What is an identity disorder?

Identity disorder can refer to very different conditions that can affect people. The most commonly cited identity disorders are not similar at all. One of them is a gender identity disorder and the other is usually better known as a multiple personality disorder, although it can also be called dissociative identity disorder. People may feel they are in the wrong body and that they should have been in the opposite gender body. Some children work as children and no longer feel like adults, while others can identify more strongly with the opposite gender roles as adults. The psychological pain that it can create is significant, and because choices such as sexual assignment or trans-sexualism are rejected in many cultures, the problem of the family or friends could not only be embarrassing but can be life-threatening. Thus, the person can try to hide these feelings for years, although some are now able to obtain family support to transition to another sex.

between some narrows associated with this condition is the discomfort of calling a failure. Many of them advocated the call of a gender identity disorder something else. Others who have been open about this problem suggest that it is not really a mind that is disturbed, but the body; Once this has been satisfactorily changed, there may be anxiety about the appropriate sex. Many still require some form of therapy when they adapt to a new life and continue to recover from psychic scars that caused the rejection of society or loved ones.

dissociative identity disorder or more personality (MPD) is a CONSITION where a person has several discrete and identifiable personalities that are separated from each other and which can have each other with each other. This is also a difficult state that requires therapy. The emphasis on therapy is placed in such a way that it draws different personalities and forced them to communicate with each other.In other words, therapy hopes that the tangle of broken personalities in an effort to give the main personality fully conscious control of life at all times.

As with a gender identity failure, doubts about MPDs remain. Both conditions are perceived with skepticism or are assumed that they are intentionally supported by the acceptance of the media and the display of these conditions. Medical authority does not agree with this interpretation and the psychiatric community accepts both disorders as very real and determines diagnostic criteria for them. These two conditions are given in diagnostic and statistical manuals.

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