likely had this experience because your core identity needed love, and the absence of it in a significant person in your life was more than you could bear. My core identity turned out to be a strong woman of faith. When I came out the other side I focused on her. And I focused on the tender loving kindness of my heavenly Father Jehovah. Revelation chapter 21 verse 4 "And he will wipe out every tear from their eyes" Isaiah chapter 65 verse 17 "And the former things will not be called to mind. Nor will they come up into the heart." Reliable well being is ahead. 🌱

  • @snowpeeps2550
    @snowpeeps25502 жыл бұрын

    I have also starting seeing a therapist and I have found that talking things out helps a lot

  • @ElevenDrops
    @ElevenDrops2 жыл бұрын

    Hey! I found you through wmma and you are awesome! I've been on a journey for the past 3 years and finding your videos has helped me recently on this journey. There are always new things to learn :) thanks for all you do! Also, just started the your podcast, love it! You guys are great and the vibe is so chill 😊

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hi! Glad you are here & thanks for the kind words. Christina is the real deal. Love her!

  • @nikkimckay860
    @nikkimckay8602 жыл бұрын

    Kati Morton thank you for this video you always put so much time and effort into these videos and so many of them have been helpful to more understand myself and learning about more new different mental health issues I didn't know much about or understand you are so appreciated ❤️

  • @anju5124
    @anju51242 жыл бұрын

    As always very helpful video. Your videos have helped me a lot! ❤

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    So happy to hear this ❤️

  • @RosheenQuynh
    @RosheenQuynh2 жыл бұрын

    This video is super helpful for my character analysis!

  • @mitchyboy41
    @mitchyboy412 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the insightful video... I needed some clarification regarding this topic. It hit home too know, I'm not the only one who gets upset they cannot recall years from their life.. Even today, I had lunch with my mom. and yes, I know the lunch happened.. But I can't even recall which way I drove to get to the restaurant..which is scary.. because now that i watched this video.. I'm just realizing that yeah... I'm missing massive gaps in my time. I've been on autopilot for years...

  • @megster-96
    @megster-96Ай бұрын

    thank you for sharing this video! I will need to talk to my doctor about this because I've dealing with this.

  • @siobhanoconnell9444
    @siobhanoconnell94442 жыл бұрын

    Ive forgotten large parts of elementary and middle school. I only remember the bad parts

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    I am so sorry :( xoxo

  • @lollsazz
    @lollsazz2 жыл бұрын

    I think I had this, but not sure. For some reason, for at least 5 years, I wasn't able to recall what year I last visited my home country. It was like as i I was constantly distracted by something when I tried to remember the year. Then I sat down and began going through things in my life year-by-year, back and forth, till I narrowed down a year where I suddenly laxked memories. It was 2014, and it was the year which I returned to find my dad having terminal, very aggressive cancer. It seemed he just wanted to see his family one last time, as he died 3 days later. It was very traumatic to me, and completely unexpected. My brain seems to have closed off the part where the memories of these events were, so I don't remember parts of the vacation either.

  • @LM-zn8iv
    @LM-zn8iv Жыл бұрын

    Disclaimer: My comment is practical advice as a layperson who suffers with dissociative amnesia who is a former hospital worker who endured years of inhumane treatment on site and now struggles with severe trust issues with areas of the healthcare system. This is NOT medical advice. Just another person in the world sharing how I do my best to cope given my circumstances. No words can accurately describe what it feels like..maybe the worst major depression ever and you just don't care about things you should be caring about because you can't even remember them but if you do it just reminds you of how bad your memory loss is and then the sadness overcomes you from that realisation til you can't cope and you gradually (and sometimes abruptly) shift back into dissociation.....and it goes on and on and on.....the never ending story of the inability to cope with life anymore. Sometimes I can cope for short periods and there are times that I actually do have a couple good days in between, but it's difficult most of the time...you become more used to it after a while but it's still very challenging. Self care is huge for anyone who struggles like I do. Lot's of self care. Spend time in nature and with nurturing people and environments. Connect with your creativity, however you do that personally - even if it's just scribbling on a notepad (it will reawaken if you keep up with it). Read interesting stuff that makes you feel good inside. Listen to anything that inspires you and can relax you and help you focus. Breathe deep belly breaths. Revisit positive memories from anytime in your past and be grateful for them and trust that God is always with you. Be gentle with yourself on your healing journey. Pray and meditate. STAY AWAY FROM ABUSERS.

  • @DrPatrickKingsep
    @DrPatrickKingsep2 жыл бұрын

    Hi there, Thanks for putting out this video Kati. This is a topic that needs to be talked about and your videos can reach so many people! Do you still see clients in the US? Thanks

  • @mystrose333
    @mystrose3332 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this video. It's helped me a lot. I wake up in the morning a few times a month and see things I did the night before, but don't remember doing. It's unnerving and confusing. Usually, for the rest of the day I feel foggy.

  • @talalotaibi7141
    @talalotaibi71412 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Kati I missed the episode at time as we have been run around a collection of football (soccer) matches but I can't forgot your weekly content.finally goodluck to the United States national team tomorrow or maybe tonight against Costa Rica.

  • @valeriatorres96
    @valeriatorres962 жыл бұрын

    started absolutely bawling at "even though we know the days happened logically, but it's like we slept throught them" because i never knew exactly how to explain it.

  • @NeraNotes
    @NeraNotes Жыл бұрын

    I’m so glad there’s a name for this sensation of not remembering especially since I can recall events then it hits that those events occurred many months prior. I’m definitely am going to bring this up in therapy

  • @a.iiscoming1467
    @a.iiscoming14672 жыл бұрын

    I have recently remembered the event that caused DA. It was after contracting Covid? I can remember the exact moment it was deleted from my conscious mind when I was a child. I remember feeling extremely distraught and then suddenly feeling fine. Spent two years on sick but did not know what caused the problems I had, neither did counsellors. It was as if nothing had caused it. Thanks Kati.

  • @raywood8187
    @raywood81872 жыл бұрын

    I have about 5 minutes worth of childhood memories, most of that I don't want to remember. Almost like it's a slow motion dissociation because I choose not to remember and it faded over time.

  • @VeryBeby
    @VeryBeby2 жыл бұрын

    I just found out this is what I've been dealing for years with today. Like, I'll write down notes for my therapist in my phone while I'm having a really stressful or bad mental health time so I can better verbalize how I'm feeling and what led to it but by the next appointment I'd look at the notes and have NO recollection of those things happening and delete them. I would be aware that the week was "rough" or "hard to get through" but any and all details were just.... gone. Until today I actually read the note I left for myself for today's appointment that said "YOU NEED TO TELL HIM YOU CAN'T REMEMBER ANYTHING FROM THESE EPISODES YOU DINGUS" which was kind of eye-opening for me jkhfdhkjs

  • @mikem2132
    @mikem21322 жыл бұрын

    I wish I had the “flash thing” from the Men in Black movie lol. Such a great concept. I think being forgetful is just a way for the mind to cope, I really don’t see it as a negative. I think it also depends on the duration of time. I mean, it’s hard enough to remember everything that happened on just one 12 month deployment. But if someone’s been deployed 4 or 5 times in a period of 10 years, you’d think being forgetful would just be normal.

  • @whatsthestorymorningglory61
    @whatsthestorymorningglory612 жыл бұрын

    I left my last therapy session in some kind of shocked state. I didn’t know how I came home or which way I took and I could not remember where I put my bike. I just remember leaving my therapist‘s room, then there‘s a very short clear moment when there was a very big and loud car getting near me, and then I am sitting at my couch. Nothing in between. I felt good that day though, totally spaced out like that. No fear, no sadness, just being somewhere else, wherever that was. I actually love that kind of dissociation because it makes me stop caring so much about everything.

  • @Shortkonner
    @Shortkonner2 жыл бұрын

    Hey, thanks for this. I have it bad in my dissociative times. Have to go right to bed after.

  • @webstudios2401
    @webstudios240110 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the explanation. I don’t remember much of my life. Currently, I’m having mind blockages every single week. I would have an object in my hand and then my mind will go off and once it comes back on like a light switch, that object is gone. I have had A LOT of stuff like that happening to me. One time, I used to work at Subway and was pushing a cart of hot bread to the fan. I remember pushing it, but all of a sudden, my mind blanked out and then I was at the sink. It’s like a time skip or a glitch. Then I heard one of my coworkers say, “Who put this bread here?” I looked and it was at an odd spot away from the fan. Another coworker said it was me. I believe them because I do remember pushing that cart. I have NO MEMPRY of leaving it there. I’ve been told I’ve done some things in the past that I have no memory of and it could be a year or two ago or in a week because of my mind blockages. I am undiagnosed, but maybe that’s amnesiac?? I know it’s dissociation for sure because someone told me. Also, my Subway manager said, “Remember? I told you to pan bread in 10 minutes?” I have no memory of him saying one word to me at all

  • @abrahamlincolnkickss5822
    @abrahamlincolnkickss5822 Жыл бұрын

    I have a friend who has this disorder. She doesn't remember some things. She really believed things did not happen because she doesn't remember. A couple of times or sometimes, it's like the other person in her will take over, a much more mature personality. Then this personality remembers the things that she doesn't remember, but when she gets back, she doesn't remember again. And then when the mature personality takes over, she does remember things the original her does not remember. It's really like 2 people in 1 body. She becomes someone so strong and fast beating up grown ess guys and dodging bullets. The other things I tell you wouldn't make much sense. Yea it's crazy. It's like this other her comes on to protect her and give her what she deserves. Have seen Yugioh? Yea, serious, it's like no other explanations.

  • @trevx3680

    @trevx3680

    Жыл бұрын

    That sound quite distressing for her but also for her friends. That is likely to be dissociative identity disorder.

  • @VBecks22
    @VBecks22 Жыл бұрын

    In January of this year, and at 42-years-old, by accidentally stumbling upon a pic on social media, “it” materialized. And for several minutes as the recollection of my multiple molestations came back to me, there I was: six-years-old again. Everything… and I mean, EVERYTHING was so horrifyingly real. I felt it all (again). ALL OF IT. AT ONCE. My Dad heard me wailing from the second floor, ran down the steps & found me on all fours clenching my stomach & shaking violently. It took me hours & hours to even (finally) tell him what happened. So for 35+ years the memory of my abuse was not suppressed, even repressed, etc.. It was just simply straight-up nonexistent.

  • @VBecks22

    @VBecks22

    Жыл бұрын

    I know that even if I, as an outsider looking in, heard/read about this I would find it questionable as Hell. I mean, even as I so vividly recalled it all, I questioned MYSELF. I actually fact checked & talked to the few friends & relatives I had left from back then to corroborate everything surrounding it. And yes indeed, it ALL checked out.

  • @GingerNorseman
    @GingerNorseman Жыл бұрын

    Love this video. Have amnesia. Want to get back to work and acting.

  • @meggrotte4760
    @meggrotte47605 ай бұрын

    Wow, I thought I was the only one who filled this way. I think my amnesia's finally starting dissipate.

  • @jeffk7734
    @jeffk77342 жыл бұрын

    Very informative. I’ve got PTSD and anxiety as well as depression, and boarderline personality disorder. I can remember quite vividly memories of abuse that really started to kick off after first grade, and years later still have had episodes where I feel the abuse all over again, but this time I am doing everything I can think of to fight back. When this has happened, I often mutter to myself, and when I’ve been a lone with nobody else in the house I have started screaming at the people who I’ve had trouble with. Medication has cut some of this out, but I am wondering if it would be possible there could be abuse incidents that are just hidden away that I don’t remember? I can remember the good and bad as far back as I was a toddler and not even out of diapers.

  • @kylapollard9275
    @kylapollard92752 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this. This could explain a lot. However, I have a question…. Could this type of dissociation cause you to forget every detail of a possible trauma including anything to do with your senses? But then later on in life you get bits of the memory back, which seems out of the blue, but still doesn’t include the senses just the fact that something might have happened? I hope this makes sense.

  • @Katimorton

    @Katimorton

    2 жыл бұрын

    It could definitely cause you to forget every detail of a possible trauma, including anything to do with your senses. In my experience, the senses usually do come back, but if they don't you can still process what happened and heal. xoxo

  • @kylapollard9275

    @kylapollard9275

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Katimorton even if it might have happened as a small child?

  • @ritaevergreen7234

    @ritaevergreen7234

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’m doing somatic expirencing for my truama and I remember my body smelling the scent of bubblegum randomly one day. It was a distinct smell from my childhood. So yes I think the body can eventually remember bits and pieces eventually but unsure if really the full capacity.

  • @kylapollard9275

    @kylapollard9275

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ritaevergreen7234 just knowing this makes me fearful as this memory one day popped up for me and then I feel like the whole scenario around (including with my counsellor at the time) didn’t handle it well and was told it wasn’t true. I have briefly mentioned this to my current T (she’s freaking amazing!) but I keep coming back to that I had made the whole thing up and such guilt, shame and embarrassment overwhelms me to the point I can’t even open my mouth to let out any words.

  • @ritaevergreen7234

    @ritaevergreen7234

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kylapollard9275 i would try to look into trauma body work such as somatic work and look into Peter Levine and the polyvagal theory. Kathy Kain is another person who I think has answers to the things you’ve been through. A lot of counselors or therapist aren’t trained in how trauma stays in the body and needing to rewire the nervous System for better health and regaining safety.

  • @annabellemoore4214
    @annabellemoore4214 Жыл бұрын

    1.) Have an inability to recall information, usually from traumatic events (Not normal 2.) Cause significant distress 3.) Not connected to other things 4.) Not better explained by dissociative identity disorder, ptsd Looks like -Even though the days happened, it feels like you sleep through them -wandering around leave life and have no memory (Rare) Localized -Only don’t recognize what happened during that time -Can be selective, only remember some things -Can have both -We can lose pervious knowledge, childhood -generalized -Rare Systemtemitzed -Lose memory of specific areas of life -Family, person who harmed us, school Continuous -Can’t remember new events -New she spoke to her mom but can’t remember the words -Only somewhat know about their memory loss How to treat -Trauma based treatment -Talk therapy can be useful, talk until it becomes less distressing -EMDR, bilateral stimulation -Tapping, headphones, right and left -Done while we recall bad memories -CBT -Identify unhelpful thinking patterns and change them DBT -Become more aware of how we’re feeling -Manage impulses Medication -Help with symptoms (anxiety, depression)

  • @cassiclinton4605
    @cassiclinton46052 жыл бұрын

    Hello, thank you for making this video. I am also struggling with this and it hits home. I was sexually assaulted at the age of 6 by my brother and cousin and my father was mentally abusive until I was 17. There are flashes of pictures when People talk about things or else it’s just blank it drives my family crazy because I can’t remember passed family members or trips we did all together or little things but I was so worried about my dad and not telling about my assault that I couldn’t focus and then I had a tumor so it was all nuts, just know that your not alone and it’s true it doesn’t bug me as much as some because I just don’t remember 🙃😄

  • @Toni-kk3we
    @Toni-kk3we2 жыл бұрын

    I have that with my therapy sessions. Often I cannot remember what we talked about. Often I can't recall the session by the time I'm home. Sometimes even during session I notice I've forgotten what was said just a minute ago. It doesn't matter how much I'm trying to focus or stay present, when it gets too stressful I'm just gone and can do nothing about it. Can't recall my childhood and its traumas either... I hate it

  • @songofphoenix2288
    @songofphoenix22882 жыл бұрын

    I remember very little from the period surrounding my freshman year to my sophomore year... only events that were seemingly so traumatic they got stuck there, or when I started to slip into the world's inside my head (even then I only remember the context of the daydream not reality.) I ended junior year with slips of daydreams and depersonalization but for the most part I think I've been improving. The problem is that... now my perception and reality... don't match up. I look in the mirror and I don't see a person heading into senior year. It feels like I've woken up from a long coma... like I'm 14 heading into sophomore year. It causes me a lot of distress and break down... idk what to do. My therapist seems to only want to put me in a more dangerous situation and basically undo all the 'progress' I had made before I saw her.

  • @lexirose9753
    @lexirose97532 жыл бұрын

    I already relate based off the thumbnail

  • @haralambimarkov6862
    @haralambimarkov68622 жыл бұрын

    It sucks so much to not remember so much of my life. Have I even lived?!

  • @natascha_mephisto
    @natascha_mephisto2 жыл бұрын

    Sometimes a week is just gone except for some specific events. I am not sure if the lack of most childhood memories is because of this or if it was just not important to me. I struggle with dissociation more within my body and less in my head. I notice when I can’t move my hands or my whole body. I notice people talking to me but sometimes the words don’t make sense, or I immediately forget what they wanted, or I can’t do it. I even notice when I am childlike and ask teachers if they wanna be my friend (so embarrassing). I don’t even pass out when I start shaking and twitching on the ground. My memories of those times are foggy but partly there and all that makes me wonder if I could stop it if I just tried harder or maybe I am just pretending I dissociate. A therapist once said to me that dissociation is a decision, we make to get attention and I want to say that he is wrong… but what if he’s right and I am a bad person? I just wrote this to get it of my chest. Happy week everyone^^

  • @Emmy-nb5xp

    @Emmy-nb5xp

    2 жыл бұрын

    You are not a bad person because you experience bad things or because you might be mentally ill, it is not a choice and it's totally valid what you are going through, I would advise you to get help so that you start experience less of these things and generally get better. I wish you the best and don't ever doubt your experiences

  • @aurieamoore5823
    @aurieamoore58234 ай бұрын

    My go to catharsis song for my dissociation (derealization, mostly) is Comfortably Numb by Pink Floyd. If anyone out there is dealing with this difficult symptom/diagnosis and is looking for some catharsis, i hope this helps you scratch that itch to express it like it does for me. Best results with good quality headphones or earbuds and put up as loud as you are comfortable with, without damaging your hearing. Also highly recommend a comfy spot to sit and a room that's not too bright. Really just gets ya lost in the song. Follow it up with some grounding techniques afterwards.

  • @ritaevergreen7234
    @ritaevergreen72342 жыл бұрын

    I had something happened to me as a toddler that was really traumatic that ended up me in the hospital and being pinned down and screaming. I have no recollection of it whatsoever but my mother told me as I have a scar from the event. My mind completely blocked it out but my body held onto it. I think it’s the reason I would have lots of emotional outbursts over pain that wasn’t meant to be as intense as it felt. I had a hard time seeing blood as the event involved that. I’m doing trauma body work such as somatic. I do think early traumatic events can heighten mental health issues more. I’ve always had a history of bad anxiety for little things that felt too much.

  • @siobhanoconnell9444
    @siobhanoconnell94442 жыл бұрын

    I questioned once whether I had developed schizotypal or antisocial personality disorder because Im so numb. Im also very vengeful underneath the "it doesnt bother me".

  • @Ab-se1zj

    @Ab-se1zj

    2 жыл бұрын

    Bruh what an edgelord

  • @vnh2567
    @vnh25672 жыл бұрын

    My now ex-girlfriend, remembers very little of her childhood to the degree that when I would ask her what her daily routine was like she said very little to the point that I still don’t know the answer after knowing her for six years. She grew up in an extremely hyper religious (Catholic) homeschooling household that was, ironically, extremely neglectful; she was one of eight. Aside from the neglect, I suspect that there was some other type of trauma she faced and did not like to talk about her upbringing to avoid it. She did on a few occasions say she believed she would disassociate at times. Many times it felt as if she didn’t even remember details of our trips abroad and adventures, which would always leave me feeling very unappreciated. Her sense of “living in the now“ seems to be an over extreme version and a constant pursuit of stimulation/dopamine but yet her memories of what seemed to excite her were usually around “50/50”. Five out of the six sisters (out of eight kids), including her, seem to demonstrate this degree of sensation seeking behavior in their own way. She took a job that is contrary to her stated life goals but affords her the opportunity to travel to various cities throughout the week, combined with the fact that her supposedly wealthy boss would fly her first class and put her up at expensive hotels. I could be wrong but intuitively it just feels like nothing more than a pursuit of distraction and escape, which ultimately broke us apart. I’m definitely not taking this opportunity to speak ill of her because I do still love her very much. I’m just giving my input in the hopes that it somehow helps or validates.

  • @Happy_days01
    @Happy_days012 жыл бұрын

    I'm very confused... I don't know if I've always had bad memory but only now am I starting to realise it as people around me have been pointing it out to me and... It's scary. My brother in law says he's jealous because I am able to pick up an old game and enjoy like it's new again... Now I have kid's and it makes me depressed. I can't remember any day's with my kid's or my partner. I know she had a birthday, that she had a surgery, that we went to hospital (all i remember of that day is sitting by the hospital window with her). I can not recall anything I take photo's of moments and look back and cry because I see my children smiling in these photo's but cant remember the day. I'll be in some photos and can't remember anything. My partner has to constantly remind me about lifetime event's. Im confused because they aren't traumatic events they are just normal day to day life. Yes I was SA as a child and only remember one time of it and my mum used to abuse me too. However I'm over it now, thad not what makes me sad what makes me sad is I am forgetting my own family... I don't want to get help but I do want a diagnosis just to make me feel better... I remember hobbies like new words I learn or piano but that is all. I thought I had Alzheimer's and I'm afraid if I do because I am only 22 (I forget this too and have to keep asking my partner my age) Every knows me as someone with just bad memory but it's so bad I cry whenever I see something beautiful in daily life because I know I will forget it... idk what to do...

  • @yb4691
    @yb46912 жыл бұрын

    Hello Kati and kinions ;) I'm sometimes struggeling with severe fear/stress before a therapysession. Because I don't know what to expect. I have thoughts/questions in my head like 'I don't know which questions she'll ask' (and yes, every session there is at least one amazingly sharp question I didn't expect at all :D ) and 'I don't know if we'll talk about triggers, and if we talk about them... How I'll react'. I know I'm in full control about the topics we adress in session. And i've got a nice therapist. She did gave me some tips which are helpfull with generalized anxiety. But still I'm stressing before sessions. Do you have some thoughts or tips about this?

  • @ems7623
    @ems76232 жыл бұрын

    i do often wonder why I seem to remember so much less of my childhood than others ... but i see to reason to think that I had any childhood trauma beyond light bullying.

  • @nataliewatson5152
    @nataliewatson5152 Жыл бұрын

    I tried EMDR but it does not work because how can I do EMDR if I can't recall the events? The trauma and feelings live in my body but even if I know it happened from being told it did, seeing video of specific events, and knowing it happened only because it happened daily for my entire life, etc. I myself cannot make a connection to it in my mind. So, I cannot picture it in my mind, I can't put myself back into it as my brain won't give me the memories, I can't tell how i felt because like you said, "it doesn't really feel like anything because you don't know about what you don't remember" However that statement more so resonates with me currently as the amnesia is continuous without trauma still occurring.

  • @trishbowers3768
    @trishbowers3768Ай бұрын

    I suffer severely from this amnesia. I have very minimal memory of my life. Even just the past year. I’m constantly losing memory of small and significant things. I hate this.

  • @Rachelballew000
    @Rachelballew000 Жыл бұрын

    👍 localized probably 😍

  • @iamapotatochip4243
    @iamapotatochip42432 жыл бұрын

    I seem to have the issue where I remember the trauma from childhood very vividly, down to the physical sensations, but very few other memories from childhood, especially good ones. I know my childhood wasn't all bad, but sometimes it feels like all that existed was just the trauma and overall just bad memories from the past. I use to have a great memory from 18-30(not so much with learning though). I'm 32 now and the past few years, its like anything stressful that happens I forget the events as they are happening. Does this still sound like dissociative amnesia? I also dissociate into fake realities throughout the day to deal with depression.

  • @peachesl8706
    @peachesl8706 Жыл бұрын

    I don’t remember most of my childhood. I remember bits and pieces like coming in and out of sleep where you don’t dream. I struggle at times as an adult with dissociating out of conversations even when there is no perceived danger.

  • @1337174m1
    @1337174m13 ай бұрын

    I have a hard time remembering a lot of things, but my memory problems seem to be like...in general? Or specifically when it comes to people and my interactions with them. Like, I can be friends with someone for several years, but if they stopped talking to me I would eventually forget who they were, and why we were friends. Its almost as if my memory leaks or has a cooldown, and if I don't refresh that relationship by staying in contact frequently. I forget them. I have been in a relationship for over 10 years now, and I can hardly remember any of it. I can barely remember what I was doing/thinking before I got into that relationship either. My spouse would constantly ask me if I remember x or y event and how much fun it was, and I have no idea what they were talking about. I sometimes remember a vague understanding of the environment around me in some memories that they bring up, but never what is said or what I was thinking/doing. I am not sure what this classifies as in your video though.

  • @blauespony1013
    @blauespony101310 ай бұрын

    I had systematic dissociative amnesia. I forgot a friend I quarrelled with. I went into trauma mode and instead of pushing him away tried to open up. He did misunderstand what I tried to say, took it personally and yelled at me. I exploded like I never exploded at another person before and ... then forgot most about him. Like I knew his name and that we knew each other for twelve years, but everything else was gone. And half a year later, it just ... reappeared like nothing happened. Okay, not exactly. When it snapped back I had an instant flashback to the horror of us quarrelling. It just felt like a switch being turned on/off. So spooky!

  • @terhisomersalo8588
    @terhisomersalo85887 ай бұрын

    I remember when I started senior high school (or whatever one would call school years 10-12) I had determined to tag along a new aquaintance I got bc I wanted to have a new friend and didn't want to go to school with no friends at all again. So the senior high and high school were partially sharing the school building and I went my high school there so I told that I can show places there. But turned out when my new aquaintances asked directions or where was a certain place in the school building and how to go there I totally didn't recognise. Which was weird bc I have attended the high school there all the 3 years and I didn't skip school or drop out or have a gap in schooling. I also have terrible sense of direction but this was different bc I learn directions when the route is familiar. At least I recognise places. I was bullied throughout my high school. Same in elementary school which was elsewhere, I was bullied there from years 4-6.

  • @msebk
    @msebk2 жыл бұрын

    The only instance I have of something like this, that I know of, I didn't know about until a few years ago when I was talking to my older sister about my new therapist's intake where she had me write up a thing on major events in my childhood. I was sexually assaulted while I was biking to band the summer before 6th grade. I remember the assault, I remember getting to school and talking to my band-mates, but there's nothing after that. When I mentioned it to my sister, she told me the guy's name - she knew him - and I was stunned. I had told her about what happened when I got home from band and she told Mom etc. She also came with me the next day to protect me. He was waiting for me. I don't know what happened, but she said she was able to chase him off. To this day, there is nothing in my memory about this. It's like the memory was never written.

  • @DjNexus69
    @DjNexus692 жыл бұрын

    I'm waiting on the dissociative identity disorder video. Cause we have that but in the UK there's literally nothing about it unless you go private so basically been watching you since I was a teenager which is crazy to think about ... We found out about it 5 years ago and yeah it turned out we had a lot more trauma than I ever knew or even remembered or accepted. But I'm finding I'm really on my own with d.i.d ironically there are about 28 people in my head last time I checked. So yeah if you could do more on it would really help cause just nothing out there on it it mean there's childhood stuff but nothing on the actual mechanisms of how it works and plays. Because even more at 26 I still don't get it really half the time. If anyone has it or wants to talk about it message me because I am honestly lonely with it:/

  • @annetteabma

    @annetteabma

    2 жыл бұрын

    I highly recommend the channel DissociaDid and Multiplicity & Me. There is a whole community of people with DID online (just ignore the drama and accept them for who they are). I've learned so much from them and feel much less alone in my OSDD and PTSD. I also have trauma that I can't remember and have night terrors (I cry, talk, yell in my sleep but have no recall of dreaming because it happens in a different stage of sleep). I only know because people have told me, I've woken myself up, or my sleep app has recorded it). I'm still learning about my own past. Medication and meditation have been a huge help to me in becoming more aware of what is happening in my mind without becoming identified with any of the "voices". I think DID is more severe in terms of actual identities, though, so I know you must struggle. You are not alone, though (no pun intended but kinda funny, yes -- we always have someone to listen to). ♥

  • @franciscopontesvelasco4315
    @franciscopontesvelasco43152 жыл бұрын

    Sometimes its the opposite, u had a traumatic experience and its in your head all the time😪

  • @mackfam9798
    @mackfam97982 жыл бұрын

    love you this was good

  • @bobdeclor528
    @bobdeclor5286 ай бұрын

    im 34 and every now and then something comes back to me from my childhood. i still dont have a full picture of everything

  • @vladimirofsvalbard9477
    @vladimirofsvalbard94778 ай бұрын

    I wonder if I have this to some degree. I had an extremely traumatic childhood, but those are just the memories I have from 8-12 for the most part. I have VERY few memories before the age of 8. Literally like 4-5 memories.

  • @youtubelu622
    @youtubelu6222 жыл бұрын

    In my experience it is like reading a redacted document. I am remembering something that happened as a complete story and then suddenly the details aren't there. The more I try to focus the more the whole thing looks blurry, I get confused/distressed, repeat until I forget what it was in the first place.

  • @lifewithcats1163
    @lifewithcats116324 күн бұрын

    The father of my kids died in a car accident.. I don’t remember much about the year or 2 after the accident..I melted ended up in an institution for a few months.. I just remember certain things.. vividly the last time I saw him .. lying on the bed during his funeral with my girls.. seeing him in the ER.. I am ashamed to say I can’t remember the year he died or how long ago it was… it’s like my brain doesn’t want to remember..as far as I know I just continued the best I could which was a blur of anxiety depression and self destructive behaviors… over 10 years have passed( not sure how many).. I am in a better place with a new life but I feel guilty for blocking it all out and emotionally disappearing from my kids lives for a few years… not sure I even want to revisit any of it..

  • @tomlotti240
    @tomlotti2402 жыл бұрын

    I was wondering if stress might play a role in this. Recently, I had a dream where I found myself in my car, parked in front of this building. The dream felt so real that, for a moment, I was worried that I drove to this place without realizing it, and wondered how I even got there. Knowing how to lucid dream, I talked myself thru the dream and began wondering around the place. What's weird is that the dream contained this imagery that has only come up one other time.

  • @TheunissenC
    @TheunissenC2 жыл бұрын

    I've been wondering if I have it ever since I first heard of it. I relate a lot to the things the featured viewers said. It's tricky though; basically my whole life is gone so that would be considered generelised but I don't think I had a very sudden memory loss. Others would have noticed. It seems so clear cut out but I'm still not sure