Brighton and Hove Psychotherapy

01273 921 355
Online therapy In the press
  • Home
  • Therapy services
    • Fees
    • How psychotherapy works
    • Who is it for?
    • Individual psychotherapy
    • Child therapy
    • Couples counselling and therapy in Brighton
    • Marriage counselling
    • Family therapy and counselling
    • Group psychotherapy
    • Corporate services
    • Leadership coaching and consultancy
    • Clinical supervision for individuals and organisations
    • FAQs
  • Types of therapy
    • Acceptance commitment therapy (ACT)
    • Analytic psychotherapy
    • Body-orientated psychotherapy
    • Private clinical psychology
    • Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)
    • Compassion focused therapy (CFT)
    • Cult Recovery
    • Dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT)
    • Therapy for divorce or separation
    • Eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR)
    • Existential therapy
    • Group analytic psychotherapy
    • Integrative therapy
    • Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT)
    • Non-violent resistance (NVR)
    • Family and systemic psychotherapy
    • Schema therapy
    • Transactional analysis (TA)
    • Trauma psychotherapy
  • Types of issues
    • Abuse
    • Addiction counselling Brighton
      • Gambling addiction therapy
      • Porn addiction help
    • Affairs
    • Anger management counselling in Brighton
    • Anxiety
    • Bereavement counselling
    • Cross-cultural issues
    • Depression
    • Family issues
    • LGBT+ issues and therapy
    • Low self-esteem
    • Relationship issues
    • Sexual issues
    • Stress
  • Online therapy
    • Online anger management therapy
    • Online anxiety therapy
    • Online therapy for bereavement
    • Online therapy for depression
    • Online relationship counselling
  • Find my therapist
    • Our practitioners
  • Blog
    • Ageing
    • Attachment
    • Child development
    • Families
    • Gender
    • Groups
    • Loss
    • Mental health
    • Neuroscience
    • Parenting
    • Psychotherapy
    • Relationships
    • Sexuality
    • Sleep
    • Society
    • Spirituality
    • Work
  • About us
    • Sustainability
    • Work with us
    • Press
  • Contact us
    • Contact us – Brighton and Hove practice
    • Contact us – Lewes practice
    • Contact us – online therapy
    • Contact us – press
    • Privacy policy

August 4, 2025 by BHP Leave a Comment

Dissociative identity disorder: A rare trauma response, not a social trend

In recent years, Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID) has become a trending topic on social media, particularly on platforms like TikTok. Short-form videos often depict individuals rapidly switching between so-called “alters,” complete with visual and behavioural cues. The implication—sometimes explicit, often subtle—is that these portrayals are representative of DID.

They are not.

Clinically, DID remains one of the rarest and most severe psychological responses to trauma. Its presence in the consulting room is exceptional. And when it does appear, it is neither sensational nor theatrical.

It is often profoundly confusing for the patient and represents a significant challenge to diagnose—let alone to work with therapeutically.

What is DID?

DID does not arise in response to ordinary life stress or general childhood adversity. It is a response to extreme, prolonged, and frequently unspeakable trauma—often chronic sexual abuse—occurring in early childhood, at a time when the child’s sense of self is still forming. The psyche, overwhelmed by terror and deprived of adequate relational support, fragments as a means of survival.

This fragmentation is not a performance but an act of psychic necessity. The various identities—commonly referred to as “alters”—emerge as distinct parts of the self, each holding pieces of memory, emotion, or experience that could not otherwise be processed. These parts are not necessarily “visible” in the way TikTok trends would have us believe.

Many individuals with DID are unaware of their condition until much later in life. The disorder is more often characterised by dissociative amnesia, identity confusion, and significant functional impairment than by the overt behavioural switches popular culture associates with it.

The risks of glorification

When a complex and rare condition like DID is popularised through social media, the risk is twofold. First, individuals living with the condition may feel misunderstood, invalidated, or even disbelieved. Second, such portrayals may encourage vulnerable young people to self-diagnose or mimic symptoms without understanding the gravity of what they are engaging with.

This trend trivialises and caricatures both the disorder and those who live with it.

The clinical reality of DID

In the therapy room, DID is rarely, if ever, flamboyant. It does not look like costume changes or shifting accents on cue. It looks like deep disorientation. It looks like unbearable silence and fractured memory. It looks like a long, painstaking process of building safety, recognising fragmentation, and slowly working toward integration—often over many years.

The goal is not to spotlight “alters,” if indeed the patient experiences themselves in this way, but to support the whole person in reclaiming continuity, safety, and coherence.

A note on curiosity and clinical competence

It is natural to be curious—dissociation is a fascinating and complex area of the psyche. But curiosity must be paired with caution. When complex trauma responses are reduced to trends, we risk distorting the public’s understanding of profound psychological suffering.

Most clinicians will never encounter a case of DID in their careers. It is arguably the most extreme trauma response the mind can manifest to protect itself from annihilation and psychosis. For those who do encounter it, the condition may be missed—misunderstood as something less serious—without the aid of specialist supervision.
DID is not entertainment. It is the psyche’s last defence against obliteration. It demands our respect—not our spectacle.

 

Mark Vahrmeyer is a UKCP-registered psychotherapist working in private practice in Hove and Lewes, East Sussex. He is trained in relational psychotherapy and uses an integrative approach of psychodynamic, attachment and body psychotherapy to facilitate change with clients.

 

Further reading by Mark Vahrmeyer

Can AI offer therapy?

Why staying in your chair is the key to being a good psychotherapist

What do dreams mean?

Is starting psychotherapy a good New Year’s resolution?

Twixtmas – surviving that dreaded time between Christmas and New Year

How to minimise Christmas stress if you are hosting

Filed Under: Mark Vahrmeyer, Psychotherapy, Society Tagged With: alters in DID, clinical dissociation, DID and trauma, DID TikTok trend, dissociative disorders, Dissociative Identity Disorder, misdiagnosis of DID, TikTok mental health trends, trauma and fragmentation

Find your practitioner

loader
Meta Data and Taxonomies Filter

Locations -

  • Brighton
  • Lewes
  • Online
loader
loader
loader
loader
loader

Search for your practitioner by location

Brighton
Lewes

Therapy services +

Therapy services: 

Therapy types

Therapy types: 

Our practitioners

  • Sam Jahara
  • Mark Vahrmeyer
  • Gerry Gilmartin
  • Dr Simon Cassar
  • Claire Barnes
  • David Work
  • Shiraz El Showk
  • Thad Hickman
  • Susanna Petitpierre
  • David Keighley
  • Kirsty Toal
  • Joseph Bailey
  • Lucie Ramet
  • Georgie Leake

Search our blog

Work with us

Find out more….

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Charities we support

One Earth Logo

Hove clinic
49 Church Road, Hove, East Sussex, BN3 2BE

Lewes clinic
Star Brewery, Studio 22, 1 Castle Ditch Lane, Lewes, BN7 1YJ

Copyright © 2025
Press enquiries
Privacy policy
Resources
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish.AcceptReject Privacy Policy
Privacy & Cookies Policy

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Non-necessary
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.
SAVE & ACCEPT