Dissociative Identity Disorder - 3 reasons why alters may be aggressive (also for OSDD)

In this video from The CTAD Clinic, Dr Mike Lloyd (Clinic Director) discusses three common reasons why some alters (or parts) can be aggressive, hostile or violent within conditions such as Other Specified Dissociative Disorder (OSDD) and Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID). Mike looks at how these can related to traumatic experiences in childhood and how they can interlink, alongside ways of moving towards healing and recovery for these alters. #otherspecifieddissociativedisorder #osdd #dissociativeidentitydisorder #did #therapy Chapters: 0:00 Introduction 0:22 What are alters in OSDD and DID? 1:00 The basis in trauma 2:28 Number One - Repetition 2:48 Social Learning Theory 4:10 Number Two - Prevention 5:38 The default radar system 5:54 Number Three - Reaction 6:51 Working immediately 7:25 All about fear 7:55 The factors of positive change 8:26 The role of therapy 8:41 'getting rid of' aggressive alters 8:53 One Final Tip! 9:15 Conclusion

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A Clinical Psychologist looks at Petals of a Rose DID film (Dissociative Identity Disorder)

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A case example of an internal dialogue within OSDD (Other Specified Dissociative Disorder)

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A Clinical Psychologist reacts to the depersonalization / derealization film, Absent of Me

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Ways to help progress after trauma: internal self-help strategies for OSDD and DID

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How Action Systems, Integration and OSDD can work together as a responsive process

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Psychology of a Hero: MOON KNIGHT and Dissociative Identity Disorder

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Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) Explained: Trauma, Neuroscience, Controversies & Recovery

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All Of Me | Living with multiple personalities (dissociative identity disorder) | 7NEWS Spotlight

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Overt and Covert Switching with DID (in clinic and on Social Media)

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Overview of Dissociative Identity Disorder DID

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Villain Therapy: SPLIT and Dissociative Identity Disorder

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Relating with fragile Emotional Parts of dissociative patients