I'm not sure but I think it might be a personality disorder I'm not sure what to do.

by Symptom Advice on January 28, 2011

Lately my friends have been telling me that I've been acting like a total different person at times and than I'm acting like my self at times. I've notice it too. I usually am a nice person and always happy, but at times I'm really mad and feel like hurting everyone even my friends and family than I also become very quiet and I want to kill myself and I feel alone. at times I don't remember saying something and usually I won't ever say it and my friends agree and they tell me that I really did say that so I'm not sure, but I think it might be MPD I don't really know what to do cause this is starting to scare my friends and they are starting to avoid me. my boyfriend left me because he said I was a total different person and called me a freak of nature. what do you think personally what it is/what I should do?

MPD is now called Dissociative Identity Disorder

D.I.D. A questionnaire for the presence of D.I.D. may be found at: counsellingresource.com/quizzes/c…Individuals diagnosed with DID demonstrate a variety of symptoms with wide fluctuations across time; functioning can vary from severe impairment in daily functioning to normal or high abilities. Symptoms can include:[1]

* multiple mannerisms, attitudes and beliefs that are not similar to each other* headaches and other body pains* distortion or loss of subjective time* depersonalization* derealization* amnesia* depression* flashbacks of abuse/trauma* unexplainable phobias* sudden anger without a justified cause* lack of intimacy and personal connections* frequent panic/anxiety attacks* auditory hallucinations of the personalities inside their mind

Patients may experience an extremely broad array of other symptoms that resemble epilepsy, schizophrenia, anxiety disorders, mood disorders, post traumatic stress disorder, personality disorders, and eating disorders.[ Source(s): en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dissociativ…

Those people who have D.I.D. may experience such things as "coming to" in a place that they don't recognise, or receiving bills for things they don't remember ordering, or, if living alone, finding notes in a different handwriting, or sometimes friends tell them things about themselves, and their behaviour as another "alter".View your-mental-health.weebly.com/u.h… for much more about D.I.D., including resources, and books. I suggest that you also view page G, & X about BPD, which is much more common than the considerably rarer DID.

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