ABSTRACT

The author explores a relational approach to the psychotherapy of dissocialise identity disorder (DID) that has a sound psychotherapeutic basis, but does not have, the cumulative case studies to argue that it is superior to the outcomes reported by Klutz. Worrell and Denham make an implicit assertion that human dignity be paramount in regard to the treatment of psychiatric problems like dissocialise identity disorder. The neurobiological context is of a modular brain that is prone to synaptic, neurohumoral, and biochemical disruption and disconnection when severely stressed. People often live in a world of perceiving constant threat consistent with the failure of the extinction of traumatic memory noted in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The psychotherapy continued as everyone explores his experience of work, family, friends, and so on, from a new vantage point and worked on unresolved issues that were part of his ongoing therapy.